History courses at Lawrenceville require students to use Chicago/Turabian Citation Style.
In Chicago/Turabian Style, you will need to create two citations for each source:
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A full bibliographic citation (goes at the end of your paper on the Bibliography page; your sources should be listed in alphabetical order by author)
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A footnote (added at the end of the page where the source is referenced)
Only cite the information that is available to you. If you cannot identify a piece of the template [e.g. an author or date], leave it out rather than making it up.
How to Cite a Harvard Business School (HBS) Case:
BIBLIOGRAPHY FORMAT:
Campasano, Mark, and David Moss. “Battle over a Bank: Defining the Limits of Federal Power Under a New Constitution” HBS N9-716-052. Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing, 2016.
FOOTNOTE FORMAT:
David Moss and Marc Campasano, “Battle over a Bank: Defining the Limits of Federal Power Under a New Constitution,” HBS N9-716-052 (Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing, 2016), p. 16.
For Help with Chicago/Turabian Style:
For additional help with citation, use the libchat feature in this research guide or stop into the library to work with a librarian.
When Should I Cite?
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When using a direct quote
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Paraphrasing an idea from a text
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Summarizing a text
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Using facts, information, and data, anything that is not common knowledge
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When in doubt, cite!
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Cite while you write -- do not leave your citations until the last minute.