Citing webpages has been a common practice in scholarly publications for nearly two decades as the Web evolved into a major information source. But over the years, more and more bibliographies have suffered from “reference rot”: cited URLs are broken links or point to a page that no longer contains the content the author originally cited. In this column, I look at several studies showing how reference rot has affected different academic disciplines. I also examine citation styles’ approach to citing web sources. I then turn to emerging web citation practices: Perma, a “freemium” web archiving service specifically for citation; and the Internet Archive, the largest web archive
The digital era has changed the way we humans read a book. No longer are words confined to a bound l...
On June 30, 1858, abolitionist Parker Pillsbury wrote William Lloyd Garrison and readers of the Libe...
The following article was taken from the last issue of The Summerland Courier, a major newspaper pub...
Citing webpages has been a common practice in scholarly publications for nearly two decades as the W...
Web annotation has been a pipe dream almost since the birth of the Internet itself. Commenting in th...
This study examines ETDs deposited during the period 2011-2015 in an institutional repository, to de...
Book Title: Conducting Educational Research: A primer for teachers and administrators Book Authors:...
This column introduces APIs (application programming interfaces) and discusses how APIs are used in ...
The World Wide Web is the largest collection of human testimonies that we have ever had at our finge...
Part of “Music Librarianship: What Types of Jobs Are Available, Who’s Hiring, and How to Land One of...
Historically, school leaders have occupied a somewhat ambiguous position within networks of power. O...
This essay co-authored with Mark Hope, co-founder of the Barn, Banchory, forms a chapter in the book...
This edition of Support for Learning came about through an incidental comment by one of the Journal'...
PrimeTimes is the newsletter of the Office of Lifespan Studies in the College of Science at Coastal ...
Based on searches in Academic Search Premier, ERIC, SCOPUS and ORIA the paper reviews a total of 55 ...
The digital era has changed the way we humans read a book. No longer are words confined to a bound l...
On June 30, 1858, abolitionist Parker Pillsbury wrote William Lloyd Garrison and readers of the Libe...
The following article was taken from the last issue of The Summerland Courier, a major newspaper pub...
Citing webpages has been a common practice in scholarly publications for nearly two decades as the W...
Web annotation has been a pipe dream almost since the birth of the Internet itself. Commenting in th...
This study examines ETDs deposited during the period 2011-2015 in an institutional repository, to de...
Book Title: Conducting Educational Research: A primer for teachers and administrators Book Authors:...
This column introduces APIs (application programming interfaces) and discusses how APIs are used in ...
The World Wide Web is the largest collection of human testimonies that we have ever had at our finge...
Part of “Music Librarianship: What Types of Jobs Are Available, Who’s Hiring, and How to Land One of...
Historically, school leaders have occupied a somewhat ambiguous position within networks of power. O...
This essay co-authored with Mark Hope, co-founder of the Barn, Banchory, forms a chapter in the book...
This edition of Support for Learning came about through an incidental comment by one of the Journal'...
PrimeTimes is the newsletter of the Office of Lifespan Studies in the College of Science at Coastal ...
Based on searches in Academic Search Premier, ERIC, SCOPUS and ORIA the paper reviews a total of 55 ...
The digital era has changed the way we humans read a book. No longer are words confined to a bound l...
On June 30, 1858, abolitionist Parker Pillsbury wrote William Lloyd Garrison and readers of the Libe...
The following article was taken from the last issue of The Summerland Courier, a major newspaper pub...