APA 6th Sullivan Library @ Dominican College Updated 11/30/2012 What is APA?  APA = American Psychological Association.  Psychology, Education, and Health Sciences  Used for publication of.

Download Report

Transcript APA 6th Sullivan Library @ Dominican College Updated 11/30/2012 What is APA?  APA = American Psychological Association.  Psychology, Education, and Health Sciences  Used for publication of.

APA 6th
Sullivan Library @
Dominican College
Updated 11/30/2012
What is APA?
 APA
= American Psychological
Association.
 Psychology, Education, and Health
Sciences
 Used for publication of manuscripts

“Conformity” is the goal
What are the style rules?
 12
point Times New Roman font
 1” margins around all edges
 Double spaced throughout
 Running head (not author’s name) on
each page
 Page number in the upper right of each
page
What do I need?
 Title
page
(beginning)
 Main body of paper (middle)
 List of References
(end)
General Formatting Rules


Paper title – no more than 12 words in length. Capitalize
significant words.
Running head - No more than 50 characters, including spaces.
This is a shortened version of your title. Use capital letters for the
entire running head.
Setting up running heads and page numbers in Word 2007/2010:
1.
Insert > Header. Choose “Blank” or the first option.
2.
IMPORTANT: Make sure you click “different first page” in Design >
Options before you start typing.
3.
Type your running head,
Running head: TITLE OF YOUR PAPER
Running head: EFFECTS OF SLEEP DEPRIVATION
4.
Tab over your cursor to the far right side of the page, where
your page number goes.
5.
It might be helpful to view the ruler before you add a page
number, to see where the edge of the page is.
View > “Show” Section > Ruler.
4.
Insert > Page Number > Current Position > Plain Number
5.
A page number should be inserted on the far right side.
General Formatting Rules
1.
Go down to page 2 by pressing the enter key or similar to set up
page 2 and higher.
Insert > Header. Choose “Blank” or the first option.
2.
Type the running head (without Running head: …Compare to
#3 on previous slide)
TITLE OF YOUR PAPER
EFFECTS OF SLEEP DEPRIVATION
Thus, Running head: does not appear in the rest of your paper.
This is why you need a different first page.
Tab over your cursor to the far right side of the page, where your
page number goes.
Insert > Page Number > Current Position > Plain Number
A page number should be inserted on the far right side.
3.
Your paper should now be formatted appropriately in terms of the
running head and page numbers.
Title Page
Start of your paper

If you need an abstract as page 2, this would be page 3.
Why cite?
 Gives
credit to the researchers
 Shows which sources contributed to your
learning and intellectual growth
 Allows readers to easily find the sources to
further their own knowledge
 Prevents accidental plagiarism by you
Did you know. . . ?
 That




it is plagiarism to:
Copy the words, ideas, graphs, images, etc.
of others without proper credit
Cut and paste various ideas together from
different sources without proper credit
Use the same paper in more than one class
without permission
Edit material between quote marks without
proper notice (look in the APA 6th manual
for instructions on how to do it properly)
Citing what you found

Author / Date system:


Underwood and Findlay (2004) found that the
problem occurred when . . .
In-text citations
are a roadmap to
your references page
Ways to cite properly
 Two
places to put Author / Date info:
In the starting signal phrase:
The experiments by Davis and Smith (2004)
found that “a further variable was needed:
time” (p. 13).

In parentheses at the end:
… found that “a further variable was needed:
time” (Davis & Smith, 2004, p. 13).

Rules you shouldn’t try to
memorize . . . in-text citing
1 author (for both first and subsequent citations)
Signal phrase… Williams (2001)*
In the parentheses… (Williams, 2001, p. 13)
2 authors (for both first and subsequent citations)
Signal phrase … Williams and Robinson (2001) *
In the parentheses … (Williams & Robinson, 2001, p. 13)
3 authors (first citation)
Signal phrase … Williams, Robinson, and Smith (2001)*
In the parentheses … (Williams, Robinson, & Smith, 2001, p. 13)
3 authors (subsequent citations)
Signal phrase … Williams et al. (2001)*
In the parentheses … (Williams et al., 2001, p. 13)
* = do not forget the page number goes at the end of the quotation!
Rules you shouldn’t try to
memorize . . . in-text citing
4 authors (first citation)
Signal phrase … Williams, Robinson, Smith, and Hu (2001)*
In the parentheses … (Williams, Robinson, Smith, & Hu, 2001, p. 13)
4 authors (subsequent citations)
Signal phrase … Williams et al. (2001)*
In the parentheses … (Williams et al., 2001, p. 13)
5 authors (first citation)
Signal phrase … Williams, Robinson, Smith, Hu, and Margt (2001)*
In the parentheses … (Williams, Robinson, Smith, Hu, & Margt, 2001, p. 13)
5 authors (subsequent citations)
Signal phrase … Williams et al. (2001)*
In the parentheses … (Williams et al., 2001, p. 13)
6 or more authors (first and subsequent citations)
Signal phrase … Williams et al. (2001)*
In the parentheses … (Williams et al., 2001, p. 13)
* = do not forget the page number in the parentheses at the end!
Paraphrasing vs. Quoting
 Two

ways to insert an idea into your paper
Direct quotation
 Requires
author/date information
 requires a page number

Paraphrasing
 Requires
author/date information
 Page number optional, but highly
encouraged (might be required by your
professor)
Direct Quotation Example
 Examples
with required page number

Interpreting these results, Robbins et al. (2003)
suggested that the “therapists in dropout cases
may have inadvertently validated parental
negativity” (p. 541), contributing to an overall
climate of negativity.

Author / date / page # in parentheses
… and furthermore, “therapists in dropout cases
may have inadvertently validated parental
negativity” (Robbins et al., 2003, p. 541),
contributing to an overall climate of negativity.
What is paraphrasing?
 More
than changing the word order of a
few words
 More than just summarizing


Synthesizing (putting together) the
information
Expressing what you have learned to the
reader
Paraphrasing Example
 Using
a signal phrase for author / date to begin
the sentence has the advantage of letting your
reader know in advance that it is not your
idea(s), but parenthetical citations are okay,
too.
 Page number is optional but encouraged.
 The
researcher stated that the therapist might
have seemed to take the parents’ side, which
then caused the session to take a negative turn
(Robbins et al., 2003, p. 541).
Unique phrases
in paraphrases
 If
you want to use a small unique phrase from
the original text within your paraphrase:

The researcher stated that one of the issues was
a therapist who “inadvertently validated
parental negativity” and thus caused the
session to take a negative turn (Robbins et al.,
2003, p. 541).
Paraphrasing Tips
 Re-read
the text until you grasp its meaning
 Physically cover the text up!
 Re-write the quote from memory
 Look over your work:



Any unique phrases you would not normally use
need to be put in quotes (with a page number!)
Try to use different words than the author did
If it is close to the original idea, try again or ask for
help
Citing a source mentioned in
the source you have

Williams stated that “Nursing is fun” (as
cited in Kaymen, 2009, p. 245).
 Williams
has the information you want to
state/quote, but you don’t have his article
 Kaymen is the text you have in your hands
 Kaymen is the text you include in your
reference list, because that is where you got
the (secondary) information from, in case
there is a discrepancy.

It is recommended that you try to find the
original/primary source (Williams) rather
than using the secondary source (Kaymen)
Two or more works in the same
parentheses

If multiple items have the information,
arrange in the parentheses by the order
they would appear in the reference list:
 Several
studies (Miller, 1999; Shafranske &
Mahoney, 1998) reinforce the claim…

Exception: major citations which should be
consulted first by the reader:
 (Minor,
2007)
2001; see also Adams, 1999; Storandt,
Personal Communication

Private letters, interview, telephone
conversations, and etc. Sometimes includes
online material, but be careful to make sure
it is applicable for scholarly work.
 R.
A. Bates (personal communication, March
18, 2007)
 T. K. Lithman (interview, April 2, 2012)
 As the information is not recoverable by the
reader, it is not included in the reference list,
only the text of the paper.
Reference List Formatting
 Located
at the end of your paper, on a
new page
 Every source in the paper has an entry
 One word at the top of the page,
centered:
References
[Not bolded, italicized, or in quote marks]
Reference List Formatting
 Entries
in alphabetical order by (the first)
author’s last name usually, or, if needed,
the title of the work
 Double spaced
 Hanging indents used for references of 2+
lines
 Cite the work of individuals whose ideas,
research, or theories have influenced your
paper
 Citing an item implies you have read it
Author info (all items)

Two authors

Last Name, F. M., & Last Name, F. M. (1985). …


Three to seven authors


Commas should separate last names and other authors.
There is also a comma before ampersands ( & )
Last Name, F. M., Last Name, F. M., & Last Name, F. M.
(1985).
More than seven authors

Last Name, A. A., Last Name, B. B., Last Name, C. C., Last
Name, D. D., Last Name, E. E., Last Name, F. F., . . . Last
Name, H. H. (1985).
Reference List - Books
Last Name, F. M. (Year). An italicized title with only the
first word capitalized: Except proper nouns or after
colons. Location of Publisher: Publisher.
Smith, T. S. (2004). Running home: An American
sprinter’s story. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE.
Jones, B. Y., & James, C. A. (Eds.). (2009). Geriatric
physical therapy within the hospital. Philadelphia,
PA: F.A. Davis.
Reference List - Articles
Last Name, F. M., & Last Name, F. M. (Year). An article title
that is not italicized with only the first word capitalized:
Except proper nouns or after colons. Name of Journal
Italicized, vol#italicized(issue#), page#-page#.
doi:##.######
EBSCOhost:
ProQuest:
(citation/abstract page)
Note: some articles might
not have DOIs.
Reference List - Articles
If the DOI is not available, you can use the URL of
the journal’s homepage instead:
. . . vol#(issue#), page#-page#. Retrieved from
http://jopst.org

Or the name of the database (APA states only use
this if that is what your professor wants).
. . . vol#(issue#), page#-page#. Retrieved from
Academic Search Elite.

Article Examples
Sledziewski, L., Schaaf, R. C., & Mount, J. (2012). Preview use
of robotics in spinal cord injury: A case report. American
Journal of Occupational Therapy, 166(1), 51-8. doi:
10.5014/ajot.2012.000943
Passier, L. N., Nasciemento, M. P., Gesch, J. M., & Haines, T.
P. (2010). Physiotherapist observation of head and neck
alignment. Physiotherapy Theory & Practice, 26, 416-423.
Retrieved from: http://www. informahealthcare.com/ptp
Note: If a journal uses continuous pagination (issue 1 is pg. 1 – 76, issue 2 is 77 – 183,
etc.) you are not required to state the issue number in APA 6th, as shown in the
2nd example.
Note: Technically, example 1 comes from A.J.O.T., which also uses continuous
pagination and thus the (1) should not be included.
Reference List - Websites
Last Name, F. M. (Publication or last update date). A
website title with only the first word capitalized:
Except proper nouns or after colons. Retrieved from:
http://www.website.com
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.
(2012, Jan. 9). NINDS stroke information page.
Retrieved from: http://www.ninds.nih.gov/
disorders/stroke/stroke.htm
Reference List - Websites


No author – alphabetize by website title.
No date – use n.d.
Stroke statistics. (2008, Nov. 30). Retrieved from: http://
nyp.org/health/neuro-strkstats.html
Stroke statistics. (n.d.). Retrieved from: http://
nyp.org/health/neuro-strkstats.html
Reference List: Magazines
Chamberlin, J., & Novotney, A., Packard, E., & Price,
M. (2008, May). Enhancing worker well-being:
Occupational health psychologists convene to
share their research on work, stress, and health.
Monitor on Psychology, 39(5). Retrieved from:
http://www.apa.org/monitor/index.aspx
 Magazines
do not have DOIs, so use the
magazine’s URL home page.
 You probably won’t have a page number
if you find it online. If you find it offline, you
can use the page numbers instead of the
retrieved from.
More help with APA
 Paper

formatting video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pbUoNa5tyY
 Title: APA Format Citations-Sixth (6th) Edition
 Username: peakdavid
 Occupation: University Professor, Media and
Communications
APA Reference List Sample
http://flash1r.apa.org/apastyle/basics/data/resources/referen
ces-sample.pdf

APA Sample Paper
http://supp.apa.org/style/PM6E-Corrected-Sample-Papers.pdf

APA Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
http://www.apastyle.org/learn/faqs/index.aspx