List author name (if available) beginning with the last name followed by a comma, the first name and a period. If there is no author name, begin with the company or authority behind the page, such as “Cornell University” or “The National Science Institute.”
Follow the author information with the name of the article or entry title in quotation marks followed by a period.
State the publishing party in italics, such as “Cornell University Library” or “U.S. National Archives” followed with a period.
Follow with the location, “Cornell University” (comma), the year published (period), “Web.”, date accessed and period.
End the bibliography citation by pasting the full URL address enclosed in brackets. Close with a period.
Example:
Tyler, Jane. “The Korean War.” Cornell University Library. Cornell University, 2007. Web. 14 April 2008. <http://www.library.cornell.edu/biss/koreanwarjt>.
Follow the same procedure as outlined in Step 1 of the first section.
List the name of the article or piece in quotation marks ending with a period inside of the quotation marks.
Follow with the publishing source or whoever is responsible for the website and end with a period.
Paste the full URL beginning with "http." Do not enclose in brackets or parenthesis. End with a period.
Finish the citation with the date the website was accessed in parenthesis with the worth “accessed” followed by “month, numerical day, comma and year. Place the period on the outside of the parenthesis.
Example:
The U.S. National Archives. “The Immigration Report.” The U.S. National Archives. http://www.archives.gov/immigrationreport. (accessed May 4, 2010).
Follow the same procedure as outlined in Step 1 of the first section.
Follow the author name with the date of publication listed in parenthesis under the form of “year, comma, month and numerical day”. Example: (2009, July 8). If the date of publication is not available, write “n.d.” inside of the parenthesis. Follow with a period.
List the title of the article or piece in italics followed with a period.
List the date the website was accessed under the form, “Retrieved month, numerical day, comma and year. Follow the year with a comma.
Write the word “from” followed by the full URL of the website accessed. Do not place a comma after “from” or a period at the end.
Example:
Clark, Charles. (2009, July 8). Tackling Modernity. University of New Hampshire Archives. Retrieved March 4, 2010, from http://nha.edu/tacklingmodernity/280/html