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Chicago 18th (B) Author-Date

University lectures, theses and dissertations

In-text citation

Format

(Lecturer Surname Year)

Example

(Gerber 2012)

(Smith 2021)

Reference list

Format

Lecturer Surname, First Name. Year. “Title of Lecture: Subtitle.” Unit Code: Title of Unit. Lecture, University Name, Location, Month DD. URL.

Example

Gerber, Leah. 2012. “Translation/Transnation: Lecture 3.” APG5555: Translation Studies. Lecture, Monash University, Caulfield VIC, May 1. https://echo360.org.au/lesson/G_4fc1005c-0815-63e0-91b6-abbecf_90ad7995-7df3-4bed-baf4-96df922b5e5f_2012-0T11:58:00.000/classroom#sortDirection=desc.

Smith, Mark. 2021. "Baroque Art: Week 4." AHT1111: Art History and Theory. Lecture, Monash University, Caulfield VIC, July 15. https://learning.monash.edu/course/view.php?id=20480.

Tips

  • References to university lecture recordings and presentation slides follow similar patterns to other audiovisual material and presentations.

In-text citation

Format

(Author Last Name Year of Award, Pages)

Example

(Johnson 2007, 60–63)

(Vedrashko 2006)

Reference list

Format

Author Surname, First Name. Year of Award. “Title of Thesis: Subtitle.” Thesis type, University Name. Database name (Document identifier) or URL.

Example

Johnson, Shakela Carion. 2007. “An Examination of the Social Characteristics and Beliefs of Delinquent and Non-Delinquent Youth.” PhD thesis, Auburn University. ProQuest (AAI3270975).

Vedrashko, Ilya. 2006. “Advertising in Computer Games.” Master’s thesis, MIT. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/39144.


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