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Say you’re writing a paper on Twitter during the 2012 U.S. presidential election. How do you cite all those tweets you’ll be referencing?

Four more yearspic.twitter.com/bAJE6Vom

— Barack Obama (@BarackObama) November 7, 2012

The Modern Language Association has an answer to that: a straightforward formula that ends with “Tweet,” which is lovely. Here’s how it should go:

cit1

Easy enough. But say you need to cite dozens or even hundreds of tweets. You’re going to be pretty sick of all the ctrl-c/ctrl-v required to wrestle those tweets into the desired format.

Thankfully, a web developer by the name of Ben Hedlund built Tweet2Cite.com, a free utility that can take the URL of any tweet, extract the requisite information, and, with one click, generate citations in the MLA format (and the APA format too, for the psychology students out there)Enter the URL for the famous election night tweet above, and in less than a second, you’ll get these results, easily copy-and-pasteable into your text editor of choice. Read more…

More about Research, Twitter, Academic, Tweets, and Text Generators