What You'll Learn
The CUNY SPS Writing Fellows will present a live webinar/Q&A session covering how to find, use, and cite sources in your writing. The presentation will include information on how to use CUNY OneSearch, direct quoting, paraphrasing, and how to create in-text citations and a reference list in APA format.
Writing Fellows Presenters

Kiera Bono
Kiera Bono is a Ph.D. Candidate in the Theatre and Performance program at The Graduate Center, CUNY. They are most comfortable with the Chicago Manual of Style (CMOS) and MLA formatting, but they have some experience with APA formatting from their stint as a 2022-2023 CUNY SPS Writing Fellow.
Their dissertation engages with disability and relationality in performance. Kiera has taught at The City College of New York and is currently teaching at Wagner College.
Kiera Bono is a Ph.D. Candidate in the Theatre and Performance program at The Graduate Center, CUNY. They are most comfortable with the Chicago Manual of Style (CMOS) and MLA formatting, but they have some experience with APA formatting from their stint as a 2022-2023 CUNY SPS Writing Fellow.
Their dissertation engages with disability and relationality in performance. Kiera has taught at The City College of New York and is currently teaching at Wagner College.

Kay Healy
Kay Healy is a Ph.D. candidate in French at the CUNY Graduate Center. Their current doctoral research focuses on French musical theatre and its unique genre features as distinct from dominant, anglophone musical theatre models. Other research interests include propaganda and state-sponsored art, literatures of moral education, and medieval studies. Kay speaks English and French, with additional, varying levels of familiarity with ASL, German, and Czech. They have served as a French instructor at Brooklyn College, and currently teach at an independent language school in Greenpoint. Kay specializes in Chicago style formatting, but is also experienced in MLA and APA styles.
Kay Healy is a Ph.D. candidate in French at the CUNY Graduate Center. Their current doctoral research focuses on French musical theatre and its unique genre features as distinct from dominant, anglophone musical theatre models. Other research interests include propaganda and state-sponsored art, literatures of moral education, and medieval studies. Kay speaks English and French, with additional, varying levels of familiarity with ASL, German, and Czech. They have served as a French instructor at Brooklyn College, and currently teach at an independent language school in Greenpoint. Kay specializes in Chicago style formatting, but is also experienced in MLA and APA styles.