For students, do you need help properly citing your sources, or having them in the correct format?
Here are some amazing guides to proper referencing, which can be amazingly useful as you are creating your written submissions:
Purdue University - a spectacular website that provides the most comprehensive citation guide, as well as a sample paper for students or academics to refer to! Definitely Check It Out! https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/research_and_citation/apa_style/apa_formatting_and_style_guide/general_format.html
Aside from the previous, one of the only things that guide does not provide is how to cite legal references (e.g. statutes). There are a few different websites for this, but I would highly recommend the website provided by Douglas College Library, for legal citation. https://guides.douglascollege.ca/APA-7/LegalCitation
Here is another offered by Durham College for APA 7th Edition and a link provided by Durham College for McGill 9th Ed - Legal Citation (which is the ultimate Canadian legal citation guide)
If those don't work for you, please let me know. If you know of sources better, or equally as good as these, please let me know and I can add it to the list.
Writing citations is at times one of the most challenging things for young students, and hopefully these can help get over that barrier!
Take care, stay safe, and have a great day.

I've been reading a bit about citational justice and thought others might be interested:
Diana Kwon, “The Rise of Citational Justice: How Scholars are Making References Fairer” (2022): https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-00793-1?utm_source=Nature+Briefing&utm_campaign=00d48fce33-briefing-dy-20220321_COPY_01&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c9dfd39373-00d48fce33-46726682
A Camosun College Library Guide, “Citing Indigenous Knowledge”: https://camosun.libguides.com/apa7/IndigenousKnowledge
(This one further refers readers to the APA Publication Manual [7th edition] and Gregory Younging’s Elements of Indigenous Style: A Guide for Writing By and About Indigenous Peoples [2018]).
Thank you for sharing that information and those links!