18 April 2012

Essay Quote Citation vs Blogging Hyperlinks

As I covered in my previous post, MLA citation is extremely important to avoid plagiarism.  In-text parenthetical citation allows writers to quote information from outside sources in order to support their writing; the source information always goes in a parentheses when not mentioned in the blended sentence.

To refresh your memory, the following is an example of a dropped quote vs. a blended quote using in-text parenthetical citation.

  • Dropped
    • "He spoke to us in German and then left us behind" (Donaldson 45).


  • Blended
    • "I never thought of myself as proud," says Jennings in his book Pushing the Limits of Political Journalism (107).
When blogging, in-text parenthetical citation is not necessary. Instead, bloggers hyperlink the credited information to the original source.

For example:

I found an article that uses accurate hyperlinking and blending from ReadWriteWeb: This article is about Read It Later's new app Pocket, which allows users to save pages to read later:
Pocket founder Nate Weiner posted his rationale for making his app free. He has two essential arguments.
The first is that "it is hard to ask most people to pay for something they don't understand." 
Here is another example from the blog Ars Technica about the CISPA legislation.  (CISPA is the government's new legislation about controlling Internet privacy after SOPA was ultimately shut down by opposition on the Internet.)
The controversy over the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act intensified on Tuesday when a White House spokeswoman warned Congress not to pass "cybersecurity" legislation without "robust safeguards to preserve the privacy and civil liberties of our citizens." While the statement by National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden did not mention CISPA specifically, there was little doubt which legislation she was talking about.
Finally, here is a third example on theguardian that is also discussing the overwhelming fight about SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) concerning Internet privacy:
After the act was shelved, Cary Sherman, chief executive of the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), which represents music labels, wrote a blistering article in the New York Times attacking Wikipedia and Google for spreading misinformation in order to cause a "digital tsunami" that "raised questions about how the democratic process functions in the digital age".

Notice that each example introduces the credibility of the author, quoted information identified by the quotation marks, and a hyperlink to the original statement.  These three items are extremely important for blending quotations with correct citation in a blog.

Blending quotations is exactly the same when written in an essay.  The only difference is using parenthetical citation instead of hyperlinks when writing a research paper.

Remember, a quote in research for citation is not what someone "says."  That is dialogue.
A quote for research citation is not a famous statement or phrase by someone.  Yes, that is considered a quote, but it is not what one looks for when using to support your writing.

Again, keep the tips covered in this post in mind when you are writing your next blog post and/or your research paper.  Plagiarism is no joke.

38 comments:

  1. I did not know all of this stuff.

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  2. Now that I look at this, I think I may have done my blog post wrong.

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  3. Your blogs are a lot better than mine.

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  4. I think that my quote is wrong on my blog post!!!!!

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  5. i didn't know how to do most of this stuff

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  6. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  7. I didn't know all that but if we did it wrong how can we go back and correct it?

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  8. I think I done mine wrong.

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  9. These are things that I will surely put on my next blog.

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  10. Done Reading this (= Maybe I didn't do this the way you wanted.

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  11. Well i'm not sure if my quote is right

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  12. Ok I get it now, I think I messed up on mine.

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  13. I think I did mine right...

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  14. Now that I know that I can do my post right.

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  15. Reading this lets me know that I did some things wrong, I will make sure to fix it and hopefully it will be right the second time.

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  16. Thanks for the example.

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  17. I believe that my quote is correct

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  18. I got it right on my blog.

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  19. According to this blog, I think I done both of my posts correctly. I just hope I don't mess up.

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  20. I'm not 100 percent sure if mine is correct or not but I believe so.

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  21. That's a lot of information I didn't even know. I might have done my wrong.

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  22. Now I know how to do this correctly and not take away the credit.

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  23. This helps show me what I was doing wrong.

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  24. This helps remarkably. Thank you for this post. I think my quote is done wrong.

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  25. I guess I did mine correctly. I used the person's name and then put what she said in quotations. Good.

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  26. I've read your blog post and will referrer to it as I write my next and following posts.

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  27. Glad that you posted that because I believe that mine may be me semi- correct if you know what I mean!

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  28. I know that a blog uses hyperlinks instead of parenthetical citation, but I'm not sure I did that in my post. I'll check. Thanks!

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  29. I will make sure that mine is right and use this information for my following posts to make sure everything is correct.

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  30. Basically whoever you are using is in the sentence the just link the website to that name.

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  31. Thank you, I believe my quote blending needs some work.

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  32. Thanks for breaking it down for us.

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  33. Okay Now I Know what i'm doing :-)

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