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Central Queensland University, Rockhampton on 21 April, 2000. Materials produced for students of education institutions Teaching organisations may produce books like Study Guides for distance education or resourcebased teaching programs. Usually, these study materials are not 'published' because they are not sold or distributed to the public. Copyright licences restrict use of these materials to enrolled students. These books of study materials often contain copies of published material copied under licence. Reference details, required for information obtained from copies of such published materials (e.g. a book, periodical, etc.), should be presented in the normal form for a book or periodical. In addition, these study materials usually contain the original work prepared by the teaching organisation for the Unit or Subject offered. If you wish to cite such material, the reference material should be presented in a format similar to that shown for unpublished lecturer's notes. Show the author's name, year presented, the name and number of the unit being presented (maximal capitalisation), a description of the item (e.g. study guide, book of readings, audiotape, computer disk) the name of teaching organisation, location and study period. No italics or quotation marks are shown. Bork, A. 2000, Applied Hydraulics 65150, a study guide distributed by Central Queensland University, Rockhampton for Winter Term, 2000. Bork, A. 2000, Applied Hydraulics 65150, audiotape no.3 distributed by Central Queensland University, Rockhampton for Winter Term, 2000. Publication sponsored by an organisation You may need to make some judgment about whether a book sponsored by an organisation was primarily the work of, and expresses the views of individual authors; whether it has been written primarily by the organisation; or whether the publishing organisation has not written the publication but owns and publishes it. If the individual authors are directly identified on the cover, title page or copyright page of the book they should be shown in the reference as authors. If they are not identified directly, follow the examples set out below. For many government publications, the author may be shown as a department or a committee. If the author is also the publisher, show the author as the usual first element in the reference and show the word 'author' where the publisher's name normally occurs (see examples under Publication written by an organisation: The organisation is the publisher). For many government publications where individuals are shown in the reference as the authors, an extra element - supplementary information - may be included in the reference after the title of the publication to show: • the status of the publication (e.g. draft report), • the chair of the committee writing the publication, |