What is the difference between in-text citations, footnotes and endnotes?
In-text citations, footnotes and endnotes refer readers to exact page(s) of a source.In-text citation is given within the body of an assignment to any ideas directly quoted or copied, any ideas adapted from an original source and any original diagrams or pictures, or major ideas paraphrased to help explain a concept.Footnotes and endnotes are two other ways of acknowledging the sources of any material quoted, summarised or paraphrased on any page of a submitted work. Footnotes provide the information about the source of each numbered reference at the bottom of each page of the text. Endnotes provide this information in a list at the end of a piece of work.
In-text citations, footnotes and endnotes refer readers to exact page(s) of a source. In-text citation is given within the body of an assignment to any ideas directly quoted or copied, any ideas adapted from an original source and any original diagrams or pictures, or major ideas paraphrased to help explain a concept. Footnotes and endnotes are two other ways of acknowledging the sources of any material quoted, summarised or paraphrased on any page of a submitted work. Footnotes provide the information about the source of each numbered reference at the bottom of each page of the text. Endnotes provide this information in a list at the end of a piece of work.