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Conventions of Academic Reporting: Citations and Bibliographic Referencing

Extended Investigation
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Conventions of Academic Reporting: Citations and Bibliographic Referencing

Extended Investigation
01 May 2026

Conventions of Academic Reporting: Citations and Bibliographic Referencing

Academic writing depends on a system of transparent attribution — every claim, idea or piece of evidence that comes from another source must be acknowledged. This is not just convention; it is an ethical and intellectual obligation. Citations and references allow readers to verify your evidence and trace the development of ideas.

Why Citations and References Matter

  1. Intellectual honesty: You acknowledge whose ideas you are building on
  2. Credibility: Citations show your claims are grounded in evidence, not opinion
  3. Verifiability: Readers can find and check your sources
  4. Academic tradition: Participation in scholarly conversation requires attribution

KEY TAKEAWAY: In Extended Investigation, correct and consistent referencing is directly assessed. It signals that you understand the norms of academic discourse — not just the content of your research area.

Citations vs References

Term Definition
In-text citation Brief acknowledgement within the body of the text identifying the source of a specific piece of information
Reference list / Bibliography Complete list of all sources cited, with full publication details

Note: A bibliography sometimes includes works consulted but not directly cited. A reference list only includes works you cited in your text. Know which your style guide requires.

Common Referencing Styles

Different disciplines use different conventions. The key is to choose one style and apply it consistently.

Style Common In In-text format
APA (7th ed.) Psychology, education, social sciences (Author, Year)
MLA Humanities, literature (Author page)
Chicago History, some humanities Footnotes or (Author Year)
Harvard Many Australian universities (Author Year)
Vancouver Medicine, sciences Numbered [1]

For Extended Investigation, your school or teacher will typically specify the required style.

APA 7th Edition: Key Rules (Most Common)

In-text citations

  • Single author: (Smith, 2020)
  • Two authors: (Smith & Jones, 2020)
  • Three or more: (Smith et al., 2020)
  • Direct quote: (Smith, 2020, p. 45)
  • Organisation as author: (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2022)
  • No author: (Title of Article, Year) — shorten if long

Reference List Examples

Journal article:

Smith, A. B., & Jones, C. D. (2020). Title of article. Journal Name, 12(3), 45–67. https://doi.org/…

Book:

Smith, A. B. (2019). Title of book (2nd ed.). Publisher.

Webpage:

Organisation Name. (2021, March 5). Title of page. Website Name. https://www.example.com

EXAM TIP: You will not be asked to produce a full reference list from scratch in an exam. However, you may be asked to identify what information is missing from a citation, or to explain why a particular piece of information is needed in a reference. Understand what each element of a reference achieves.

What Must Be Cited?

Cite:
- Direct quotations (exact words from a source)
- Paraphrased ideas (someone else’s ideas in your own words)
- Summarised arguments, findings or conclusions
- Statistics, data and research results
- Definitions or conceptual frameworks you adopt

Do NOT cite:
- Commonly known facts (“Australia is a federal democracy”)
- Your own original ideas and conclusions
- Information you gathered yourself through primary research

Quoting, Paraphrasing and Summarising

Technique Definition When to Use
Direct quote Exact words, enclosed in quotation marks with page number When the exact phrasing is significant
Paraphrase Author’s idea restated in your own words Most common; shows you understand the idea
Summary Condensed version of a longer argument or passage For overview of a source’s key argument

COMMON MISTAKE: Over-relying on direct quotations. Strong academic writing paraphrases and analyses, rather than stringing together quoted passages. Use direct quotes sparingly, only when the exact wording is important.

Reference Management Tools

For a project involving many sources, consider using reference management software:
- Zotero (free, recommended)
- Mendeley (free)
- EndNote

These tools store citation information and generate formatted references automatically, reducing errors and saving time.

REMEMBER: Even with reference management software, check every generated reference for accuracy. Software frequently makes errors with unusual source types (e.g., government reports, translated works, online videos).

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