Click on the purple circles labeled with an 'i' for a pop-up note on how to format your paper in MLA format. Also see longer sample paper in PDF below.
Below are the plain-text notes for the Sample Paper in MLA Format.
MLA format requires a header on the top right corner of each page of the paper. The header includes the student's last name & page number.
The MLA heading for your paper should include your name, your instructor's name, the course, and the date (Day Month Year) – each on a separate line. This information should not be placed in header of Word document but on the first four lines of your document.
The title of the essay should be centered following the name and course information and before the essay begins.
When you are citing a source that has two authors, place both of the author's last names in the parenthetical citation with the word and.
For example: Police interrogation tactics can lead to false confessions, and young people with intellectual disabilities are especially vulnerable to this tactic (LaVigne and Miles).
When citing a source in-text without an author, you place the title of the article or part of the title if it is a long title in quotation marks within the in-text citation.
For example: In part because of the widespread evidence that his confession was false, Brendan Dassey’s case has been taken up by several innocence projects, including one at the Northwestern Pritzker School of Law (“Brendan Dassey”).
Titles of Books, Magazines, and Websites are italicized. "Titles of Articles" or "Titles of Parts" are placed within quotation marks. The same format you use in the works cited entry is used for titles within the paper.
For example: In the Berkeley Journal of International Law, Megan Annitto shared evidence from an expert on false confession and police questioning tactics who testified in Dassey’s defense.
If you use the author's name in the sentence, you should not include the author's last name in the in-text citation. In this case, you will simply place the page ‘number(s)’ and add ‘or paragraph numbers if applicable' within the in-text citation if the source has page numbers.
The author's name appears in the sentence, which means it should not be placed in the in-text citation. However, you must still include the page #.
For example: In the Berkeley Journal of International Law, Megan Annitto shared evidence from an expert on false confession and police questioning tactics who testified in Dassey’s defense. The expert testified that the confession was coerced, citing a lot of inaccuracies in the statement and calling it “highly contaminated” (194).
If your source only has one author, you should place the author's last name in the parenthesis. In this example, there are not page numbers.
For example: Unfortunately, this is too common an occurrence. In a similar scenario, a psychologist testified that 17-year-old Jesse Misskelley “[gave] police a ‘false statement’ when he could ‘no longer stand the strain of the interrogation’” (Linder).
FYI: If your instructor requires students to count and add paragraphs when there are no page numbers, the Linder example would look like (Linder, pars.8 - 10).
An in-text citation if you have 3 or more authors (et al.) and odd page numbers (e1314) will use last name of first author and then follow with et al. and the page number.
For example: The National Registry of Exonerations reported in 2020 that “of over 3000 exonerations, estimates… suggest that 12% of all known wrongful convictions involved a false confession” (Catlin et al. e1314).
This is an example of a basic in-text citation. It includes the author's last name and the page numbers within the parenthesis.
For example: Dassey’s lawyer failed to defend him adequately against his false confession (Annitto 190-191).
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