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APA Style Guide
APA STYLE GUIDE
The American Psychological
Association (APA) has developed guidelines for the written presentation of
research. The complete rules appear in
the Publication Manual of the American
Psychological Association 6th ed. (shelved in the Reference
Section and at the Circulation Desk).
Examples of types of commonly cited works appear below. Please check with your instructor for more
specific information.
General Information
- Use a separate page for your reference list.
- Use 12 point Times Roman or Courier type.
- Arrange citations alphabetically by author’s last name.
- Double space within all entries.
- Use hanging indents. See the Publication Manual of the APA, section 8.03 for instructions.
Citing Sources in Text
APA uses
the author-date system for citations in the text of your paper. These citations refer the reader to the
Reference List at the end of the paper.
Below are examples of in-text citations:
·
One Work
by One Author- Viviano (1995) sees advantages in this line of defense.
·
One Work
by Multiple Authors- Viviano, Smith, and Johnson (1994) found that native
people have little to lose by adopting these practices.
·
Groups as
Authors- (National Institute of Mental Health [NIMH], 1999) have taken a
somewhat different approach.
References
The
Reference list appears at the end of your paper and should include only the
sources used in the research and preparation of the paper. Each reference in the Reference List should
be directly cited in the text. Detailed information on preparing a Reference
List can be found in The Publication
Manual of the APA—see chapter 6 for detailed information on how to cite
different types of materials, and see chapter 7 for detailed information on
formatting the Reference List—or Purdue Online Writing Lab (OWL) http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/
Helpful websites: Guides to APA style
JCTC’s Research Guide on Citations <http://jefferson.kctcs.libguides.com/citations>
APA Style web site “Electronic References” <http://www.apastyle.org/elecref.html>
University of Iowa.
Guide to Citation Style Guides <http://bailiwick.lib.uiowa.edu/journalism/cite.html>
University of Maryland University Libraries < http://www.umuc.edu/library/guides/apa.shtml
>
More helpful websites: Input and print citations
EasyBib <http://www.easybib.com/>
(Note: Must pay for subscription to use APA)
KnightCite Citation Service <http://www.calvin.edu/library/knightcite/index.php>
Son of Citation Machine < http://citationmachine.net/>
Print Sources
Books, Book Chapters and Entries in
Anthologies
Book with a single author:
Author last name,
Author first name initial. (Year published). Title of book. City where published: Company that published.
Von Borries, P. (2010). The Louisville
baseball almanac. Charleston, SC: The History Press.
Book with two or more authors (but less
than six authors):
Author last name,
Author first name initial, & 2nd Author last name, First name
initial. (Year published). Title of book.
City where published: Company that published.
Firestone, R.W.,
& Catlett, J. (1999). Fear of intimacy.
Washington, DC: American
Psychological Association.
Article or individual chapter in a book:
Article author
last name, First initial. (Year published). Title of article or chapter. In
Book author’s first initial. Last name, Title
of book (page numbers). City where published: Company that published.
Vigil, J.D.
(2005). Young people join gangs because
of social marginalization. In W. Dudley and L.I. Gerdes (Eds.), Gangs: Opposing viewpoints (pp.
79-89). Detroit, MI: Greenhaven Press.
Encyclopedias
Entry with a named author:
Author last name,
First initial. (Year published). Entry title. In Name of encyclopedia (Vol. #, page #). City where published:
Company that published.
Calabrese, R.L.
(2000). Alienation. In Encyclopedia of psychology (Vol. 1, pp.
116-118). New
York, NY: Oxford University Press.
Entry without a named
author:
Entry title.
(Year published). In Name of encyclopedia
(Vol. #). City where published: Company that published.
Egoism. (2010).
In The new encyclopedia Britannica:
Micropedia (Vol. 4). Chicago, IL: Encyclopedia Britannica.
Magazine, Journal and
Newspaper Articles
A periodical is a publication
that appears regularly at a fixed interval (e.g. a newspaper, a magazine or a
scholarly journal). Names of newspapers should be properly capitalized and
underlined or italicized. Use p. or pp.
before single or multiple page numbers respectively. Separate discontinuous
pages with a comma. For example, the
article below started on page B1 and continued on page B7.
Print Magazine:
Author last name, First initial. (Year published). Article
title. Magazine title, volume #(issue #), page numbers.
Sanneh, K. (2011,
March 7). Fish tales. New Yorker, 25(3), 38-43.
Print Journal article:
Author last name, First initial. (Year published).
Article title. Journal title, volume#(issue#), page #.
Rosenblum, S.,
Sachs, D., & Schreuer, N. (2010). Reliability and validity of the
children’s leisure assessment scale. The
American Journal of Occupational Therapy, 64(4), 633-641.
Newspaper Entry with author:
Author last name,
First name initial. (Year published). Article title. Newspaper Title, page#.
Norris, F. (2011, April 22).
After years of red flags, a conviction.
The New York Times, pp. B1,
B7.
Newspaper Entry without author:
Article title.
(Year published). Newspaper Title,
page #.
Air controller
suspended for watching DVD on job. (2011, April 19). The Courier-Journal, p. A6.
Electronic Sources
Books and
Encyclopedias
Electronic book (from
a source such as NetLibrary, Google Books or an e-Reader):
Author last name, First name initial. (Year published). Title of book. Retrieved from URL
Bell-Vilada, G.H.
(2009). Garcia Marquez: The man and his work
(2nd ed.). [Ebrary version]. Retrieved from http://site.ebrary.com/
Skloot, R. (2010) The immortal life of Henrietta Lacks.
[Kindle version]. Available from Amazon.com
Electronic Encyclopedia found through
subscription database:
Author last name,
First name initial. (Year published). Entry title. Name of encyclopedia. Retrieved from http://someaddress.com/
Mussen, P. (2011). Psychology. Encyclopedia Americana.
Retrieved from
http://ea.grolier.com/
Wikipedia (may not be
accepted by your instructor):
Title of
document. (Date published). Retrieved
from http://someaddress.com/full/URL
Mountaintop
removal mining. (2004, July 22). Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/
Journal, Magazine &
Newspaper Articles
Please note, that while many online services offer citation
tools for their articles, these citations are not 100% accurate. That is why it
is important to check generated citations for accuracy.
Electronic Magazine article found through a
subscription database:
Author last name,
First name initial. (Year published). Article title. Magazine title, volume#(issue#),
page #.
Borowitz, A.
(2004, November 15). Pavlov’s brother. New
Yorker, 80(35), 63.
Electronic Journal
article found through a subscription database:
Author last name, First initial. (Year published).
Article title. Journal title, volume#(issue#),
page #.
Hughes, J.,
Brestan, E., Christens, B., Klinger, L., & Valle, L. (2004).
Problem-solving interactions between mothers and children. Child &
Family Behavior Therapy, 26(1), 1-16.
***Recent changes in APA style call for the use of a Digital
Object Identifier (DOI). If no DOI is
available, use a URL. Your instructor may ask you to use DOIs in accordance
with the latest APA changes.
Entry with DOI inclusion:
Sagarin, B.J.,
& Lawler-Sagarin, K.A. (2005). Critically evaluating competing theories: An
exercise based on the Kitty Genovese murder. Teaching of Psychology, 32(3), 167-169.
doi:10.1207/s15328023top3203_8
Entry from an online
newspaper:
Author last name,
First name initial. (Year published). Article title. Newspaper Title. Retrieved from http://someaddress.com/
Carpenter, S. (2001, October). Sleep deprivation may be
undermining teen health. APA Monitor.
Retrieved from http://www.apa.org/
Newspaper article found on a subscription
database:
Author last name,
First Name initial. (Year published). Article title. Newspaper Title, page#. Retrieved from http://someaddress.com/
Markoff, J. (2011,
April 26). Digging deeper, seeing farther: supercomputers alter science. New York Times, p. D.1.
Films and Video-recordings
Motion Picture:
Producer last
name, First initial. (Producer) & Director last name, First initial.
(Director). (Year released). Title of
film [Motion picture]. Country of origin: Studio.
Rosellini, A.
& Madigan-Yorkin, A. (Producers) & Granik, D. (Director). (2010). Winter’s bone [Motion Picture]. United
States: Lionsgate.
Films on Demand:
Title of video.
(Year released). [Medium]. Retrieved from Database's URL on the web
Accepting
Life's Transitions. (1998). [Online video]. Retrieved from http://digital.films.com
Online Sources
Citing online sources can be
confusing. Refer to the Publication Manual of the APA or Purdue
Online Writing Lab (OWL) for details on citing various electronic sources
including e-mail and web pages.
Web Page (author):
Author last name, First initial. (Date). Web page title. Retrieved from URL
Roudik, P. (2011,
February 9). Russian federation: New law on police. Retrieved from http://www.loc.gov/
Web Page (no author):
Web page title. (Date).
Retrieved from URL
What is Alzheimer’s. (2011, April 20).
Retrieved from http://www.alz.org/
Chapter or section on a Web Page:
Name of
organization. (Date). Web page chapter or section title. In Web Page Title. Retrieved from URL.
National
Institute of Mental Health. (2009, January 23). What conditions can coexist
with ADHD? In Adolescent Attention
Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Retrieved from http://www.nimh.nih.gov/
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