Skip to Main Content

Algorithms, AI, and First-Year Academic Skills

When to Cite Sources

Just as important as knowing how to cite your sources is knowing when to cite your sources.

This guide from Princeton University is an excellent overview.

  • Cite when you use a direct quotation
  • Cite when you paraphrase
  • Cite when you summarize a source's ideas
  • Cite when you include facts, information, or data
  • Cite supplementary information that you might not be able to include in the body of your paper

(Princeton University. Academic Integrity at Princeton University, 2011. http://www.princeton.edu/pr/pub/integrity/pages/cite/)

Why to Cite: Academic Integrity at Dominican

Academic Integrity Policy
Students of the university must conduct themselves in accordance with the highest standards of academic honesty and integrity.  Failure to maintain academic integrity will not be tolerated. The following definitions are provided for understanding and clarity.

Definitions of Plagiarism, Cheating, and Academic Dishonesty
Student plagiarism is the presentation of the writing or thinking of another as the student’s own. In written or oral work a student may make fair use of quotations, ideas, images, etc., that appear in others’ work only if the student gives appropriate credit to the original authors, thinkers, owners, or creators of that work. This includes material found on the internet and in electronic databases.

Cheating entails the use of unauthorized or prohibited aids in accomplishing assigned academic tasks. Obtaining unauthorized help on examinations, using prohibited notes on closed-note examinations, and depending on others for the writing of essays or the creation of other assigned work are all forms of cheating.

Academic dishonesty may also include other acts intended to misrepresent the authorship of academic work or to undermine the integrity of the classroom or of grades assigned for academic work. Deliberate acts threatening the integrity of library materials or the smooth operation of laboratories are among possible acts of academic dishonesty.

See the Undergraduate Bulletin or specific Graduate School policies for more information.

Rebecca Crown Library Catalog Citation Feature

Rebecca Crown Library's Citation Feature

If you are trying to cite a book you found in the library's catalog, there is a citation feature that will cite the book in MLA, APA, Chicago/Turabian, or Harvard Style. The citations may not be correct. Please review and adjust the citations using this guide. 

This will pull up the citations styles underneath: