Metadata
Title
Referencing an oral presentation
Category
general
UUID
9528bebf4f11499cba3d9b54d86db166
Source URL
https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/assessments/presentations/referencing-oral-prese...
Parent URL
https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/assessments/presentations/
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T20:12:20+00:00
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Referencing an oral presentation

Source: https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/assessments/presentations/referencing-oral-presentation/ Parent: https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/assessments/presentations/

Referencing is important for any type of assignment you do, and presentations are no different. On this page, we'll cover the ways that you can cite and reference the ideas, quotes and images you use in your presentations.

Which referencing style?

The first step for referencing is to find out which style you are required to use for your assignment. This information is usually included in your assignment instructions. If you have any doubt, ask your lecturer or tutor. If you use the incorrect referencing style or make errors in formatting, you could lose marks.

Citation

For oral presentations, there are two ways that you can cite information that has been taken from other sources. They are:

For more information, visit Understanding citation.

References list

For your presentation, you should include a slide with a reference list. This list should be formatted in the same way that you would format a reference list for a written assignment.

Referencing images

Referencing images can be confusing at times. Luckily, RMIT has developed a great referencing resource called Easy Cite that guides students through the referencing process. It has rules and examples for referencing and citing in all of the major referencing styles used at RMIT, and the sections for each of these styles have information for referencing images and audiovisual material.

Tips for managing references

Test your knowledge

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