EndNote describes Reference styles as output styles.
Many styles come free with the EndNote software and also check UWA Library provided styles. If no style is available for the journal to which you're submitting, you can create or edit a style yourself.
You can view an online tutorial for an introduction to EndNote and Word.
Visit the EndNote support site for answers to many frequently asked questions about using EndNote with Word.
Contact your Reference Librarian for personal help.
Try an online tutorial, download a guide or ask Reference Librarians in your subject Library for help or for info about attending an Introduction to EndNote session.
EndNote is a useful tool for building your own database or Library of references to books, journal articles et cetera. It helps you organise your research and stay in control of your information.
EndNote can link to word processing software so you can insert references (citations) from your Library into papers that you're writing. You choose the Referencing style you want and EndNote automatically formats your in text citations and Reference list according to the style you've chosen.
What is EndNote?
Endnote is software that helps with doing references for assignments and papers. It's free to all UWA students and staff.
What does it do?

We used to talk about IT (information technology), but we now talk about ICT (Information and Communication Technologies) which is a term that obviously recognises the proliferation of online and electronic communication happening globally.
So just a change/update in terms/lingo really! Both terms are used widely (ICT is a bit of a 'newer' term than IT) but you'll still see and hear people at UWA talking about IT help-desks, IT departments and IT nerds!

Lectopia is the system used to record face-to-face lectures and then make them available online to UWA students (a 24/7 service!). It was developed by UWA and is now used by many Universities worldwide (it used to be called iLecture but the name had to be changed to comply with US copyright).
There are 5 types of recordings made by the system:

Navigating through a book structure/between book pages is relatively simple once you know how: