Schmal, J.P. (2004) ‘The Rise of the Aztec Empire’ [online] http://www.houstonculture.org/mexico/aztecs.html (Accessed 27th November 2007)
The above example has the author's name - it the website doesn't list an author, replace with 'Anon'. Similarly if no date of publishing or date the site was last updated is given, put 'unknown date' in the brackets. Always put the date(s) you accessed the site in brackets at the end, and [online] after the site heading. Note that it is in ' ' , and not in italics as a book title would be. One piece of advice I would give when citing websites, is to look into authorship, sponsorship etc for bias - and, if no authors, dates, contact details etc are given, think about how reliable the information is. Apply the same criteria to your analysis of websites as you would to books, journals, articles, newspapers etc.
2007-12-03 20:04:44
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answer #2
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answered by Heaven Leigh 4
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It is the same as a traditional Bibliography only you site the website and quote the link.
Here are a few examples relating to the Hobbit:
Wikepedia.org: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bilbo_Baggins
Abitors - The Hobbit: http://www.berghuis.co.nz/abiator/unit/hobbit/ch/ch3.html
Spark Notes.com: http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/hobbit/
To keep the lines clearly separated you may wish to use 3 columns - leave the middle empty for balance in spacing. Good Luck!
2007-12-03 20:00:59
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answer #3
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answered by Walking on Sunshine 7
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