One of Word 2016's latest features, Researcher allows you to find information for a term paper, dissertation or other project without leaving your word processor. Students can easily browse web-based articles in a small pane that sits to the right of their documents, highlight text they wish to include in their projects, and insert it along with the appropriate citation style (MLA, APA, etc). Available to Office Insiders right now and all Office 365 users in the near future, Researcher can be useful, but it has a couple of caveats. First, when you use the 'cite' function to insert a direct quote from a source, the tool doesn't put quotation marks around the text, which is absolutely necessary to avoid plagiarism. So be sure to add those manually.
Second, the tool gives high priority to results from Wikipedia, which many teachers don't consider a valid source for serious research. Here's how to use Word 2016 Researcher: 1.
Word and the other Office applications get the full-blown ribbon treatment in Office 16 for Mac. On the plus side, there's a new Styles pane that lets you apply pre-set styles to text and paragraphs. Selecting the Review tab will provide access to all of the features. Comments: How to view comments, insert your own comments, and delete comments that.
![How To Get To Review Tab On Word For Mac How To Get To Review Tab On Word For Mac](https://images.slideplayer.com/14/4497934/slides/slide_28.jpg)
Click the References tab in Word. Select a citation style from the style menu. Depending on what school or organization you work for, you might need to select MLA, APA, Chicago Style or another type on the list. Click Bibliography and select one of the choices (Bibliography, References or Works Cited). A header will appear in your document. Click the Researcher button. A new window pane opens.
Enter a query in the search box (ex: revolutionary war). You'll get a list of sub topics you can either enter as subheads in your document (for later research) or open up to view individual articles. Click the plus sign next to topics to create them as subheads. You can further research these subtopics later if you wish. Double click on a subtopic to learn more. You'll likely see an overview of the subtopic and you can click on the 'Research' tab to view more articles. Open an article to read it.
Highlight text you wish to insert in your article, right click and select 'Add and Cite.' The quote appears in your body copy and as a citation in your bibliography.
![How How](https://i1.wp.com/lowendmac.com/wp-content/uploads/word-preview2.png)
Add quotation marks and an attribution to any text you've inserted word-for-word. If you include a direct quote in your paper without putting quotation marks around it and crediting the author, that's plagiarism.
Hi, This is a very strange problem that's really affecting my ability to work and get on with stuff. Usually I have the HOME tab open with all my formatting options, but every so often I use the REVIEW tab to make comments, track changes in documents etc. However, for some unknown reason (bug?) once I click the REVIEW tab I can't click the HOME tab afterwards. It just won't select and flip back. Sometimes I can persevere and click the HOME tab around 10+ times in quick succession, and sometimes that works, but sometimes it doesn't.
This is very frustrating. I have all the latest updates to both Office apps and Mac. I'm really keen on all of this sort of stuff. I'm not what I'd consider to be an inexperienced user either. I run Linux and Windows at home, and OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) at work - I'm quite used to a bit of 'terminal' action. I've tried fixing permissions too - nothing is fixing this for me.
This really seems like a peculiar bug to me. Can anyone advise? Thanks in advance.