Hello! I'm Eileen Archer and I'm here at FLY HIGH as Maria Grazia's guest blogger. My post is a
short guide for those who use books as part of their academic pieces of work.
Why should
I use books?
To write
academically and correctly we must make use of the literature available to us.
You must read as much as you possibly can before even starting to write your
academic piece. Take notes of each book you have thought interesting and the
relation between that and your own forthcoming work. Remember to mark the pages
too, so you can come back to ideas later.
Which
books?
When it
comes to using the information from a book that you have absorbed, been
interested in or found highly relevant to your field, you must decide when and
where to use it. If there are two books that have the same idea, choose the one
that clarifies the point better, and cite that one in your own piece of work.
The clearer the idea, the easier it is for you to expand on the point and the
easier it is for the reader to follow.
How do I
use the books correctly?
Knowing how
to use the book correctly and not waste time is a must. It’s so easy to sit
back and read, relax and actually enjoy what you are doing if you like the
subject area. However, the reality is that you’ll feel hemmed in by all the
books you have in front of you, begging to be used. The first thing you should
do is reduce that pile. Choose only the books with distinctly different ideas.
When you have the most important ideas/books in front of you, then work your
way through them, using the ideas and relevantly adding them to your academic
piece of work.
Should I
reference the book?
This is a
question that is par for the course, even though it has a simple answer: If you
are directly quoting (word for word) from a book then it must be included in
your reference pages. If not, you are plagiarising. Simple as that. However,
the trickier question is whether to cite a book you have read as part of your
research. For this, the answer can be simplified: if you have read a book that
has enabled you to write what you are writing or something that has given you
an idea or progressed your work in any way, then it should definitely be cited.
How do I
reference it?
Dealing
with direct quotations from books first: The way you include it both in your
essay and in your references is highly important. Both must correspond. Direct
quotes should be in italics in your actual writing and when it comes to
referencing, depending on the style you are using, you should follow the
handbook you were given, down to the very last letter. The necessary elements
to include, in every style, are: book title, author, date, publisher,
chapter/section cited. Books that have been read and have influenced you must
also be cited in a similar way at the end.
Remember to
do all your referencing throughout your writing journey so as not to waste
hours at the end, and cause yourself a lot of unnecessary frustration.
Guest
Blogger: Eileen Archer is currently a
resident blogger and a chief editor at essayplanet.org and has researched and written on a number of topics
affecting secondary and university students. After obtaining a Masters in
English language she decided to dedicate her time to creative writing as well as
providing assistance to students.
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