This alternative involves a numbered list of bibliographic references.
The first reference to a work in the numbered list contains full details (except in a book with a main bibliography at the end, in which case a shortened note is required), and later notes are as brief as possible. A numbered bibliographic entry would look like this:
- Craven, Mary Louise. “Chinese-Speaking University-Level ESL Students’ Changes to Essay Drafts.” Paper presented at TESL Conference, Toronto, November 1988.
Then, within the body of the text, the writer merely cites the name of the author of each source work, along with a key number in parentheses on the same line:
As Craven (1) has demonstrated, there is no evidence that extensive feedback played a more significant role in improving students’ writing.
The advantage of the author-number system is that footnotes are required only for comments by the writer, examples and allusions.
The inherent difficulty is that the writer must keep a running list of source works and appropriate page numbers at the first draft stage in order to ensure that each work is assigned the same number in every pertinent note reference.
Copyright notice for Writing Tips Plus
© His Majesty the King in Right of Canada, represented by the Minister of Public Services and Procurement
A tool created and made available online by the Translation Bureau, Public Services and Procurement Canada
Search by related themes
Want to learn more about a theme discussed on this page? Click on a link below to see all the pages on the Language Portal of Canada that relate to the theme you selected. The search results will be displayed in Language Navigator.
Related links
- Writing Tips Plus (home page)
- Writing tools
- Language Navigator (for fast access to language tips)
- TERMIUM Plus®