Write an article based on this "Treat essays in books similarly to journal articles in your reference list citation. Note whether a dissertation is unpublished if citing it. Put the organization's name first if that's the author. Add the URL at the end of the citation for a webpage. Add the in-text citation to the sentence you're citing."

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While you won't include all the same information, an essay in a book is similar. Use the author's name, the date, and the essay title, then add the name of the book. You'll use "In" with the editors names before the title, followed by a comma and the title. Then you'll add the location and publisher.  So an essay entry would look like this: Braxton, N. K. (2011). Finding the right playing field. In J. L. Washington and M. P. Hicks (Eds.), AstroTurf versus real grass: The dilemma (55-74). Miami, OK: Small Town Press.  You need the "Eds." in parentheses to tell the viewer that those are the editors. The numbers in the parentheses after the title (in italics) are the page numbers of the essay in the book. Treat it like a book, mostly, but add "Unpublished doctoral dissertation" after the title in parentheses if it's unpublished. Then put the name of the institution, a comma, and the location.  So a basic entry would look like this: Harbor, L. R. (2010). Astroturf and the playing field (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). University of Oregon, Eugene, OR.  If it's published, use "Doctoral dissertation," a period, then "Retrieved from" and the database. You'll also need the accession or order number in parentheses, like this: Price, H. F. (2012). Why AstroTurf should be outlawed (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from Sports Central Database. (244412321) Some pamphlets and informative documents are authored by organizations or corporations. Instead of an individual, use the organization's name in place of the author's name. If it has an individual author, put it at the end, after the location.  Your citation might look like this: The Society for the Best Playing Fields. (2009).Data on injuries across different types of fields. Eugene, OR: G. H. Roberts.  Do the same for a government document, but add any publication numbers after the title in parentheses, and use the publisher at the end: National Institute of Sports. (2001). Study of various types of turf for playing fields (DHHS Publication No. ADM 553234-131). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. If you're using a report or document from online, put the author and date of publication first. Then, use the title of the document in italics. Finally, add "Retrieved from" and a URL for the webpage. For instance, you might write: Vicks, H. R. & Jackson, G. H. (2014). The advantages of AstroTurf. Retrieved from http://www.astroturfinformationfoundation.com/advantages_of_astroturf/Vicks_Jackson When making an in-text citation, you can use the author's name in the sentence; in that case, the citation can go directly after the name in parentheses without the author's last name in it. Otherwise, the citation goes in parentheses at the end of the sentence. Include the author's last name, a comma, the publication date, a comma, and the page number. Use the page number with a direct quote; if you're not making a direct quote, it's nice to have, but not necessary.  If the author's name is in the sentence, use this form: As noted by Ford (2015, p. 124), AstroTurf isn't a good alternative to grass.  At the end of the sentence, the citation will look this way: AstroTurf is not a viable substitute for real grass (Ford, 2015, p. 124).  If you need to add multiple authors, list all of them: As noted by Ford, Macintosh, & Rose (2015, p. 88), AstroTurf can be damaging to players.  After the first citation with multiple authors, put in "et al." instead: As noted by Ford et al. (2015, p. 75), AstroTurf is detrimental.