Title: Writing for Scholarly Purposes Using APA Style
1Writing for Scholarly Purposes Using APA Style
- Denise Dedman, MSW, Ph.D.
- Assistant professor, Social Work
Department,University of Michigan - Flint
2Colleges are places of dialogue.
- When we are dishonest, the conversation is
damaged. - Inventing results to a research study is
dishonest and puts false information into the
dialogue. - Using someone elses words or ideas as your own
breaks down trust and causes confusion in the
dialogue.
3Plagiarism
- If you turn in work as though you had written all
the words yourself, but they are someone elses
words, thats plagiarism. - If you use someone elses ideas but dont give
them credit, thats plagiarism. - If you buy or are given a paper and you turn it
in as your own it is plagiarism.
4Avoiding Plagiarism
- If you use someone elses exact words you must
quote them. - If you read someones ideas and put them in your
own words, you are paraphrasing and you must give
them credit in a citation.
5Buying or downloading
- You know this is cheating.
- Software available to check for this includes
both internet searches and searching databases of
papers previously turned in on your campus.
6Copying
- Exact wording of documents, paragraphs and
sentences. - Word substitution
- Taking a word here and there and changing it,
leaving most of the text as it was.
7Example of substitution
- Institutions should spend time in dialogue
between departments regarding when and how
adjunct faculty should be used. The unique needs
of each department should determine its plan for
adjunct faculty (Dedman Pearch, 2004, p. 7).
8Example of substitution
- Colleges should spend time talking between
departments regarding when and how part timers
should be used. The unique needs of each unit
should determine its plan for part timers
(Dedman Pearch, 2004, p. 7).
9Paraphrasing
- So closely parallel to anothers thoughts that it
does not reflect your own thinking process. - If you borrow someone elses ideas, you must give
them credit in a citation.
10Synthesize!
- Read, comprehend, and give credit if you do
summarize or paraphrase. - When you write an essay or paper, dont just
quote or paraphrase the text (or journals). Make
the ideas come alive within the context of your
own experience.
11- Finding your way through the APA Style Manual,
5th ed. - Denise Dedman, MSW, Ph.D.
- Assistant professor, Social Work
Department,University of Michigan - Flint
12Issues addressed by this presentation
- A walk through the Manual, important places
youll want to mark - Reference styles
- Citation styles
- Quotations
- General writing issueschapter 2 is a wonderful
source of help on how to write, especially in
avoiding bias in your writing style!
13- Rememberthe purpose of all this APA stuff is to
help promote honesty and clarity in the scholarly
dialogue. - Citations
- If you use someone elses words there are rules
for quotes. - If you talk about someone elses ideas there is a
way to give credit (cite) for a paraphrase or
summary. - References help your reader find the source you
cited.
14Word usage
- Spell checkers give us false security
- Many words sound alike but are spelled
differentlycheck the usage - sight to see
- site a location/place
- cite refer to a source
15Vital tabs for your APA style manual
- p. 111 Headings (youll want to use these to make
your papers better organized) - p. 117 Quotations
- p. 207 Citations (within the text of your paper)
- p. 223 References (general form)
- p. 268 Electronic media references (if you used
an internet source) - Also check http//www.apastyle.org/elecref.html
- p. 397 Legal materials (how to cite a court case
or law)
16Online help for general questions
- http//www.vanguard.edu/faculty/ddegelman/index.as
px?doc_id796 - http//www.apastyle.org/styletips.html
- Examples of official APA style
- www.apa.org/journals
- (look up the references in an article)
17Paper template!
- To download a Microsoft Word template of an
APA-style paper, go to http//www.vanguard.edu/emp
library/files/psychapa.doc - www.vanguard.edu/emplibrary/files/psychapa.doc
18References
- General elements of a reference in p. 215-231.
- Specific types of material (what kind of thing is
this?) - Periodicals (A)
- Books, book chapters (B)
- Tech research reports (C)
- Conference proceedings (D)
- Dissertations theses (E)
- Unpublished works (F)
- Reviews (G)
- Audio visual media (H)
- Electronic media (I)
19Book- one author
- Brooks, R. L. (2004). Atonement and forgiveness
A new model for Black reparations. Berkeley, CA
University of California Press.
20Book- one author
- Brooks, R. L. (2004). Atonement and forgiveness
A new model for Black reparations. Berkeley, CA
University of California Press. - Lastname, F. M. (date). Title in sentence case
Italicized, but not underlined. Place Publisher.
21 - Karger, K and Stoesz, D. (2002). American
Social Welfare Policy.(4th edition). ? - Karger, H. J., Stoesz, D. (2006). American
social welfare policy A pluralist approach (5th
ed.). Boston, MA Allyn Bacon. ?
22Book- multiple authors
- Weinbach, R. W., Grinnell, R. M., Jr. (2004).
Statistics for social workers (6th ed.). Boston,
MA Allyn Bacon.
23Book- organization as author
- American Psychological Association. (2001).
Publication manual of the American Psychological
Association (5th ed.). Washington, DC Author. - Council of Social Work Education.
(2001). Educational policy and accreditation
standards. Alexandria, VA Author.
24A chapter in a book
- Houle, C. O. (1970). The educators of adults.
In R. M. Smith (Ed.), Handbook of adult
education (pp. 109-119). New York, NY The
Macmillan Company.
25Journal article
- Papacharissi, Z., Rubin, A. (2000). Predictors
of Internet use. Journal of Broadcasting and
Electronic Media, 4(2), 175-196.
26On-line journal article
- Witmer, D. F. (1997). Risky business Why people
feel safe in sexually explicit on- line
communication. Journal of Computer-Mediated
Communication. (2) 4.Retrieved March 4, 2004 from
http//www.ascusc.org/jcmc/vol2/issue4 /witmer2.h
tml
27Citations
- Citation is within the sentence. The period comes
last. - ?Their child can become a crown ward or society
ward.(Pearson, 2005) - ? Their child can become a crown ward or society
ward (Pearson, 2005).
28Citations within text
- Rick Lavoie (1994) states that children with
learning disabilities have difficulty in social
situations. - In their study of the development of
relationships on-line, Parks and Floyd (1996)
found that their participants reported moderate
to high levels of depth in their on-line
relationships.
29Secondary citations
- According to Turkle, the state of communicating
while seeming to be alone leads to a greater
sense of self-awareness (as cited in Murray,
2000).
30Quotations
- This suggests that the more often and longer
each session students use ICQ, the more likely
students would intimately disclose their personal
feelings when chatting on ICQ (Leung, 2002, p.
248).
31Quotes over 40 words
- As Palloff and Pratt (2003) stress, students are
required to take responsibility for their own
learning in a virtual environment - Students need to understand that the instructor
helps them begin a journey of discovery and that
it is then their responsibility to follow the
map to reach whatever destination is contained
in the learning objectives for the course. (p.
69)
32Quotes within quotes
- The new perspective challenges the belief that
internet relationships appeal to the reclusive. - Researchers are finding that the internet is
not mostly a social outlet for those who have
infrequent or superficial social contacts
(Birnie Horvath, 2002, p. 19), refuting earlier
claims that the internet was used as a substitute
for f2f sic social interaction. (Dedman
Samuels, 2005, p. 3)
33General writing issues
- Everything is double spacedeven the indented
long quotes. Yes, even the reference section. - Never put 2 spaces after a period. That was only
for typewriters. - In a longer (10) page paper youll need to use
headings and subheadings. - Proofreading really matters!
34So how do I find something to write about? Search
and Research
- Denise Dedman, MSW, Ph.D.
- Assistant professor, Social Work
Department,University of Michigan - Flint
35Critical thinking evaluation of web sites
- The internet seems to be the preferred tool for
searching/finding information - It is readily accessible, fast and easy
- Is it a good tool?
- You bet!
- But you have to be a good consumer of
information not everything is accurate, some
sites are deliberately biased, some content is
betteror worse!
36Critical thinking evaluation of web sites
- The library at Cornell University provides a
rubric for evaluation of web site content - Accuracy
- Authority
- Objectivity
- Currency
- Coverage
- www.library.cornell.edu/olinuris/ref/research/webc
rit.html
37Critical thinking evaluation of web sites
- The University of Michigan library provides a
similar rubric - Intention
- Relevance
- Reliability
- www.lib.umich.edu/ugl/guides/evaluation/
- The psych dept also has a good tutorial on
online research - www.lib.umich.edu/ugl/psychnew/anntutor/intro.html
38Sources of information
- Books
- Single author
- Edited volume
- Encyclopedia
- Periodicals
- Unpublished works
- Internet sources
39"Wise Words on Wikipedia"
- (6/2006) Kairosnews has printed a policy
statement -- drafted by Alan Liu,a professor of
English at the University of California at Santa
Barbara -- that tries to lay down the law on a
tricky question When is it okay for students to
cite Wikipedia in their scholarly work? - Some professors might wish the Web site's name
never turned up in students' papers, but Mr. Liu
argues that Wikipedia can be a useful, if
limited, source A Wikipedia citation can be
an appropriate convenience when the point being
supported is minor, noncontroversial, or also
supported by other evidence. In addition,
Wikipedia is an appropriate source for some
extremely recent topics (especially in popular
culture or technology) for which it provides the
sole or best available synthetic, analytical, or
historical discussion. But that should be about
the extent of it, Mr. Liu suggests. - Wikipedia should never be used as the primary
source for information on "anything that is
central to an argument, complex, or
controversial," he says. And he makes a good
point about the ephemerality of the site Since
articles are continually contested and changed,
citing a Wikipedia entry without noting the date
on which it was viewed is "meaningless," he
argues. --Brock Readhttp//chronicle.com/wiredcam
pus/index.php?id1395
40Librarieshome of books!
- Even though the dust mites live there, do not be
afraid!
41Dewey Decimal Classification
- 000 General Knowledge
- 100 Psychology Philosophy
- 200 Religions Mythology
- 300 Social Sciences Folklore
- 400 Languages Grammar
- 500 Math Science
- 600 Medicine Technology
- 700 Arts Recreation
- 800 Literature
- 900 Geography History
42Library of Congress Classification System
- A - General Works B - Philosophy, psych.
religion C - Auxiliary Sciences Of History D -
History (General) And History Of Europe E -
History America F - History America G -
Geography. Anthropology. Recreation H - Social
Sciences J - Political Science K - Law
- L - Education M - Music N - Fine Arts P -
Language Lit.Q - Science R - Medicine S -
Agriculture T - TechnologyU - Military Science
V - Naval Science Z - Library Science.
Information Resources
43Sources of information
- Periodicals
- Newspapers
- Magazines
- Trade journals
- Professional journals
44Sources of information
- Unpublished works
- Conference proceedings
- Papersincluding your own term papers!
- Its not o.k. to use the same paper (or parts of
it) in several different classes - Letters, other communications
45Sources of information
- Internet sources
- Web version of published text
- On-line books/journals
- Web pages
- Blogswhile not great resources for scholarly
writing they may contain references to
authorities you should look up
46Sources of informationInternet sources
- Web version of published text
- full text in html or doc or pdf
- The pdf version gives page s
- On-line books/journals Web pages
- Often difficult to provide the location of exact
quotes because they lack page s - Still must ital. the title, look for date (or
n.d.), look for author
47ERIC
- Educational Resources Information Center
- Since the 1960s has indexed journals
publications in education other social sciences - Can access through public channels,
- But you have better access through our librarys
web site
48Using the library databases
- Start at UM Flint homepage
- Go to the library link
- Select the database youd like to use
- Social Science Abstracts
- Social Service Abstracts
- Social Work Abstracts
- Publishers databases often contain full-text
articles - Blackwell Synergy, Wiley, Springerlink
49Google
- Google is fast, simple and a good starting place
- Look up a definition
- Search for information on general topics
- Academic search using Google Scholar
- Policy/legislation search using
Google.com/unclesam
50Search broadlythen deeply
- In your first searches, look for additional
sources by noting who the people in the article
you are reading use as sources. - Pay particular attention to names that keep
occurring, especially if several authors refer to
the same persons work. - Use the references of one paper to help identify
more sources. - This is also a source for keywords
51Law resources
- Public policy is often impacted by legislation
and court decisions - The Avalon Project (Yale) for constitutional and
other federal issues - http//www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/avalon.htm
- Lexis/Nexis for court cases
- Thomas (as in Jefferson) is the LOC site for
legislation - http//thomas.loc.gov
52Search techniques
- LogicBoolean Logic
- Boolean logic consists of three logical
operators - OR (lots of hits)
- AND (refines the field)
- NOT (reduces hits)