I created these guides a while ago on how to cite ChatGPT in both APA and MLA. At first, I shared them separately with students and colleagues whenever questions came up about AI citation. Over time, I realized the same questions kept resurfacing, often framed as uncertainty rather than resistance.
So I gathered everything into one short, practical PDF.
The idea is simple. This is a resource you can use directly with your students in class, or keep open on your own screen while writing. No guesswork, no overcomplication, just clear guidance you can point to when AI enters the conversation.
The content is grounded in the official APA and MLA guidelines, with sources cited throughout. It explains when ChatGPT needs to be cited, how to format in-text citations and reference entries, and how disclosure works in real academic writing. It also clarifies an important point that often gets missed: AI tools are not authors, but their outputs still require transparent acknowledgment when used.
In teaching contexts, I have found that clear citation guidance does more than solve a technical problem. It lowers anxiety for students who want to do the right thing but are unsure what that looks like. It also shifts the conversation away from policing and toward academic responsibility and judgment.
For instructors, having a shared reference helps create consistency. Instead of improvising rules or answering the same questions repeatedly, you can anchor discussions in established disciplinary standards and move on to more meaningful conversations about learning, authorship, and integrity.
If you are working with students in higher education, supervising research, or writing yourself, this PDF can serve as a practical checkpoint. Keep it nearby, share it freely, and adapt it to your local context.
I hope you find it useful.




