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Format of the American Psychological Association 6 th Edition

Format of the American Psychological Association 6 th Edition. APA Manual. APA Format. Rules for manuscript preparation that contribute to clear communication Commonly accepted guidelines Each chapter provides different kinds of information,

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Format of the American Psychological Association 6 th Edition

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  1. Dr. Lincoln Format of the American Psychological Association 6th Edition APA Manual

  2. APA Format • Rules for manuscript preparation that contribute to clear communication • Commonly accepted guidelines • Each chapter provides different kinds of information, • Which is arranged in the sequence of manuscript preparation through publication Dr. Lincoln

  3. Manuscript Organization • Writing for publication is not easy • Good papers are carefully designed and managed • The content is important and of good quality • Before beginning a paper consider • Length required • Headings – the hierarchy of the ideas to be presented • Tone – interesting and compelling, not dull or lack style Dr. Lincoln

  4. Order of Manuscript Pages • Title page with title, author’s name, institutional affiliation, and running head • Abstract (separate page) • Text (begins on a new page) • References • Appendixes • Author Note • Footnotes (list together, starting on a separate page) • Tables • Figure Captions • Figures Dr. Lincoln

  5. Title Page • Summarizes main idea of paper • Concise statement of main topic • A title should be fully explanatory when standing alone • Principal function to inform readers about the study • Avoid words that serve no useful purpose • Recommended length for a title is 10-12 words Dr. Lincoln

  6. Abstract • A brief, comprehensive summary • Readers can survey the contents of an article (or paper) quickly • Most important paragraph in paper • Should be readable, well organized, brief and self-contained • Should be about 120 – 250 words Dr. Lincoln

  7. Abstract (of a research paper) • Should describe the following: • Problem • Subjects • Methods • Findings • Conclusions and implications or applications Dr. Lincoln

  8. Introduction • Introduce the problem • Describe the research strategy • It is not labeled!!! • Develop the background, an appropriate history and priority of the work of others • Tells what you did in the closing paragraphs of the introduction Dr. Lincoln

  9. Methods (for primary research papers) • Describes in detail how study was done • Identify subsections • Usually descriptions of participants, materials and procedures Dr. Lincoln

  10. Results • Summarizes data collected and statistics used • Main results presented first • Details follow; enough to justify the conclusions • Use tables and figures to report data • Can enhance readability of complex data • They must be mentioned in the text • Present relevant statistics Dr. Lincoln

  11. Discussion • Evaluate and interpret implications of results • Emphasize any theoretical consequences of the results • Be sure to check spelling and grammar throughout the paper, and use a thesaurus to find interesting alternative words Dr. Lincoln

  12. References • Citations document statements made about the literature • All citations in paper must appear in the reference list • All references on the reference list must be cited in text • Choose references carefully and cite them accurately Dr. Lincoln

  13. Appendix • Use it for detailed descriptions of certain material not needed in or distracting in the body of the paper. • An unpublished test • Complicated mathematical proofs • Lists • It should help reader understand, evaluate or replicate your work. Dr. Lincoln

  14. Author Note • Identifies specific information such as • The departmental affiliation of each author • Sources of financial support • Acknowledgement of contributions of others to the study • Disclosure of specifics, such as the bases of a study, if results have been presented at a meeting, etc. Dr. Lincoln

  15. Expression of Ideas • Essential to use correct grammar and professional writing style • Orderly presentations of ideas • Consistent in use of verb tense • Unbiased language • Correct spelling and punctuation Dr. Lincoln

  16. Abbreviations • Some common scientific abbreviations • a.m. ante meridiem • cm centimeter • dB decible • hr hour • in. inch • IQ intelligence quotient • mg milligram • p.m. post meridiem • ppm parts per million • s second Dr. Lincoln

  17. Use of Periods with Abbreviations • Use periods with • Initials of names (P. R. Jones). • Abbrev. for United States when used as an adjective (U.S. Navy) • Latin abbreviations • (a.m., cf., i.e., vs.) Dr. Lincoln

  18. Use of Periods with Abbreviations • Do not use periods with • Abbreviations of state names (NY; OH; Washington, DC) in reference list entries • Capital letter abbreviations and acronyms (APA, NIMH, IQ) (p. 110) • Metric and nonmetric measurement abbreviations (cd, cm, ft, hr, lb, kg, min, ml) • Exception – inch abbreviated as in. • Without the period it could be misread • Abbreviations for routes of administration • icv, im, ip, iv, sc Dr. Lincoln

  19. Plurals of Abbreviations • Usually you add an “s” alone, but not italicized • Without an apostrophe • IQs Eds. Vols. Ms ps ns • Exceptions • Do not add an s to make abbreviations of units of measurement pleural • For example: 3 cm, not 3 cms • To form the pleural of the reference abbreviation p. (page) • Write pp. • Do not add an s Dr. Lincoln

  20. Page Header & Running Head • The running head appears on every page • In the page header at the left margin • With the page number at the right margin • No more than the first 50 characters of the title should appear • All in uppercase letters Dr. Lincoln

  21. Headings • Headings indicate the organization of a manuscript and establish the importance of each topic. • Regardless of the number of levels of subheadings within a section, they should follow the same top-down progression. • Each section begins with the highest level of heading. • Even if one section may have fewer levels of subheading than another Dr. Lincoln

  22. Headings • The APA Manual discusses the 5 levels of headings • 6th edition - see pages 62-63 • Each heading level is numbered • The heading structure for all sections follows the same top-down progression • Each section starts with the highest level of heading Dr. Lincoln

  23. Headings • Level 1 Heading • Bolded, Centered Uppercase and Lowercase words • Level 2 Heading • Bolded at the left margin with upper and lowercase words • Level 3 Heading • Bolded, indented, with only the first letter of the first word in caps, and ending with a period Dr. Lincoln

  24. Headings • Level 4 Heading • Bolded, indented, italicized, with only the first letter of the first word in caps and ending with a period. • Level 5 Heading • CENTERED UPPERCASE HEADING Dr. Lincoln

  25. Levels of Heading • The heading structure for all sections follows the same top-down progression • Each section starts with the highest level of heading. • Example: Method Level 1 Sample and Participant Selection Level 2 Assessments and Measures Level 2 Q-sort measure of inhibition. Level 3 Life history calendar. Level 3 Measures of time. Level 4 Dr. Lincoln

  26. Quotations • Citing sources within the narrative • When quoting, • always provide the author, year, and specific page citation in the text. • Reproduce it word for word. • Incorporate a short quotation (less than 40 words) in text, and enclose with double quotation marks. “ . . . . . . . . . ” • For quotations of 40 or more words • Omit quotations marks and use block quote format Dr. Lincoln

  27. When to use quotation marks • Use double quote marks • To introduce a word or phrase used as a comment, as slang, or as an invented or coined expression. • The first time the word or phrase is used, then not needed • To set off the title of an article or chapter in a periodical or book when the title is mentioned in the text Dr. Lincoln

  28. Double or single quotation marks • Double – • for quotations in text • Single – • within double quotation marks to set off material that, in the original source, was enclosed in double quotation marks • In block quotes (40 or more words) – • do not use any quotation marks • use double marks to enclosed any quoted material within a block quote. Dr. Lincoln

  29. Block Quotes • 40 or more words • Free-standing block of typewritten lines • Omit quotation marks • Start a block quote on a new line • Indent it 5 to 7 spaces from left margin • Type subsequent lines flush with indent • Type entire quotation double-spaced • If quote is more than one paragraph • Indent first line of 2nd and additional paragraphs 5-7 spaces from the new margin. Dr. Lincoln

  30. Block quote According to Salka (2004), Leadership is what makes organizations effective. It’s the essential spark that makes things happen. Without leadership, an organization is just a loosely connected group of people operating without a unifying focus or coordinating mission, pursuing different goals, flailing in a hundred sometimes contradictory directions. (p. 7) The leadership role includes organizational skills, such as having a vision, being able to set the strategic direction of the firm, able to clearly communicate goals and objectives, and being responsible and accountable. Dr. Lincoln

  31. Omitting material from quotes • Use 3 ellipsis points (…) within a sentence to indicate that you have omitted material from the original source in a sentence. • Use 4 points (….) to indicate any omission between two sentences. • The manager felt that . . . . employees • needed to have increased responsibilities. Dr. Lincoln

  32. Citation of sources of quotes • Direct quote in text – • Provide author, year and page # in parentheses • Paragraph numbers may be used in place of page number for electronic text • When paraphrasing or referring to an idea contained in another work, it is not required to provide a page number. Dr. Lincoln

  33. Date • If more than the year is listed, then include the complete listing in the following order • Year, month, day • If no date is provided • identify this as no date • (n.d.) Dr. Lincoln

  34. Citation of sources of quotes • In mid-sentence, cite source in parentheses immediately after the quote marks, then continue the sentence. • “Four types of culture are adaptability, achievement, clan and bureaucratic” (Daft, 2003, p. 98), and these are illustrated in Exhibit 3.7. Dr. Lincoln

  35. Citation of sources of quotes • At the end of a sentence • close the quoted passage with quote marks, • cite the quoted source in parentheses after the quotation marks, • and end with a period or other punctuation outside the final parenthesis. (p. 121) • At the end of a block quote – • cite the quoted source in parentheses after the final punctuation mark. Dr. Lincoln

  36. Reference citations in text (see pp 174-176) • One author • Jones (1997); • (Walker, 2001) • In 1997, Jones • One work, multiple authors • 2 authors, cite both names every time used • 3,4 or 5 authors, cite all authors 1st time used, • In subsequent citations, only surname of first author followed by “et al.” and the year Dr. Lincoln

  37. Reference citations in text (see pp 175-176) • 6 or more authors • Cite only surname of 1st author followed by “et al.” and the year for first and subsequent citations • Groups as authors • Corporations, government agencies, etc. • Usually spelled out each time they appear in a citation • Give enough info in citation for reader to locate entry in reference list Dr. Lincoln

  38. Reference citations in text (see pp 176-177) • Works with no author • Cite in text 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, and italicize the title of a periodical, book, brochure or report. • Anonymous author • Cite in text the word Anonymous followed by a comma and the date • (Anonymous, 2009) • Note: In the reference list, an anonymous work is alphabetized by the word Anonymous. Dr. Lincoln

  39. Author Variations • Associations • Author as publisher • Collaboration • Corporate author • Editors • Government agency of institute • Group authors • Multiple authors • No author Dr. Lincoln

  40. Personal Communications • Letters, memos, some electronic communications (E-mail), telephone conversations, etc. • Since they cannot be recovered, • they are not included in the reference list. • Cite in text only. • **Provide as exact a date as possible. • According to B. Smith (personal communication, September 2, 2009) . . . . Dr. Lincoln

  41. Secondary Sources (see p. 178) • Citing a work discussed in a secondary source • Put the secondary source in the reference list. • In text, name the original work, and give a citation for the secondary source • Smith and Jones study (as cited in Brown, Adams, Green & Walters, 2008) revealed some unusual findings. Dr. Lincoln

  42. Reference List (see p. 180) • Provides the information to retrieve each source • Include only sources used in the paper • Sources listed alphabetically • Data must be correct and complete • List is double-spaced • Use a hanging indent • Entries start flush left with margin • 2nd and subsequent lines indented 5-7 spaces Dr. Lincoln

  43. Order of References in Reference List (p. 181) • Alphabetical bysurname of first author • For several works by same first author • Arranged by year of publication, earliest first • Jones, L. L. (1996). • Jones, L. L. (1998). • One-author entries precede multiple-author entries beginning with the same surname • Brown, T. (2004) • Brown, T. & Green, A. (1999) Dr. Lincoln

  44. Order of References in Reference List • References by same author with the same publication date, are arranged alphabetically by title • Lower case letters (a,b,c) are placed immediately after the year in the parentheses • Jones, B. G. (1999a). After the study . . . . • Jones, B. G. (1999b). Framing the study . . . Dr. Lincoln

  45. Order of works with group authors or with no authors (p. 183) • Alphabetize group authors (associations, gov. agencies) by first significant wordof the name • Full, official names should be used • If work is anonymous • Entry begins with the word Anonymous • If there is no author • The title moves to the author position • The entry is alphabetized by the first significant word of the title Dr. Lincoln

  46. Reference list citation for a chapter in a book • A nonperiodical is a book • To cite a chapter in a book, the format is slightly different • Author, A., & Author, B. (1999). Title of chapter. In F. Editor, G, Editor, & H. Editor (Eds.), Title of book (pp. 222-299). Location: Publisher. • Note that the order of the editor names are listed first initial, then last name, which is just the opposite of the way an author is listed (last name first, then initial of first name) Dr. Lincoln

  47. ON-LINE SOURCES • E-mail communications • Web site • An article from an on-line journal • An on-line magazine article • Database accessed from Web Dr. Lincoln

  48. Examples • E-mail communications • Cited as personal communications, only in text as • Taylor (personal communication, February 3, 2007). • Web site • Cited in text (not on reference list) • There is a good nursing website that offers many free benefits to healthcare professionals (http://www.NursingCenter.com) Dr. Lincoln

  49. Examples • On-line article from journal Burns, J. (1999). Technology Issues. Business Quarterly, 11(4), 22-25. Retrieved January 4, 2004 from: http://www.xxxx.xxx.htm • Note that the journal name and volume number are in italics • Note: a retrieval date may not be necessary Dr. Lincoln

  50. Examples • On-line magazine article, no author Business and technology. (1998, December). Forbes, 11, 19-21. Retrieved March 1, 2008 from: http://www.xxxxx.com Reminder: The journal name and volume number are italicized; A retrieval date may not be necessary Dr. Lincoln

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