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When To Cite (And When Not To)

You’ll never be accused of plagiarism if you know both when to cite and the few times you don’t have to.

Most of us already know it’s important to cite when we use other peoples ideas, words or data. But there are so many different ways that we use research papers when we’re writing assignments that it’s not always that straightforward.

In fact, not everything needs a citation, so here’s a full guide on when to cite and when not to…to make citing and referencing at university less confusing.

You can also watch my video on when to cite (and when not to) here:

When You Do Need To Cite

Most of our writing and images will need citations, and that’s because at university we rarely come up with new things. More often than not we’re just writing about what others have already found.

Follow these citation rules, and you’ll protect yourself from plagiarism while keeping your writing clear and professional. You can also read my complete guide on academic writing here.

1. Using Someone Else’s Data

If you use data that comes from another study, you have to reference it every time you use it. This is one of the most common citation situations in reports, literature reviews, and essays.

  • Cite it in your text when you describe or discuss the data.
  • Cite it again in the figure caption if you turn that data into a graph.
  • Cite it in the table caption if you display it in a table.

One study can end up being cited multiple times throughout your assignment, which is completely normal. If you have a look at most journal articles (or research papers) they repeat the same citations throughout their text and captions too.

What counts as “data”?

“Data” are not just numbers – yes, I know that’s what you’re thinking, but it’s more than that: Data are any:

  • Numerical results: re.g., ainfall totals, test scores, population sizes.
  • Experimental findings: e.g., lab measurements, chemical concentrations, gene sequences.
  • Observational data: e.g., survey responses, interview transcripts, field notes.
  • Statistical outputs: e.g., regression results, charts, or tables from published studies.

2. Paraphrasing or Summarizing

When you rewrite someone else’s words into your own, you need to cite the original source. Even if the sentence is completely different, the idea isn’t yours. So, ultimately we’re really citing someone else’s idea, and not just how they phrased it in text.

This is the most common form of citation in essays and literature reviews. They’re important because it shows that you’ve understood the material and can explain it in your own words. So, it’s a good citation to have.

3. Direct Quotes, Images, and Videos

When you copy the exact words from a source, you must give full credit. That probably seems obvious, but this also applies to visuals like images, graphs, and videos (because they are ‘direct’, or unaltered).

The rules are simple:

  • Use quotation marks around copied text.
  • Add the citation immediately after the quote.
  • Include a page number if your referencing style (e.g., APA, Chicago) requires it.
  • For images, graphs, or videos, provide the full reference in the caption as well as the reference list.

It’s the exact same as if you were stiching someone’s content on Instagram, you would always tag the person (otherwise you would be ripping off their content).

Keep direct quotes short and rarely use them. Most of your assignment should be in your own words.

I know it can be tempting to just whack an entire sentence in from a paper and then put quotation marks around it and add a citation. It seems easier than bothering to paraphase it. But to give you an idea, I probably only used direct quote two or three times, in my entire undergrad.

4. Using Someone Else’s Method

If you use someone else’s method or technique for your study then you need to cite them. Even if you change a method slightly (e.g., you use the same first three steps, but change the last one), you still need to credit where it came from. This is common in most research reports, lab work, or dissertations.

In fact, in some papers you might read “completed following the method of XYZ”, and there would be almost no other method details.

Here are the citation rules to follow in this situation:

  • Cite the original source of the method.
  • If you made changes, explain what you changed (e.g., adjusted the sample size, swapped a material, shortened the timeframe).
  • Always make it clear that the method is based on someone else’s work, not fully your own.

When You Don’t Need To Cite

There’s only a couple of times that we don’t need to cite, but they’re just as important:

1. Accepted or General Knowledge

If something is considered universally accepted, then you don’t need a reference. These are facts that are so well known, they belong to everyone (or rather, they don’t belong to any one person).

Examples of general knowledge you don’t need to cite:

  • The Earth is round.
  • World War II ended in 1945.

These are basic facts that don’t “belong” to any one researcher or study, so no citation is needed. If you ever tried to find the original person to say these things you would be looking for a long time!

What’s not general knowledge and would need citations:

  • Climate change is increasing the frequency of heatwaves in Australia”.
    This is based on research. Even though you might have read it many times, it still needs a reference.
  • Exercise improves mental health”.
    This feels “obvious,” but it’s only obvious because lots of studies have shown this same result. You must cite one of them.

2. Your Own Work

If the material you’re writing about comes directly from you, then there’s no need to cite anyone else. This includes your own data (from experiments, surveys, or studies etc), your own experiences (like in reflective or narrative essays), and your own images (photos, graphs, or diagrams you created).

Think about it, if someone else didn’t make or produce it, then you don’t need a citation.

The only exception to this is if you’re re-using your own material. Then you would need to cite yourself. For example, if you reused an image from a previous assignment in a new one.

Re-using your own work without citing yourself is called self-plagiarism, and universities take it just as seriously as plagiarizing someone else’s work.

And when in doubt, follow my golden citation rule…. if you didn’t write it, cite it (yes, I know…it rhymes).

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