Citation Systems
Which is the best?
There
are several distinct conventions authors can use to cite the sources they use
in their research. Individuals often
have very strong beliefs about which convention is best. And professional organizations have issued
lengthy guidelines. Among the best known
and most widely used are those of the American Psychological Association, the
Modern Language Association, and the University of Chicago Press. Some research journals have their own
systems.
Is
one of these better than the others? No,
they are all just fine. They are all
merely conventions. Saying that one is
better than another would be like claiming that driving on the left side of the
road is better than driving on the right.
Both are fine as long as everyone knows and abides by the rules.
There
is only one criterion for excellence in a citation system. If your reader can easily check your sources for accuracy, the system is good. If your reader cannot do so, the system is
bad. Specific format does not matter at all if it meets this
criterion.
But
tastes differ, people have preferences. As
an author of text books and reference works in research methods, I wanted to
know what my readers prefer. So I did
some market research among potential readers—students in research methods
courses in the social sciences and applied disciplines such as nursing, social
work, and education. I prepared two
versions of a short paragraph, one citing sources in parentheses in the text of
the paragraph and the other citing the sources in footnotes or endnotes.
The
results were overwhelming. In the first
group of 47 students surveyed, 42 preferred the endnote system, 5 didn’t care,
and not a single student opted for the in-text citation system. In psychology courses, the in-text citation
system did better, probably because the American Psychological Association uses
an in-text system, and it is a powerful presence in the fields of psychology
and education. But in no group of
respondents did more than 20% ever opt for an in-text system. Readers who offered an explanation said that
in-text citations were “annoying,” that they “got in the way,” and that they “cluttered
the text.”
Convinced
by this market research, I have used footnotes or endnotes for citations
whenever possible.
HERE ARE THE SURVEY INSTRUCTIONS
FOLLOWED BY THE TWO VERSIONS OF THE PARAGRAPH
I would appreciate
your help with the following survey. I
am writing text books and
reference works for
graduate students in research methods, and I would like to learn from potential
readers your preferences about the format of the text.
The survey is
anonymous. You are under no obligation
to participate. If you choose not to
participate just return these pages blank.
Thank you,
W. Paul Vogt
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The passages on the
next page are identical in content, but they differ in form. The first version of the passage includes the
citations in the text. The second
version provides the citations as endnotes.
WHICH DO YOU PREFER?
If you were
consulting a reference book or text book, which of the two passages would you
rather read?
_____Version 1 with
citations in the text
_____Version 2 with
citations as endnotes
_____No preference
If you would be
willing to share the reasons for your preferences, please explain them
below. I would appreciate learning about
them.
Version 1—Citations in Text
While internet surveys are becoming
more common, many scholars (Baker, Curtice & Sparrow, 2002; Schoen &
Fass, 2005; see also Couper, 2000; Dillman, 2000) continue to express
skepticism about their value, especially as concerns sampling bias. On the other hand, several survey experiments
comparing Internet surveying to more traditional modes (Krosnick & Chang,
2001; VanBeselaere, 2002; Alvarez, Sherman & VanBeselaere, 2003; Chang
& Krosnik, 2003; Sanders, Clarke, Stewart, & Whiteley, 2007) have shown
that well-conducted Internet surveys can be as effective as other methods of
sampling and surveying.
Version 2—Citations in Endnotes
While internet surveys are becoming
more common, many scholars[1] continue
to express skepticism about their value, especially as concerns sampling
bias. On the other hand, several survey
experiments comparing Internet surveying to more traditional modes[2] have shown that well-conducted Internet
surveys can be as effective as other methods of sampling and surveying.
[1] Baker,
Curtice & Sparrow, 2002; Schoen
& Fass, 2005. See also Couper,
2000; Dillman, 2000.
[2] Krosnick
& Chang, 2001; VanBeselaere, 2002; Alvarez, Sherman & VanBeselaere,
2003; Chang & Krosnik, 2003;
Sanders, Clarke, Stewart, & Whiteley, 2007.
IF
YOU HAVE A REASON FOR PREFERRING ONE VERSION OR THE OTHER, AND YOU WOULD LIKE
TO SHARE IT, PLEASE POST IT BELOW.
If there are only a few references I don't mind to put the in the text. But with a few, I mean 3 or less per page!
ReplyDeleteIn any other situation - and that would be any academic writing, given you'll have more than 3 references per page - I'd go for footnotes, given it makes the text more readable.
I prefer footnotes over endnotes, because if you do want to see the source, you don't need to go back and forth to the endnotes.
Best,
Dennis Bours
http://www.linkedin.com/in/dpbours/
Dennis,
ReplyDeleteI agree completely. Publishers used to balk at footnotes, but modern typesetting technology makes it no more complicated to put footnotes where they belong. At least Guilford Press, where I've published my most recent work, has no problem with putting footnotes at the foot of the page, where readers usually want them.
Paul
Hi Paul! Call me crazy, but I've been reading academic literature in the social sciences for so long now that I have developed a strong preference for APA in-text citations, and find it a pain to go hunting for endnotes. It's also the only style I've used for writing since high school, and THAT as we know was done with a pen and paper! :-)
ReplyDeleteSheila,
DeleteI agree with you about endnotes, but footnotes, especially, those at the foot of the page, combine the virtues of non-cluttered text with not having to hunt for endnotes.
I grew up on Turabian's (University of Chicago) style, but I've become a polyglot citation speaker--whatever the publisher or journal wants I'll give.
One the thing about the APA style I don't like is replacing names with initials. Seems so impersonal.
Paul
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