[Apogee (aka Apogee 2|Citation Creator) is an extension for Chrome which can be used to reference sources and check on their credibility.]
To Apogee or Not to Apogee?
Well, after investigating this extension to Chrome, I would give a resounding "No!".
I was asked the other day by a student if he could use Apogee 2, a Chrome extention to create his works cited list. I said no, that he was required to use Noodletools. However, I did promise to investigate it.
Just in case your students ask you about using it for citing, here is what I discovered. I added the app and then went into the settings. The first thing to note is that Apogee tells the user that MLA 8 is not as popular as MLA 7. In fact, not many people are using it. I don't know about you but my school has been using it since it was first introduced.
Next, I chose a web page that a student had recently used in his research.
Apogee gives its version of the MLA 8 reference but unfortunately it isn't correct. Note the following mistakes:
- The author's name is not inverted. In a Works Cited List the author's last name comes first.
- BBC News is included in the author's name.
- The title of the article is completely wrong.
- No date is given, despite the fact that there is one in the article: 20 May 2018.
- The access date is given but is wrongly located.
Below is the MLA reference done in Noodletools MLA 8:
Next I looked at the credibility rating for an article which a student mistook for an authentic one from World War One, but which was actually from the Onion, an American satirical website:
This web page received a 100% credibility rating, whereas the BBC article was only given 80%.
I think I will rest my case there for the time being and check in with Apogee in 6 months to see if it has improved.
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