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CONM 1000 Introduction to Construction Management

This guide is for the Wentworth/Catholic Memorial Dual Enrollment students in the CONM 1000 course.

RefWorks: Managing Your Research & Citations

Why Cite?

  • It's required in the Institute's Academic Honesty and Conduct Policy
  • Your paper is great and everyone wants to learn about your topic.  They want to read your sources.
  • It is the right thing to do - everyone deserves credit for their work.
  • It is required by your professor.

What to Cite

WHEN IN DOUBT-CITE!

  • Direct quotes - always cite
  • Images-unless you created it, cite it!
  • Paraphrasing - yes, you need to cite
  • Summarizing - you guessed it, cite it!  
  • AI-generated images and material

Citation Styles

Some (but not all) of the more frequently used citation styles in academic disciplines: 

Citing Images

Using images, charts, tables, or figures that you did not create require citation in all cases and the citation should be accessible in the context of the image's use.

Citing images is important to give attribution to image creators and acknowledge authorship of the image - this includes giving yourself credit for photographs you've taken! 

Image citations typically include the following information, or as much of it as can be easily determined: 

  1. Creator's name;
  2. Title of the work, as given;
  3. Location of the work (museum, library or owning institution, if known);
  4. Date;
  5. Database collection, if known;
  6. Rights information, if known.

Please see below for guides on how to cite images in MLA, APA, and Chicago Style.