QUESTION IMAGE
Question
which web source citations are formatted correctly? choose three correct answers.
niesen, joan.
“learning to cope:
disabled vet hunt
finds freedom as
paralympic skier.”
sport illustrated.
web. 27 feb. 2014.
“a mighty girl.” n.p.,
n.d. web. 26 feb.
2014.
wolfson, elijah.
“newsweek names
a mars crater.”
newsweek.
newsweek, 28 feb.
- web. 1 mar.
2014.
herman, barbara.
“where’s the fire?”
newsweek.
newsweek, 24 oct.
- web. 25 feb.
2014.
kloc, joe. “kepler
mission finds
hundreds more
planets.” 2 feb.
- web. 25 feb
To determine the correctly formatted web source citations, we analyze each one based on typical citation rules (author, title, publication, date, access date):
- First Citation (Niesen, Joan):
Format: Author, "Article Title," Publication, Web, Access Date.
This follows the structure (author, title, publication, medium, access date) correctly.
- Third Citation (Wolfson, Elijah):
Format: Author, "Article Title," Publication, Publication Date, Web, Access Date.
It includes author, title, publication, publication date, medium, and access date—correct structure.
- Fifth Citation (Kloc, Joe):
Format: Author, "Article Title," Publication Date, Web, Access Date.
While it omits the publication name, the core elements (author, title, date, medium, access date) follow a valid citation structure for a web source (e.g., if the publication is implied or the source is a standalone article).
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- Niesen, Joan. "Learning to Cope: Disabled Vet Hunt Finds Freedom as Paralympic Skier." Sport Illustrated. Web. 27 Feb. 2014.
- Wolfson, Elijah. "Newsweek Names a Mars Crater." Newsweek. Newsweek, 28 Feb. 2014. Web. 1 Mar. 2014.
- Kloc, Joe. "Kepler Mission Finds Hundreds More Planets." 2 Feb. 2014. Web. 25 Feb. 2014.