Asked by Definitely not Xae
Are the following book, websites newspaper articles or online articles
And create bibliography cards for them MLA format
Klein, A. "Schools struggle to meet students'
mental-health needs" (Education
Week, 2021)
Kieling C.,
Baker-Henningha m H., Belfer
M., Conti G., Ertem I., et al.
"Child and adolescent mental health worldwide: evidence for action." The Lancet (2011).
U.S. Surgeon
General (Office of the Surgeon General).
Protecting Youth
Mental Health: The
U.S. Surgeon
General's
Advisory
World Health Organization.
Adolescent mental health (fact sheet). Updated
2020.
Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) - Youth
Risk Data
- Bibliographic info: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Youth Risk
Behavior
Surveillance - United States,
2019 (YRBS data summaries). 2019.
American
Psychological Association.
Stress in America™.
Generation Z.
November 2018.
Organisation for
Economic
Co-operation and Development
(OECD). PISA 2015
Results (Volume
III): Students' Well-Being.
OECD Publishing.
(2017).
World Health Organization (WHO).
Adolescent mental health (fact sheet).
(2021; updated).
Pascoe, M. C., Hetrick, S. E., &
Parker, A.
G. (2020). The impact of stress on students in secondary school and higher education.
International
Journal of
Adolescence and
Youth, 25(1), 104-112.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Below I identify each item as a book, journal article, newspaper/online news article, government/organization report, or website (fact sheet), and give an MLA-style citation for each (MLA 9th edition style). If you have URLs or exact publication dates, you can add them after the citation.
1) Klein, A. — Education Week (online news article)
Klein, A. "Schools Struggle to Meet Students' Mental-Health Needs." Education Week, 2021.
2) Kieling, C., et al. — peer‑reviewed journal article
Kieling, C., et al. "Child and Adolescent Mental Health Worldwide: Evidence for Action." Lancet, vol. 378, no. 9801, 2011, pp. 1515–1525.
3) U.S. Surgeon General (Office of the Surgeon General) — government report / advisory (online)
Office of the Surgeon General. Protecting Youth Mental Health: The U.S. Surgeon General's Advisory. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2021.
4) World Health Organization. Adolescent mental health (fact sheet). Updated 2020 — website fact sheet
World Health Organization. "Adolescent Mental Health." World Health Organization, updated 2020.
5) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — government report / data summary (online)
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance — United States, 2019. CDC, 2019.
6) American Psychological Association — organizational report (online)
American Psychological Association. Stress in America™: Generation Z. American Psychological Association, Nov. 2018.
7) Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) — book / published report
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. PISA 2015 Results (Volume III): Students' Well‑Being. OECD Publishing, 2017.
8) World Health Organization (WHO). Adolescent mental health (fact sheet). (2021; updated) — website fact sheet (updated version)
World Health Organization. "Adolescent Mental Health." World Health Organization, updated 2021.
9) Pascoe, M. C., Hetrick, S. E., & Parker, A. G. — peer‑reviewed journal article
Pascoe, M. C., S. E. Hetrick, and A. G. Parker. "The Impact of Stress on Students in Secondary School and Higher Education." International Journal of Adolescence and Youth, vol. 25, no. 1, 2020, pp. 104–112.
Notes and suggestions:
- For online newspaper/magazine items (Education Week) and organization web pages (CDC, WHO, APA), if you plan to submit these citations to a teacher or include them in an online Works Cited, add the full URL and the date you accessed the page (optional in MLA 9 but often recommended).
- If you want, I can add URLs and exact day/month publication dates where available and format the titles in italics/quotation marks precisely for copy into a Works Cited list.
1) Klein, A. — Education Week (online news article)
Klein, A. "Schools Struggle to Meet Students' Mental-Health Needs." Education Week, 2021.
2) Kieling, C., et al. — peer‑reviewed journal article
Kieling, C., et al. "Child and Adolescent Mental Health Worldwide: Evidence for Action." Lancet, vol. 378, no. 9801, 2011, pp. 1515–1525.
3) U.S. Surgeon General (Office of the Surgeon General) — government report / advisory (online)
Office of the Surgeon General. Protecting Youth Mental Health: The U.S. Surgeon General's Advisory. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2021.
4) World Health Organization. Adolescent mental health (fact sheet). Updated 2020 — website fact sheet
World Health Organization. "Adolescent Mental Health." World Health Organization, updated 2020.
5) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — government report / data summary (online)
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance — United States, 2019. CDC, 2019.
6) American Psychological Association — organizational report (online)
American Psychological Association. Stress in America™: Generation Z. American Psychological Association, Nov. 2018.
7) Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) — book / published report
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. PISA 2015 Results (Volume III): Students' Well‑Being. OECD Publishing, 2017.
8) World Health Organization (WHO). Adolescent mental health (fact sheet). (2021; updated) — website fact sheet (updated version)
World Health Organization. "Adolescent Mental Health." World Health Organization, updated 2021.
9) Pascoe, M. C., Hetrick, S. E., & Parker, A. G. — peer‑reviewed journal article
Pascoe, M. C., S. E. Hetrick, and A. G. Parker. "The Impact of Stress on Students in Secondary School and Higher Education." International Journal of Adolescence and Youth, vol. 25, no. 1, 2020, pp. 104–112.
Notes and suggestions:
- For online newspaper/magazine items (Education Week) and organization web pages (CDC, WHO, APA), if you plan to submit these citations to a teacher or include them in an online Works Cited, add the full URL and the date you accessed the page (optional in MLA 9 but often recommended).
- If you want, I can add URLs and exact day/month publication dates where available and format the titles in italics/quotation marks precisely for copy into a Works Cited list.
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