
North campus: Wednesday 11 July, 11:15am – 12:15pm, Library Lab AL120. At the end of the session you should be equipped to choose the citation manager that best meets your working style and current academic needs. If you want to learn more about your options, come along to the new Library workshop next week: “Zotero, Mendeley, or EndNote – which is best?” You’ll get an overview of Zotero, Mendeley and EndNote, hear expert users discuss their strengths and weaknesses, and have an opportunity to try each product for yourself. (You can actually transfer content between these systems, so don’t fret if this is you.) Sometimes, you’ll get familiar with one, and then realise it doesn’t work for you – so you need to learn another. EndNote, Zotero, and Mendeley are all popular options, but they all have different features and they all require some upskilling to use correctly.
#Endnote vs zotero how to
We can look up almost any information in seconds, and cite our sources (relatively) easily using software programmes.īut it still takes a bit of effort to figure out which citation management software to use, and how to get the most out of it. Then, when they came to cite those sources, they had to sit with a style manual and painstakingly write out each reference in full. They looked up sources in card catalogues at the library, and if an item they needed wasn’t physically located in the library, it took a massive effort to procure it.

Our predecessors wrote out their theses and dissertations long-hand, or typed them up on typewriters.

It’s strange to think about academic work before computers.
