In-text and Reference
Journal Article
Books
According to APA style, you must have a Reference page at the end of your research paper. All entries in the Reference page must correspond to the works cited within your main text, and sorted alphabetically. These citations change based on the type of source.
Website
+ info
+ info
+ info
Audiovisual Media
More APA Guidelines
Photos
+ info
+ info
+ info
Adapted from APAStyle.APA.org
Unknown Author
When a source has no known author, use a shortened title of the work instead of an author name. Place the title in quotation marks if it's a short work (such as an article) or italicize it if it's a longer work (e.g. plays, books, television shows, entire Web sites) and provide a page number.
Work Cited Format: Periodicals
Periodicals (e.g. magazines, newspapers, and scholarly journals) all have different formats.
Newspaper and Magazine Reviews Anonymous Articles
How are we going to evaluate?
We are in the era of the explosion of digital information. This causes our way of obtaining information to have changed, we have transitioned from traditional reading to a cognitive strategy based on navigation.
Digitalbeings
Socialbeings
Beings narratives
We are visual beings
We avoid being part of the content saturation in the digital world.
We need to interact with each other. We learn collaboratively.
We teach through stories. They entertain us and help us stay focused.
We are able to understand images from millions of years ago, even from other cultures.
Reference Citation: Website
Author, A. A. OR Organization (Full date, Year, Month Day). Title of work: Capital to start subtitle. Website Name. URL
In-text Citation
(Author Last or Organization, Year)
Variations
Examples
Multiple Authors
For a source with three or fewer authors, list the authors' last names in the text or in the parenthetical citation:
For example: Smith, Yang, and Moore argue that tougher gun control is not needed in the United States (76). The authors state "Tighter gun control in the United States erodes S econd Amendment rights" (Smith, Yang, and Moore 76).
For a source with more than three authors, use the work's bibliographic information as a guide for your citation. Provide the first author's last name followed by et al. or list all the last names.
For example: Jones et al. counter Smith, Yang, and Moore's argument by noting that the current spike in gun violence in America compels law makers to adjust gun laws (4). Legal experts counter Smith, Yang, and Moore's argument by noting that the current spike in gun violence in America compels law makers to adjust gun laws (Jones et al. 4).
Journal Article Reference Citation:
Author Last Name, Author Initials & Author Last, B. B. (Year). Title of the article. Name of the Journal. Vol.(Issue), Page number(s) URL or DOI if available
In-text Citation
(Author Last & Author Last, Year) OR Last name and Last name (Year) - *if more than three authors are listed, use: (First Author Last Name et al., Year)
Examples
Variations
Work Cited Format: Books
Author Last Name, First name. Title of Book. City of Publication: Publisher, Year of Publication. Medium of Publication.
Variations:
Entire Website Page on a Website Image Article
Basic Format
MLA format follows the author-page method of in-text citation. This means that the author's last name and the page number(s) from which the quotation or paraphrase is taken must appear in the text, and a complete reference should appear on your Works Cited page.
The author's name may appear either in the sentence itself or in parentheses following the quotation or paraphrase, but the page number(s) should always appear in the parentheses, not in the text of your sentence.
For example: Wordsworth stated that Romantic poetry was marked by a "spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings" (263). Romantic poetry is characterized by the "spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings" (Wordsworth 263).
Interesting resources
Showing enthusiasm, smiling, and maintaining eye contact with the rest of the people in the classroom can be your best allies when it comes to presenting content and creating motivating learning experiences. With that and interactive content to match, no class will be able to resist you!
Resource 1
Resource 2
Resource 3
Resource 4
Resource 6
Resource 5
How are we going to learn?
Show enthusiasm, give a smile and maintain eye contact with the rest of the people in the classroom can be your best allies when it comes to presenting content and creating motivating learning experiences. With that and some interactive content up to par, no class will resist you!
- Improve understanding about any topic.
- Engage the entire class...
- And keep their attention until the end.
- Include visually appropriate elements to the topic.
- Display data and information visually.
- Use interactivity to delve into concepts.
Reference Citation: Books
Author, A. A. (Year of publication). Title of work: Capital to start subtitle. (edition). Publisher Name. DOI (if available)
In-text Citation
(Author Last, Year)
Variations
Examples
Name Last Name
Write a subtitle that provides further information
With Genially templates you can include visual resources to engage the class from minute one. You can also highlight key content to facilitate understanding and even embed external content that surprises and provides more context to the topic: videos, photos, audios... Whatever you want!
Multiple sources
Multiple citations To cite multiple sources in the same parenthetical reference, separate the citations by a semicolon: . . . as has been discussed elsewhere (Burke 3; Dewey 21).
For example: . . . as has been discussed elsewhere (Burke 3; Dewey 21).
What are we going to need?
What you are reading: interactivity and animation can make even the most boring content become something fun. At Genially, we also create our designs to facilitate understanding and learning, so that you level up with interactivity and turn your content into something that adds value and engages.
Did you know that Genially allows you to share your creation directly, without the need for downloads? Ready for students to view it on any device and learn from anywhere.
- Generate learning experiences with your content.
- Measure results and experiment.
- Interactivity + animation = motivation.
- Activate and surprise the class.
- Make your class think and learn.
- It is neat, hierarchical, and structured.
What are we going to learn?
Do you need more reasons to use dynamic content in class? Well: 90% of the information we assimilate comes to us through sight and, moreover, we retain 42% more information when the content moves.
The interactive visual communication step by step:
- Plan the structure of your content.
- Give visual weight to key points and primary ones.
- Define secondary messages with interactivity.
- Establish a flow through the content.
- Measure the results.
APA Citation
Alia Faubert
Created on October 15, 2025
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Transcript
In-text and Reference
Journal Article
Books
According to APA style, you must have a Reference page at the end of your research paper. All entries in the Reference page must correspond to the works cited within your main text, and sorted alphabetically. These citations change based on the type of source.
Website
+ info
+ info
+ info
Audiovisual Media
More APA Guidelines
Photos
+ info
+ info
+ info
Adapted from APAStyle.APA.org
Unknown Author
When a source has no known author, use a shortened title of the work instead of an author name. Place the title in quotation marks if it's a short work (such as an article) or italicize it if it's a longer work (e.g. plays, books, television shows, entire Web sites) and provide a page number.
Work Cited Format: Periodicals
Periodicals (e.g. magazines, newspapers, and scholarly journals) all have different formats.
Newspaper and Magazine Reviews Anonymous Articles
How are we going to evaluate?
We are in the era of the explosion of digital information. This causes our way of obtaining information to have changed, we have transitioned from traditional reading to a cognitive strategy based on navigation.
Digitalbeings
Socialbeings
Beings narratives
We are visual beings
We avoid being part of the content saturation in the digital world.
We need to interact with each other. We learn collaboratively.
We teach through stories. They entertain us and help us stay focused.
We are able to understand images from millions of years ago, even from other cultures.
Reference Citation: Website
Author, A. A. OR Organization (Full date, Year, Month Day). Title of work: Capital to start subtitle. Website Name. URL
In-text Citation
(Author Last or Organization, Year)
Variations
Examples
Multiple Authors
For a source with three or fewer authors, list the authors' last names in the text or in the parenthetical citation:
For example: Smith, Yang, and Moore argue that tougher gun control is not needed in the United States (76). The authors state "Tighter gun control in the United States erodes S econd Amendment rights" (Smith, Yang, and Moore 76).
For a source with more than three authors, use the work's bibliographic information as a guide for your citation. Provide the first author's last name followed by et al. or list all the last names.
For example: Jones et al. counter Smith, Yang, and Moore's argument by noting that the current spike in gun violence in America compels law makers to adjust gun laws (4). Legal experts counter Smith, Yang, and Moore's argument by noting that the current spike in gun violence in America compels law makers to adjust gun laws (Jones et al. 4).
Journal Article Reference Citation:
Author Last Name, Author Initials & Author Last, B. B. (Year). Title of the article. Name of the Journal. Vol.(Issue), Page number(s) URL or DOI if available
In-text Citation
(Author Last & Author Last, Year) OR Last name and Last name (Year)- *if more than three authors are listed, use: (First Author Last Name et al., Year)
Examples
Variations
Work Cited Format: Books
Author Last Name, First name. Title of Book. City of Publication: Publisher, Year of Publication. Medium of Publication.
Variations:
Entire Website Page on a Website Image Article
Basic Format
MLA format follows the author-page method of in-text citation. This means that the author's last name and the page number(s) from which the quotation or paraphrase is taken must appear in the text, and a complete reference should appear on your Works Cited page.
The author's name may appear either in the sentence itself or in parentheses following the quotation or paraphrase, but the page number(s) should always appear in the parentheses, not in the text of your sentence.
For example: Wordsworth stated that Romantic poetry was marked by a "spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings" (263). Romantic poetry is characterized by the "spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings" (Wordsworth 263).
Interesting resources
Showing enthusiasm, smiling, and maintaining eye contact with the rest of the people in the classroom can be your best allies when it comes to presenting content and creating motivating learning experiences. With that and interactive content to match, no class will be able to resist you!
Resource 1
Resource 2
Resource 3
Resource 4
Resource 6
Resource 5
How are we going to learn?
Show enthusiasm, give a smile and maintain eye contact with the rest of the people in the classroom can be your best allies when it comes to presenting content and creating motivating learning experiences. With that and some interactive content up to par, no class will resist you!
Reference Citation: Books
Author, A. A. (Year of publication). Title of work: Capital to start subtitle. (edition). Publisher Name. DOI (if available)
In-text Citation
(Author Last, Year)
Variations
Examples
Name Last Name
Write a subtitle that provides further information
With Genially templates you can include visual resources to engage the class from minute one. You can also highlight key content to facilitate understanding and even embed external content that surprises and provides more context to the topic: videos, photos, audios... Whatever you want!
Multiple sources
Multiple citations To cite multiple sources in the same parenthetical reference, separate the citations by a semicolon: . . . as has been discussed elsewhere (Burke 3; Dewey 21).
For example: . . . as has been discussed elsewhere (Burke 3; Dewey 21).
What are we going to need?
What you are reading: interactivity and animation can make even the most boring content become something fun. At Genially, we also create our designs to facilitate understanding and learning, so that you level up with interactivity and turn your content into something that adds value and engages.
Did you know that Genially allows you to share your creation directly, without the need for downloads? Ready for students to view it on any device and learn from anywhere.
What are we going to learn?
Do you need more reasons to use dynamic content in class? Well: 90% of the information we assimilate comes to us through sight and, moreover, we retain 42% more information when the content moves.
The interactive visual communication step by step: