| You do not need to cite a source for
material considered common knowledge:
General common knowledge is factual information
considered to be in the public domain, such as birth and death dates
of well-known figures, and generally accepted dates of military,
political, literary, and other historical events. In general, factual
information contained in multiple standard reference works can usually
be considered to be in the public domain.
Field-specific common knowledge is "common"
only within a particular field or specialty. It may include facts,
theories, or methods that are familiar to readers within that discipline.
For instance, you may not need to cite a reference to Piaget?s developmental
stages in a paper for an education class or give a source for your
description of a commonly used method in a biology report?but you
must be sure that this information is so widely known within that
field that it will be shared by your readers.
If in doubt, be cautious and cite the source. And in the
case of both general and field-specific common knowledge, if you
use the exact words of the reference source, you must use quotation
marks and credit the source.
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