Indirect Cited Reference Searching (search for the specific author and title, than check who has cited)
- ScienceDirect.
- SciFinder Scholar’s Chemical Abstracts.
- Emerald.
- Sage Journals Online.
- PubMed.
- JSTOR.
Hereof, how can I get references online?
Include information in the following order:
- author (the person or organisation responsible for the site)
- year (date created or last updated)
- name of sponsor of site (if available)
- accessed day month year (the date you viewed the site)
- URL or Internet address (between pointed brackets).
- Look for publications from a professional organization.
- Use databases such as JSTOR that contain only scholarly sources.
- Use databases such as Academic Search Complete or other EBSCO databases that allow you to choose “peer-reviewed journals”.
Consequently, how do I find references for a thesis?
In full text databases such as Project Muse and JStor search for an author or a specific work by putting parentheses around the name or title. Examples: “Karl Marx” or “Critique of Pure Reason” Using parentheses around titles of works will also give you better results when searching for references in other databases.
How do you cite a reference example?
Using In-text Citation
APA in-text citation style uses the author’s last name and the year of publication, for example: (Field, 2005). For direct quotations, include the page number as well, for example: (Field, 2005, p. 14).
How do you put references correctly?
References should be written in-text (as parantheses), at the bottom of the page (as footnotes) or as endnotes in a seperate notes section at the end of a chapter or at the end of the thesis.