List the title of the page you are referencing in quotation marks.
"Youth Risk Behavior Survey."
List the name of the website in italics.
FloridaCHARTS.com.
List the name of the publisher, followed by a comma.
Florida Department of Health,
If no publisher name is given, use "n.p."
List the date of publication, followed by a period.
20 Apr. 2009.
If no date is listed, use "n.d."
List the medium of publication, followed by a period. For online sources, this should appear as follows:
Web.
List the date on which you accessed the information, followed by a period.
29 Jul. 2010.
List the URL in brackets.
<www.floridacharts.com/health/doh/surveyyouth>
MLA style no longer requires the use of URLs, so this step is optional unless specifically requested by your professor.
Ensure that the finished citation appears in the following format:
"Youth Risk Behavior Survey." FloridaCHARTS.com. 20 Apr. 2009. Web. 29 Jul. 2010.
<www.floridacharts.com/health/doh/surveyyouth>
List the author or authoring organization. If the author is a person, use the following format:
Smith, L.
If the author is an organization, simply use the name of the organization followed by a period.
Florida Department of Health.
List the date of publication in parentheses.
(2009, April 20).
Use n.d. if no date is given.
(n.d.)
List the title of document or webpage. Only the first letter of the title and any proper nouns should be capitalized. For example:
Youth risk behavior survey.
List the URL in the following format:
Retrieved from www.floridacharts.com/health/doh/surveyyouth/
Ensure that the finished citation appears in the following format:
Florida Department of Health. (2009, April 20). Youth risk behavior survey. Retrieved from www.floridacharts.com/health/doh/surveyyouth/