Film, Media & TV1 min ago
Anyone with children?
9 Answers
Who buys the following magazines-
CBeebies
Toy Story
Favourites
I need the reference details e.g. author, publisher, location of publisher; not even sure if all this info is even in children's magazines, but any help would be much appreciated!
CBeebies
Toy Story
Favourites
I need the reference details e.g. author, publisher, location of publisher; not even sure if all this info is even in children's magazines, but any help would be much appreciated!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by sophie_1003. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.We don't buy those magazines but this is who publishes them (according to Google).
http://www.swpp.co.uk/publications/5343.htm - for Cbeebies
EgMont for Toy Story
Redan ltd for Favourites
He that helps
http://www.swpp.co.uk/publications/5343.htm - for Cbeebies
EgMont for Toy Story
Redan ltd for Favourites
He that helps
There's no specific author, as each magazine will combine contributions from several people. (There's probably no real point in mentioning the editor's name either).
CBeebies Weekly:
Steph Cooper (Editor), BBC Worldwide, London
Toy Story:
Egmont UK, London
Fun to Learn Favourites:
Redan, Shrewsbury
Chris
CBeebies Weekly:
Steph Cooper (Editor), BBC Worldwide, London
Toy Story:
Egmont UK, London
Fun to Learn Favourites:
Redan, Shrewsbury
Chris
Actually Chris, while you are here (and because you seem to know everything!) If I'm referencing pictures I know I need to put the author; if these were pictures of book covers would the author be the author/illustrator of the book? Also, would the year be the publication date of the book? It's Harvard referencing by the way!
I had managed to find some of it but the guide to referencing only states the format i.e. Author Title/description of image (Year) etc and I don't know if, when it is a picture of a book cover; it means all the things I've asked or something different entirely! I would email by uni tutor but she doesn't reply to emails and to be honest, she's pretty useless and probably wouldn't know anyway!
For the relevant details of any book, Sophie, click 'Search the Integrated Catalogue' on the British Library website. By law, a copy of every book published in the UK has to be deposited with the British Library. The details in the BL catalogue mirror those required by the Harvard referencing system:
http://catalogue.bl.u...le_name=login-bl-list
If your reference is specifically to a picture (rather than to written content) then, unless you're sure of the name of the illustrator, all you can do is to put something like:
Cover illustration (anon), The Answerbank for Beginners, Crystal Guides, London, 2011
If you know the name of the illustrator, something like this should do:
M. Mouse (illus.), The Answerbank for Beginners, Crystal Guides, London, 2011
As long as you keep as close as is practically possible to the Harvard referencing system (and your sources are clear), no assessor is going to penalise you for any minor discrepancies in your methodology. (I can guarantee that the guy who assessed my degree thesis never bothered checking one of my key sources. There was only one copy of the book in the UK, hundreds of miles from Sheffield university, and it was written in 18th century German - which I'd had to translate myself!)
Chris
http://catalogue.bl.u...le_name=login-bl-list
If your reference is specifically to a picture (rather than to written content) then, unless you're sure of the name of the illustrator, all you can do is to put something like:
Cover illustration (anon), The Answerbank for Beginners, Crystal Guides, London, 2011
If you know the name of the illustrator, something like this should do:
M. Mouse (illus.), The Answerbank for Beginners, Crystal Guides, London, 2011
As long as you keep as close as is practically possible to the Harvard referencing system (and your sources are clear), no assessor is going to penalise you for any minor discrepancies in your methodology. (I can guarantee that the guy who assessed my degree thesis never bothered checking one of my key sources. There was only one copy of the book in the UK, hundreds of miles from Sheffield university, and it was written in 18th century German - which I'd had to translate myself!)
Chris