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Explanatory information:
Background information
The biggest difference between footnotes and endnotes is where the notes are placed. Footnotes
appear at the bottom of the page for any notes that apply to each specific page; endnotes appear
collectively at the end of a paper, starting on a separate page and labeled as Endnotes.
Both references are placed at the end of the sentence, phrase or quotation in which they
appear to minimize the interruption in the flow of your words.
Both require the matching numeral to appear at the beginning of the actual footnote or
endnote.
Before using footnotes or using endnotes, you must understand the advantages and disadvantages
of each.
When your readers want to look at the information in a footnote, they simply have to look
at the bottom of the page.
Your readers have instant access to the citation or a supplemental thought, idea or concept
that is closely related to the material in which the footnote appears.
Your footnotes are printed on each page when you print your research paper; no
additional printing is necessary.
When you have a higher number of footnotes on a single page, they can make your paper
appear cluttered or difficult to read.
If the information in some footnotes is too lengthy, the footnotes may dominate the page
and distract from your paper.
Endnotes are not as distracting and do not clutter the pages of your paper.
Endnotes let your readers look over and digest citations and notes as a whole since they
are all in one place.
When readers want to look at the information in a specific endnote as they read, they
must go to the end of your research paper.
If you use endnotes that re-number within each chapter or section, you must remember
which corresponding number goes along with that number in each chapter.
When you use endnotes, readers might see it as misleading or that you are trying to hide
information by making it difficult to find at the end of your paper.
If you are not required to use or prohibited from using footnotes or endnotes, you can evaluate
which suits your purposes better. For some papers under specific guidelines or instructor
instructions, you may be able to use endnotes or footnotes in place of a list of references.
Footnotes are mostly considered outdated, but some fields or instructors require their use.
When using footnotes and using endnotes, use care to format them properly. The specific
formatting depends on the official style guide you are required to follow. Think critically about
every piece of information for which you use these types of notes. For supplemental information,
ask yourself if the information is disruptive or not closely related enough to keep it in the body of
the text or if the information is vital enough to put directly in the text. When you are not sure,
include the information in the text. As with anything, the overuse of footnotes or endnotes hurts
the strength of your paper.