The last few days before submission are rarely the moment when you lovingly compare every reference in your thesis against the original. Yet that’s exactly when the mistakes happen — the ones that cost you later: a word flipped in a direct quote, a page number that doesn’t match, a claim the source never actually made. This checklist helps you work through all the citations in your thesis in one structured pass — manually, with Zotero, or automatically with Acurio.
1. Build a complete list of all your citations
Before you start checking, you need an overview. Export a PDF version of your thesis from Word, keep the “Show” function for your citations active (Zotero and Citavi highlight the fields in colour when you enable “Show field codes” in the settings). Count how many citations your thesis contains. A 40-page bachelor’s thesis typically has 60–120 references; a master’s thesis often has 150 or more. Allow two to five minutes per citation in manual mode — which adds up to several days. That’s why most students skip this step.
2. Check four things per citation
For every reference, four points must hold — otherwise you have a problem.
- Content. Does the source actually say what you claim, word for word?
- Page number. Is the page number correct, and does the citation actually appear there?
- Bibliography. Is there a complete entry in the reference list that matches the in-text citation (same authors, same year, same title)?
- Citation style. Does the citation follow the requirements of your discipline or department (APA 7, Chicago, Harvard, DGPs, etc.)?
Most errors land at points 1 and 2. Point 3 is handled by Zotero when you use it consistently — see the next section.
3. Keep your Zotero library clean
If your Zotero library is messy, the mess runs through your entire thesis. Three hygiene steps:
- Remove duplicates. Tools → Find Duplicates. Merge the flagged entries — never delete just one; Zotero keeps all annotations that way.
- Complete DOIs. Right-click → “Retrieve metadata for DOI/ISBN”. Saves you every manual bibliography correction later.
- Check attachments. Every cited entry should have the source PDF or at least a link to the original page. Without it, you can’t check the citation against the source — and neither can we.
4. Gather your source PDFs
For every cited source you need the original — as a PDF, EPUB, or physical book. Download PDFs from your university library (don’t forget the VPN), use Sci-Hub only where it’s legal, and for sources not available digitally, contact the authors directly: many will send a preprint on request. Keep all PDFs in one folder per thesis and name them using the pattern Author_Year_ShortTitle.pdf. This makes the next step noticeably faster.
5. Choose your checking tool
You have three options:
- Manual. Open PDF, jump to the page, read, compare. Reliable but slow and tiring — fatigue makes the eye overlook things.
- Ctrl+F word search. Faster, but risky: a slightly paraphrased citation won’t show up.
- AI citation checking like Acurio. Upload your DOCX and the Zotero PDFs; multiple LLMs check each claim against the source, flag it as supported / partially supported / unsupported, and return a source excerpt plus a confidence score. Results in minutes rather than days.
Whichever tool you use — keep track of which citations you’ve already checked. Otherwise you start over on day three.
6. Watch out for common traps
The same mistakes repeat year after year:
- Secondary citation sold as primary. You cite Mueller (2003), but you’ve only read Schmidt (2018) where Mueller is cited. If you haven’t read Mueller, write it that way:
Mueller, as cited in Schmidt 2018. - Direct quote without quotation marks. The moment three consecutive words come from the source, they need quotation marks around them. Three words — not eight.
- Paraphrase not distant enough. Words are only your own words when the sentence structure is different too. Otherwise it’s plagiarism.
- Wrong page number from a later edition. If you cite the 1st edition but read the 2nd, page numbers shift. Always record the edition in Zotero.
- Translation ghosts. English original, foreign-language translation in the book — if you’re quoting in English, you need the English edition.
7. Set a minimum standard for your thesis
Realistically: 100% clean is rare when working by hand. Set minimum thresholds your department will accept:
- Direct quotes (in quotation marks): 100% accurate. No examiner tolerates an error here.
- Paraphrases: at least 95% content-faithful. If 5% wobble, rephrase.
- Page numbers: 100% correct. Wrong pages are immediately visible in a plagiarism checker.
- Bibliography entries: 100% complete and consistent. Don’t rely on Zotero alone — cross-check anyway.
8. Schedule the checking pass before submission
The final check comes after proofreading but before submission. A common schedule:
- Day −7: Content finalised, last proofread.
- Day −5: Clean up Zotero library, collect all source PDFs.
- Day −3: Citation check (one full day manually, about an hour with Acurio).
- Day −2: Apply corrections, re-check affected citations.
- Day −1: Plagiarism check via your plagiarism service.
- Submission.
If you only start on citations the day before, you won’t have time for follow-up work. Plan realistically.
9. Document what you’ve checked
Some departments now require a declaration of academic integrity that explicitly covers accurate citation. It doesn’t hurt to keep a small table: page, citation, source, checked on, result. If you use Acurio, you export the report as a DOCX — that’s your documentation if questions come up later.
10. Don’t let checking distract you from writing
The most important rule: check only once your text is finished. Anyone who writes and checks in parallel checks every citation twice — once when inserting it, once after the next revision. That’s frustrating, and a frustrated checking pass is a poor one.
Acurio is built precisely for this step: you upload your DOCX and the Zotero sources, and in minutes you see which citations hold and which don’t. When you reach the final stretch of your thesis, our pricing page is a small investment for a very calm last week.