Create a new page at the end of your paper with the words "Works Cited" listed centered on the top of the page.
Type all sources used in your paper in the proper format. For example, if you are citing a journal article you would first type the last name of the author, a comma, her first name and a period. Type the name of the article in quotation marks (capitalizing all important words) and a period. Type the name of the journal in italics, then type a period. Type the volume number, a period, the issue number and the year the article was written in parentheses. Type a semi-colon, the page numbers where the article can be found, a period, "Print" and a period. The citation should look like this: Smith, Susan. "Trial Coverage Today." Modern Trials. 91.2 (2001): 10-23. Print.
Place the citations in alphabetical order.
Set the page to be double-spaced and the second line of each citation should be indented.
Create a new page at the end of your paper with "References" listed on the top of the page and centered.
Type all sources used in your paper in the proper format. For example, if you are citing a journal article you would first type the last name of the author of the article, a comma, his first initial and a period. Then type the year the article was published in parentheses followed by a period. Type the title of the article (only capitalizing the first word) and a period. Type the name of the journal where the article has been found (in italics) followed by a comma. Type the volume number (in italics), the issue number in parentheses, a comma, the page numbers where the article can be found and a period. The citation will look like this: Smith, S. (2001). Trial coverage today. Modern Trials, 91(2), 10-23.
Place the citations in alphabetical order.
Set the page to be double-spaced with the second line of each citation indented.