Title: American Psychological Association APA Writing and Documentation Style Orientation
1American Psychological Association (APA) Writing
and Documentation Style Orientation
2Purchase the APA Manual
- This orientation is only an overview of APA
(2001) format. - Students still need to purchase and use the APA
(2001) Manual. - Purchase Manual at Phoenix Bookstore
http//www.thephoenixbookstore.com/ - (click on-line store) or other on-line retailers.
3apastyle.org website
- Info about the APA (2001) manual is found at
http//www.apastyle.org/pubmanual.html - See links to
- About APA Style
- Style Tips
- What's New
4APA General Requirements
- 12 point black font (Times Roman, Courier)
- 1 margin on all sides
- Major Sections
- Title Page
- Abstract (optional, consult faculty and/or
assignment requirements) - Body of Paper or Text
- References
- Appendices NOTE Sections such as appendices,
- Tables tables, and figures may not
- Figures be appropriate for all papers
-
5Expressing Ideas and Reducing Biases (See chapter
2 in APA Manual)
- Maintain continuity between words, themes, and
sections. - Use punctuation marks to show relationships.
- Use transitional words, phrases, and paragraphs.
- Say only what needs to be said.
- Avoid jargon, redundancy, and wordiness.
- Use direct, declarative sentences of various
lengths that are logically composed.
6Expressing Ideas and Reducing Biases cont.
- Precision and Clarity
- Do not use third person when speaking about self.
- Avoid colloquial expressions such as write up for
report.
7Expressing Ideas and Reducing Biases cont.
- Grammar
- Use active rather than passive verbs whenever
possible. - Use past tense to express action that occurred at
a specific time in the past. - Use the present tense to express past action that
did not occur at a specific time or action that
began in the past and continues to the present. - Subject and verb must agree in number (singular
vs. plural). - Noun and pronoun must agree in number.
- See Section 2.06-2.08 for more details.
8Expressing Ideas and Reducing Biases cont.
- Level of Specificity
- Gender is a cultural term used to refer to men
and women as social groups. - Sex is used when a biological distinction is
preferred. - Use of Labels
- Use adjectives to describe people (elderly
people) or put the person first (people who are
elderly) rather than saying the elderly.
9Expressing Ideas and Reducing Biases cont.
- Gender
- Do not use masculine nouns (man) and pronouns
(he) to refer to both sexes. - Do not assume a discipline is one gender (use she
for all nurses). - Sexual Orientation
- Lesbians and gay men are preferable to
homosexuals. - Racial and Ethnic Identity
- Use capitalized proper nouns (White, Black).
- Negro, Afro-American, Caucasian are dated and
discouraged. - Refer to tables 2.1 (chapter 2) for more examples
10Expressing Ideas and Reducing Biases cont.
- Disabilities
- Do not equate people with a condition
(schizophrenics or the disabled). - The words challenged and special should be
used only with permission. - Age
- Be specific in providing age ranges.
- Avoid open ended descriptors such as over 65.
- Use boy and girl when referring to high
school age and younger. - Use men and women for those aged 18 and
older.
11Expressing Ideas and Reducing Biases cont.
- The first time a term to be abbreviated is used,
write it out completely and follow it by its
abbreviation in parentheses. - The American Nurses Associations (ANA)
standards (2001). - When referring to the same term later in the
paper, the abbreviation can be used. - The ANA (2001)..
12The Title Page
13Contains 5 Elements
- Page Header and Page Number
- Running Head for Publication
- Title of the Manuscript
- Byline or the Authors Name
- Institutional Affiliation
14What is the Running Head?
- An abbreviated title
- Never exceeds 50 characters including punctuation
and spaces - Typed flush left at the top of the page below the
page header - Typed in all upper case letters
15Title Guidelines
- Contains 10-12 words (capitalize all verbs,
nouns, adjectives, adverbs, and pronouns, both
words of a hyphenated word, and first word after
a colon or dash) - Stands alone and is easily compressible to form
the words making up the running head - Centered between the left and right margins
- Positioned in the upper half of the paper
- Double spaced if it has more than one line
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18The Title Page
- Your faculty person may ask you to include a date
of paper submission on the title page. - THIS IS NOT AN APA GUIDELINE.
19The Abstract
20Abstract Guidelines
- Abstract summarizes the entire paper to no more
than one paragraph in length. - Abstract is dense with information but also
brief, self contained, and non-evaluative. - It is typed, double spaced, as a block of no more
than 120 words (without indentation). - It follows the title page.
- It begins with Abstract typed at top center of
the page -
21Introduction to the Paper
22Introduction Contents Characteristics
- Type title of manuscript at top center.
- Capitalize first letter of all verbs, nouns,
adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, and first letter
of the first word after a colon or dash as well
as both words of a hyphenated word - Exception In titles of books and articles in
reference lists, capitalize the first word, all
proper nouns, the first word after a colon or
hyphen, and only the first word of a hyphenated
compound.
23Introduction Contents Characteristics cont.
- Opens the body of the paper as a summarization of
relevant arguments, data, and information - Is 1-2 paragraphs in length
- Presents the specific problem under study
- Describes the research statement
- Is never labeled because it is clearly identified
by its position in the paper
24Seriation
25Purpose of Seriation
- Organizes elements of the statement, concept or
idea - Clarifies the sequence or relationship between
elements - Indicated when elements are lengthy or complex
- Used to facilitate reader comprehension
26Two Distinct Formats
- Within a sentence or paragraph
- Identify each element with a small letter
enclosed in parentheses. - Separate paragraphs in a series
- Identify each element with a number.
27Within a Sentence or Paragraph
EXAMPLE WITH COMMAS The nursing process
contains five steps including (a) assessment,
(b) diagnosis, (c) planning, (d) implementation,
and (e) evaluation.
28EXAMPLE WITH COLONS
Bonnie Wesoricks (1986) research identified
three dimensions of professional practice (a)
independent, which is least reported by hospital
nurses (b) interdependent, which is reported
more frequently than independent and involves
many different disciplines and (c) dependent,
which is reported most frequently by hospital
nurses.
29Separate Paragraphs in a Series
- Number paragraphs to itemize conclusions or steps
in a procedure. - Each paragraph of the series is numbered.
- The number is followed by a period.
- The number IS NOT enclosed in parentheses.
30EXAMPLE OF A PARAGRAPH IN A SERIES
- The literature on Oppressed Behavior indicates
- nurses exhibit a variety of behaviors in the
workplace - Silence and a lack of voice (paragraph cont.)
- Inability to organize and form coalitions
(paragraph cont.) - Horizontal violence among and between colleagues
(paragraph cont.)
31Headings
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33Examples
- ONE HEADING
- Centered Uppercase and Lowercase Heading
- (Level 1)
- TWO HEADINGS
- Centered Uppercase and Lowercase Heading
- (Level 1)
- Flush Left, Italicized, Uppercase and Lowercase
- Side Heading (Level 3)
-
-
34Examples
- THREE HEADINGS
- Centered Uppercase and Lowercase Heading
(Level 1) - Flush Left, Italicized, Uppercase, and Lowercase
- Side Heading (Level 3)
- Indented, italicized, lowercase paragraph
- heading ending with a period. (Level 4)
35Examples
- FOUR HEADINGS
- Centered Uppercase and Lowercase Heading (Level
1) - Centered, Italicized, Uppercase and Lowercase
Heading (Level 2) - Flush Left, Italicized, Uppercase and Lowercase
Side Heading (Level 3) - Indented, italicized, lowercase paragraph
heading ending - with a period. (Level 4)
36Examples
- FIVE HEADINGS
- CENTERED UPPERCASE HEADING (Level 5)
- Centered Uppercase and Lowercase Heading (Level
1) - Centered, Italicized, Uppercase and Lowercase
Heading (Level 2) - Flush Left, Italicized, Uppercase and Lowercase
Side Heading (Level 3) - Indented, italicized, lowercase
paragraph heading ending - with a period. (Level 4)
37Tables Appendices
38Constructing Tables
- Type the word Table and its arabic numeral
flush left at the top of the table. - Double space and begin the table title flush
left, capitalizing the initial letters of the
principal words italicize the title. - Double space the title if more than one line.
- Center column heads and subheads over the
appropriate columns within the table capitalize
only the initial letter of the first word of the
heading.
39Constructing Tables cont.
- Allow at least three spaces between columns.
- Double space all lines.
- Separate the table title from the headings and
the headings from the body with a line.
40Table 1 The Nurses Activity Scale Measure
and variable Score Mean
SD Variable 1
8 3 1.0 Variable
2 5
8 .5 Variable 3
7 5
2.5 Variable 4
6 6
0 Variable 5
9 4 1.5
41 Constructing Appendices
- Begin each appendix on a new page.
- Type the word Appendix and the identifying
capital letter (A, B, C, etc) at the top of the
page centered The letters are used in the order
the appendix is mentioned in the text). - If there is only one appendix, type Appendix at
the top of the page, centered. - Double space all lines.
42Appropriate Citation of Quotes and Paraphrasing
43Paraphrasing versus Quoting
- It is preferable to paraphrase, rather than
quote, the ideas of others unless the wording is
so wonderful that a quote is warranted. - How could you paraphrase the above sentence?
44Paraphrasing
- Original wording
- It is preferable to paraphrase, rather than
quote, the ideas of others unless the wording is
so wonderful that a quote is warranted. - Paraphrased wordingIt is generally better to use
your own words to describe someone elses ideas
instead of restating someone elses words
verbatim.
45Key Points to Remember
- Quotations (words and phrases not developed by
the author) and paraphrasing (ideas not developed
by the author but in the authors own words) must
be properly cited. - There may be more than one citation in a
paragraph.
46Key Points to Remember cont.
- Citations should follow every sentence where the
words and ideas are not original unless it is
clear from the context that multiple sentences
came from the same source.
47Two Types of Quotations
- Short Quotations are less than 40 words.
Incorporate into the text and enclose with double
quotation marks ( ). - Long Quotations are more than 40 words Display in
a double spaced block, indented five spaces from
the left, with no quotation marks.
48Rules for all Quotations
- Anything that is directly quoted from someone
elses work must be encased in quotation marks
and properly cited or with ellipsis points. - Use 3 ellipsis points () to indicate that
material has been omitted within a sentence. - Use 4 ellipsis points (.) to indicate material
has been omitted between sentences (the first
point indicates the period at the end of the
first sentence quoted).
49Rules for all Quotations cont.
- Provide the author, year of publication, and
specific page number of quote. - Include a complete reference for all quotations
in the reference list.
50Referencing Sources in the Body of the Paper
51Secondary Sources
- Cite the secondary source in the reference list.
- In text, name the original work and give a
citation for the secondary source. - Text Citation
- Blocks study (as cited in Kubsch
Gallagher-Lepak, 2004) .. - Reference List Entry
- Kubsch, M., Gallagher-Lepak, S. (2004). Nursing
models for the postmodern era. Advances in Green
Bay Nursing Chronicle, 22, 446-450.
52- ONE WORK BY ONE AUTHOR
- Author surname and year of publication
- Kubsch (2003) compared nurse staffing
patterns - In a recent study of nurse staffing patterns, it
was found that ..(Kubsch, 2003). - ONE WORK BY TWO AUTHORS
- Always cite both names every time the reference
appears - Connect the last names of a multiple author work
with an ampersand (Smith Smith, 2004).
53- ONE WORK BY THREE, FOUR, or FIVE AUTHORS
- Cite all authors the first time the reference
occurs. - All further references, include only the surname
of the first author followed by et al. and the
year in parentheses. - (first citation) Block, Kubsch, and
Gallagher-Lepak, (2003) found.. - (second citation) These authors found that .
(Block et al., 2003). OR Block and colleagues
(2003) found that.
54- ONE WORK BY SIX OR MORE AUTHORS
- Cite only the surname of the first author
followed by et al. and the year for the first and
all subsequent citations - In the reference list, provide the initials and
surnames of the first six authors, and shorten
any remaining authors to et al.
55- WORKS WITH NO KNOWN AUTHOR(S)
- Cite the first few words of the reference list
entry (usually the title) and the year. - Use double quotation marks around the title of an
article or chapter. - Italicize the title of a periodical, book,
brochure, or report. - When the work is designated as Anonymous, cite
the word followed by a comma and the date.
56- TWO OR MORE WORKS WITHIN THE SAME PARENTHESES
- Cite the works in the same order they appear in
the reference list. - Separate the citations with semicolons.
57- PERSONAL COMMUNICATIONS
- Includes letters, memos, e-mail, electronic
bulletin boards, personal interviews, telephone
conversations, etc. - Are cited only in the text but not included in
the reference list because information is not
recoverable - Give initials and surname of the communicator and
the exact date of the communication - M. J. DeVillers (personal communication, April 6,
2001) found.. - Scholars do not always view nursing as a
profession (M. J. Devillers, personal
communication, April 6, 2001).
58Citing Electronic References in the Text
- Indicate the page, chapter, figure, table, or
equation at the appropriate point in the text - Always give page numbers for quotations (see
section 3.34) - The words page and chapter are abbreviated
- (Collins, 2000, p. 232)
- (Katz, 1989, chap. 3)
59Citing Electronic References in the Text
- If the electronic source does not provide page
numbers, use the paragraph number preceded by the
paragraph symbol or the abbreviation para - If the paragraph and page number are not
visible, cite the heading and the number of the
paragraph following it to direct the reader to
the location of the material (see section 3.39) - (Wilson, 2000, 5)
- (Spender, 2000, Conclusion section,
para. 1)
60Citing Electronic References in Text No Author
Listed
- If you cannot find an author, cite the first few
words of the reference list entry (usually the
title and year). - The homepage of UW-Green Bays Professional
Program in Nursing (2003) has a PowerPoint
presentation about APA format (American
Psychological Association Writing, 2003).
61The Reference List
62- Start the reference list on a new page
- Type the word References center top of page
- Double space ALL LINES between and within entries
- Use a hanging indent format
- Arrange alphabetically
- If same first author arrange by year of
publication
63Table 1 Acceptable Abbreviations for Reference
List Entries Abbreviation
Reference list entry chap. chapter ed. edition
Rev. ed. revised edition 2nd ed. Second
edition Ed. (Eds.) Editor (Editors Trans. Trans
lator(s) n.d. no date p. (pp.) page
(pages) Vol. Volume (as in Vol.
4) vols. volumes (as in 4 vol.) No. Number Pt.
Part Tech Rep. Technical Report Suppl. Suppl
ement
More Rules
64Generic Format of Entries
Periodical (includes journals and scholarly
newsletters) Author, A. A., Author, B., B.,
Author, C. C. (2003). Title of article.
Title of Periodical, vol.(issue), page
numbers. Nonperiodical (includes books, reports,
manuals, and AV media) Author, A. A. (2003).
Title of book. Location Publisher. Chapter in an
Edited Book Author, A. A., Author, B. B.
(2003). Title of chapter. In A. Editor,
B. Editor, C. Editor (Eds.), Title of book (pp.
). Location Publisher.
65Journal Citations on the Reference List
66- One Author
- Brookfield, S. (1993). On impostorship, cultural
suicide, and other dangers How nurses learn
critical thinking. Journal of Continuing
Education in Nursing, 24, 197-205. - Two Authors
- Kane, D., Thomas, B. (2000). Nursing and the
F word. Nursing Forum, 35(2), 17-24.
67- Three to Six Authors
- Ossana, S. M., Helms, J. E., Leonard, M. R.
(1992). Do womanist identify attitudes
influence college womens self esteem and
perceptions of environmental bias? Journal of
Counseling and Development, 70, 402-408.
68- More than Six Authors
- Sherr, M., Maddox, J. E., Mercandante, B.,
Prentice-Dunn, S. I., Jacobs, B., Rogers, R. W.,
Katz, M., et al. (1982). The self-efficacy scale
Construction and validation. Psychological
Reports, 81, 663-671.
69Book Citations in the Reference List
70 General Information
- Give the name of the publisher as briefly as
possible - Write out the names of associations,
corporations, and university presses - Omit superfluous terms such as Publishers,
Co., or Inc. - Retain words such as Books and Press
71Table 2 Cities Not Needing State, Territory Code,
or Country Name in the Reference List
American cities Other
cities Baltimore New York Amsterdam
Paris Boston Philadelphia Jerusalem
Rome Chicago San Francisco London
Stockholm Los Angeles Milan
Tokyo Moscow Vienna
72Table 3 Use Post Office Abbreviations for States
and Territories Location
Abbreviation Location Abbreviation Alabama AL
Missouri MO Alaska AK
Montana MT American Samoa AS
Nebraska NE Arizona AZ
Nevada
NV Arkansas AR New Hampshire
NH California CA New Jersey
NJ Canal Zone CZ
New Mexico NM Colorado
CO New York NY Connecticut
CT North Carolina
NC Delaware DE
North Dakota ND District of
Columbia DC Ohio
OH Florida FL
Oklahoma OK Georgia
GA Oregon
OR
73Table 3 cont. Abbreviations for States and
Territories Location Abbreviation
Location Abbreviation Guam GU Pennsylvania
PA Hawaii HI Puerto Rico PR Idaho ID Rhode
Island RI Illinois IL South
Carolina SC Indiana IN South
Dakota SD Iowa IA Tennessee TN Kansas KS T
exas TX Kentucky KY Utah UT Louisiana LA V
ermont VT Maine ME Virginia
VA Maryland MD Virgin
Islands VI Massachusetts MA Washington WA Mich
igan MI West Virginia WV Minnesota MN Wiscons
in WI Mississippi MS Wyoming WY
74Examples of Book Citations
Vaill, P.B. (1996). Learning as a way of
being. San Francisco Jossey-Bass.
Hayes, E., Flannery, D. (2000). Women
as learners. San Francisco Jossey-Bass.
75- With an Edition
- hooks, b. (2000). Feminist theory From margin to
center (2nd ed.). Cambridge South End Press. - NOTE bell hooks, a Black feminist does not
capitalize her name in any publication,
therefore, she is cited appropriately. - With an Organization as Author, Edition, and
Capitalization of Proper Nouns - The American Nurses Association (2003).
Nursings Social Policy Statement (2nd ed.).
Washington DC Author.
76- Edited Book
- Belenky, M. F., Clinchy, B. M., Goldberger, N.
R., Tarule, J. M. (Eds.). (1997). Womens ways
of knowing. New York Basic Books. - No Author or Editor
- Rogets II The new thesaurus (3rd ed.). (1995).
New York Houghton Mifflin.
77- Chapter in a Book with an Unknown Editor
- Jarvis, P. (1992). Learning practice knowledge.
In Professionals ways of knowing New findings
on how to improve professional education (pp.
89-95). San Francisco Jossey-Bass.
78- Chapter in an Edited Book
- Hofstader, R., Munger, P. D. (1990). Education
in the workplace An integral part of the
development of professionals. In R. M. Cervero
J. F. Azzaretto (Eds.), Vision for the future of
continuing professional education (pp. 79-109).
Athens The University of Georgia.
79Dissertations
- Published
- Martin, L. (1992). Structural Racism Maintaining
hegemony in a white society. Dissertation
Abstracts International, 54(01), 296A. (UMI
No.2643857) - Unpublished
- Alfred, M. (2001). The maintenance of an
underclass with manmade language and
institutionalized patriarchy. Unpublished
doctoral dissertation. University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
80Electronic References
81Always
- Direct readers as closely as possible to the
information being cited reference specific
documents rather than home or menu pages. - Provide addresses (URLs) that work.
82Minimum Requirements
- Authors name whenever possible (may be the web
cite name go back to the home page or navigate
around the site to find it) - If you cannot, find an author, cite the first few
words of the reference list entry (usually the
title) and the year - Document title or description
- Date of publication, update, or the date of
retrieval - An Internet address or Uniform Resource Locator
(URL) -
-
83Transposing a URL to the Reference List
- Copy the URL directly from the address window in
the browser and paste it into the paper. - Do not insert a hyphen if the URL needs to be
broken.. - Always break a URL after a slash or before a
period. - Test the URL regularly.
- If the document cited has moved, update the URL.
- If the document is no longer available,
substitute another source or drop it from the
paper.
84General Form for Electronic References
- Online periodical
- Author, A. A., Author, B. B., Author, C.
C. (2003). Title of article. Title of
Periodical, volume, page numbers. - Retrieved month, day, year, from URL.
- Online document
- Author, A. A. (2003). Title of work.
Retrieved month day, year, from source.
85Internet Article Based on a Print Source
- 1. Articles are duplicates of print versions,
therefore, the same basic primary journal
reference is used - 2. Make a note of electronic version
- Goldberger, N. (1997). Ways of knowing Does
gender matter? Electronic Version. Journal of
Continuing Education in Nursing, 5, 117-123.
86Article in an Internet Only Journal
- Fredrickson, B. L. (2000, March 7).
- Cultivating positive emotions to
- optimize health and well-being.
- Prevention Treatment, 3, Article
- 0001a. Retrieved November 20,
- 2000, from
- http//journals.apa.org/prevention
- volume3/pre0030001a.html
87Stand Alone Document Organizational Author
University of Wisconsin Green Bay (2000).
The Green Bay idea. Retrieved July 10,
2001, from UWGB website
http//www.uwgb.edu/idea/uwgb-idea3.htm
88Electronic Article Retrieved from a Data Base
Roberts, S.J. (2000). Development of a positive
professional identity Liberating oneself
from the oppressor within. Advances in
Nursing Science, 22(4), 71-82. Retrieved
July 20, 2000, from CINAHL.
89Remember that this PowerPoint presentation does
not replace the APA manual. You must still
purchase the 5th edition.