Skip to Main Content

PACE Client-Based Consulting Resources

Recommended resources for students to use on PACE consulting projects

Why Refrence Sources?

While academic work draws upon the works of others and citing your sources is required, referencing your sources in experiential learning projects is flexible and depending on the needs of your clients and the requirements of your instructors.

There are several reasons to reference your sources in business consultation projects:

  • Demonstrate to your clients that you have done your research and that you used good sources of information
  • Allow your clients to track your sources to better evaluate your argument and locate additional information
  • Avoid plagiarism (see Georgia State University Academic Honesty Policy)
  • Meet licensing agreements of crediting the works of others
  • Use a "Sources Consulted" section at the end of your report with citations

Copyright Awareness

You are personally accountable for respecting copyright and licensing requirements.. Violation of any of these restrictions could result not only in the loss of your own access to the information resources, but in the loss of access for the entire GSU community.

Examples of violation of copyright and licensing agreements:

  • Provide your clients access or passwords to university library databases
  • Download articles and business reports to give to your clients
  • Profit financially from the use of library database materials  

Citation help on the web

Citing Sources in a Presentation

You are still expected to cite your sources during presentations. You professor has asked that you: 

  1. Use in-text citations on your slides when you are quoting or paraphrasing from sources AND

  2. Cite your sources on the final slide of the presentation

Also, don't forget to cite the source of any images, videos, etc. that you use for your presentation. 

Citation and Attribution with AI Tools

What are AI Tools? 

There are lots of AI Tools that can be used to increase productivity. Some AI Tools that you might have heard about are ChatGPT, Copilot, Gemini, and Grammarly, but there are many, many more. There has been a lot of recent discussion around the use of AI Tools in the academic environment, how students should or shouldn't use them, and how to cite them properly in order to avoid plagiarism and other concerns. 

When do you need to cite an AI Tool?

Whenever you use the outputs of AI tools in your work you must cite them. Always cite if you use a direct quote or paraphrase from ChatGPT or another AI Tool. You must also cite when you use an AI tool for tasks like editing, translating, idea generation, and data processing. 

Citation concerns with AI Tools

  1. You should always check the source material cited by AI Tools; this is because they can create fake citations and/or could be inaccurate
  2. Be aware that there are privacy concerns when you use AI Tools and be careful what information you share to avoid unnecessary risks
  3. Take notes about how you use AI Tools included in case you need to include those details in your citations. Remember, there are two reasons to cite your sources 1) to give credit to the author or creator and 2) to help others find the sources that you used

Source: 

McGuigan, N. (n.d.). LibGuides: Generative Artificial Intelligence : Citation and Attribution. Retrieved August 9, 2024, from https://libguides.brown.edu/c.php?g=1338928&p=9868287

How to Cite AI Tools Using APA Format

How do I cite an AI Tool?

When you ask an AI Tool like ChatGPT a question and it answers, that is known as an "output". Outputs from AI Tools that are used for your assignments needs to be cited in your References page and through in-text citations within your assignments. APA adapts the in-text citations and references for AI Tools from the reference template for software in section 10.10 of the APA Publication Manual. To cite these, you will need to include the author (or creator), the date, the title (or AI Tool) with a descriptor in brackets to tell the reader what kind it is, and the source (which is the URL for the AI Tool). 

Format:

Author. (Date). Name of tool (Version of tool) [Large language model]. URL

Notes: The author or creator is the company or organization that created the AI Tool. For example, the company that created ChatGPT is OpenAI so that would be its creator. ChatGPT is a what is known as a "Large language model", so that information should also be included in brackets to tell the reader what it is. In some cases, you may also want to include the full text of long responses (including the prompt) from ChatGPT or the AI Tool that you used in an appendix so that your readers have access to the exact text that was generated. 
Example:

OpenAI. (2023). ChatGPT (Mar 14 version) [Large language model]. https://chat.openai.com/chat

 

In-text citations:

You must also include in-text citations. APA In-Text citations should include the author or creator and the year of publication.

Example:

(OpenAI, 2023)

 
Sources: 

How to cite ChatGPT. (n.d.). Https://Apastyle.Apa.Org. Retrieved August 9, 2024, from https://apastyle.apa.org/blog/how-to-cite-chatgpt

McGuigan, N. (n.d.). LibGuides: Generative Artificial Intelligence : Citation and Attribution. Retrieved August 9, 2024, from https://libguides.brown.edu/c.php?g=1338928&p=9868287