Endnotes
This is another method of annotating your quotes/statements you are
using from other people. Here's how you do it:
Step I: After each quote put a number in parenthesis. Your first
quote will be followed by (1), your second by (2), your third by (3) and
so on.
Step II: Bibliography - After your document, include a bibliography
page.
-
Title the page "Works Cited"
-
For every quote you will have a number. If you have 24 quotes, this page
will have 24 numbers. Next to each quote write down the source information
as mentioned before (How
to footnote?) Be sure to include the page number
-
If one of your quotes is from a source already mentioned, you need to simply
mention the last name of the author and the page number.
-
If one of your quotes comes from the source directly mentioned previously
(confusing?), write down (Ibid, 42)
-
-
Is this still confusing? Look at the example below:
-
-
-
Works Cited
-
-
1. Frye, Northrup. Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays. Princeton:
-
Princeton UP, 1957, p. 54
-
2. Gesell, Arnold, and Frances L. Ing. Child Development: An
-
Introduction to the Study of Human Growth. New
-
York: Macmillan, 1960, p. 36.
-
3. Ibid, 4. This means quote # 3 came from the
Gesell book also, but page 4
-
4. Krutch, Joseph Wood. "What the Year 2000 Won't Be Like."
-
Finding a Voice. Ed. Jim W. Corder. Glenview: Scott
-
Foresman, 1973. 32.
-
5. Frye, 58. This means quote #5 came from the
same Frye book listed above. I can't use Ibid, because it doesn't directly
follow the Frye entry
-
6. Flanigan, Beverly Olson. "Peer Tutoring and Second Language
-
Acquisition in the Elementary School." Applied
-
Linguistics 12 (1991): 44. Notice how the last
number is the page entry. Unless your quote is exceptionally long, this
should be a single number
-
Still confused? Ask me during lunch or break, or
you may use the format described in The Write Connection.