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APA Style Basics

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Why use APA style? to follow the standardized citation format for your field ... APA Style Formatting. 3 parts: title page, text, references page. 12-point serif font ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: APA Style Basics


1
APA Style Basics
  • The Academic Support Center
  • Workshop Series
  • John F. Kennedy University

2
Why cite sources?
  • To honor intellectual property rights
  • To avoid plagiarism
  • To provide a roadmap back to sources

3
Why use APA style?
  • to follow the standardized citation format for
    your field
  • to bring a professional quality to your
    coursework

4
APA Style Formatting
  • 3 parts title page, text, references page
  • 12-point serif font
  • double spacing
  • header and page number on each page
  • 1 margins on all sides
  • paragraphs indented ½ inch
  • in-text parenthetical citations

5
APA Style Citations
6
A Two-part System
  • In-text (Lamott, 1994, p. 22)
  • References page
  • Lamott, A. (1994). Bird by bird Some
    instructions on writing and life. New York
    Pantheon Books.
  • In-text (Amnesty International, 2002, para.
    8)
  • References page
  • Amnesty International. (2002, October 29).
    Russian Federation fails to uphold post-Soviet
    rights. Retrieved on November 6, 2002, from
  • http//www.amnestyusa.org/news/2002rf92002.html

7
In-text Citations
  • always
  • 1. authors last name
  • 2. year of publication
  • sometimes
  • 3. page number(s)

8
Direct Quotations
  • Authors name used in sentence
  • Novelist Anne Lamott (1994) discussed the
    agony that even the best writers face when they
    sit down to write We all often feel like we are
    pulling teeth, even those writers whose prose
    ends up being the most natural and fluid (p. 22).

9
Direct Quotations
  • Authors name NOT used in sentence
  • The two central tenets of Freuds theories are
    the formative importance of infantile sexuality
    and the existence of an unconscious mind that
    works on principles quite distinct from those of
    the conscious mind (Mitchell, 1986, p. 12).

10
Block Format Quotations
  • Quotations 40 words or longer
  • The researcher described her instructor as an
    ideal prototype of a connected teacher
  • She was intensely, genuinely
    interested in everybodys feelings about things.
    She asked
  • a question and wanted to know what
    your response was. She wanted to know because
  • she wanted to see what sort of
    effect this writing was having. She wasnt using
    us as a
  • sounding board for her own feelings.
    (Belenky, Clinchy, Goldberger,
  • Tarule, 1986, p. 225)
  • Note block quotations are double spaced


11
Secondary Sources
  • Source cited within another source
  • In discussing how the story was written,
    Stevenson explained,
  • For two days I went about racking my brains
    for a plot of any
  • sort and on the second night I dreamed the
    scene at the
  • window, and a scene afterwards split into
    two. All the rest
  • was made awake, and consciously, although I
    think I can trace
  • in much of it the manner of my Brownies.
    (as cited in
  • Garfield, 1974, p. 48)

12
Paraphrases
  • Authors name used in sentence
  • Sakamoto and Miura (1976) have shown that
    those who are emotionally close to the patient
    tend to have slower recognition of the patients
    illness than those who are emotionally distant.

13
Paraphrases
  • Authors name NOT used in sentence
  • In Japanese culture, problems are supposed to
    be kept within the family thus, problem solving
    occurs within the family structure (Ina, 1997).

14
Paraphrases
  • Directing readers back to specific location
  • Amnesty International (2002) reported that
    human rights violations, instead of decreasing
    since the early, more intense days of the war,
    have become a routine part of the militarys
    operations ( 4).

15
Personal Communications
  • Interviews, course lectures, emails, etc.
  • The term leprosy, as used in the King James
    translation of the Bible, actually refers to a
    wide variety of skin ailments ranging from
    athletes foot to Hansens disease (D. Ashburn,
    personal communication, February 16, 2003).
  • Note personal communications do NOT appear on
    the references page

16
Exercise 1
  • Much research has been conducted to try to
    understand what is involved in the transition to
    motherhood. Bolen (1985) spoke of an archetypal
    dimension to motherhood, which is typically
    activated automatically (gradually or
    instantaneously) after the birth of a child, and
    often in other caregiver-child relationships as
    well. This image of maternal behavior and
    emotion (p. 14) is at play in the psyches of
    both mother and child, each of whom will notice,
    and long for it, if it is in absent.

17
Exercise 2
  • Stern and Bruschweiler-Stern (1998) expanded
    on this concept, describing a change in mindset
    as a result of motherhood, which alters not only
    a womans identity and sense of self, but her
    relationships, both with her husband and other
    women, her place in society, and her
    sensibilities and intuition (p. 22). They
    argue seeing to the survival of the baby, the
    relationship with the baby, and the need for
    validation and encouragement from other women
    (p. 22).

18
Exercise 3
  • The significance of reconciling fantasies with
    reality, of support from other women, and of the
    birth itself is echoed by other researchers. One
    study conducted by a group of researchers at
    Stanford University found that many women
    experienced a gap between their expectations
    (fantasies) and the reality of new motherhood,
    which contributed to feelings of incompetence
    that they tried to hide behind the mask of the
    supermom (Choi, Henshaw, Baker, Tree, 2005).

19
The References Page
  • alphabetized
  • hanging indented
  • double spaced
  • different formats for each source type

20
Books by a Single Author
  • Authors last name, first middle initials.
    (Year of publication). Book title (edition).
    Place of publication Publisher.
  • Lamott, A. (1994). Bird by bird Some
    instructions on writing and life (2nd ed.). New
    York Pantheon Books.

21
Chapters in an Edited Book
  • Chapter authors last name, first middle
    initials. (Year of publication). Chapter title.
    In Book editors first middle initials and last
    name (Ed.), Book title (chapter page numbers).
    Place of publication Publisher.
  • Jing, A., Wan, C. (1997). Socialization of
    Chinese children. In H. S. R. Kao D. Sinha
    (Eds.), Asian perspectives on psychology (pp.
    59-73). Thousand Oaks, CA Sage Publications.

22
Journal Articles from an Electronic Database
  • Authors last name, first middle initials.
    (Date of publication). Article title. Journal
    title, volume(issue), page numbers or indicator
    of length. Retrieved month date, year, from
    Database name.
  • Schneiderman, R. A. (1997). Librarians can make
    sense of the Net. San Antonio Business Journal,
    11(31), 58-60. Retrieved June 20, 2000,
  • from Proquest Research Library.

23
Websites
  • Authors last name, first middle initials.
    (Date of publication). Title. Retrieved month
    date, year, from Organizations Web site URL
  • Chou, L. (2004). Technology and education
    Choosing past and imagining educational futures.
    Retrieved June 20, 2000, from Columbia
    University, Institute for Learning Technologies
    Web site
  • http//www.ilt.columbia.edu/publications/papers/t
    echanded.html

24
Exercise 1
  • Authors last name, first middle initials.
    (Year of publication). Book title (edition).
    Place of publication Publisher.
  • Elbow, P. (1981). Writing with power Techniques
  • for mastering the writing process. New York
  • Oxford University Press.

25
Exercise 2
  • Chapter authors last name, first middle
    initials. (Year of publication). Chapter title.
    In Book editors first middle initials and last
    name (Ed.), Book title (chapter page numbers).
    Place of publication Publisher.
  • Carter, R. T., Boyd-Jackson, S. (1998). Racial
    identity and psychotherapy. In R. L. Jones (Ed.),
    African American identity development (pp.
    99-120). Hampton, VA Cobb Henry Publishers.

26
Exercise 3
  • Authors last name, first middle initials.
    (Date of publication). Article title. Journal
    title, volume(issue), page numbers or indicator
    of length. Retrieved month date, year, from
    Database name.
  • Allen, J., Hermann-Wilmarth, J. (2004, June).
    Cultural construction zones. Journal of Teacher
    Education, 55(3), 214-226.

27
Exercise 4
  • Authors last name, first middle initials.
    (Date of publication). Title. Retrieved month
    date, year, from Organizations Web site URL
  • Wilber, K. (n.d.). On the nature of a
    post-metaphysical spirituality to Habermas and
    Weis. Retrieved January 24, 2006, from Shambhala
    Publications Web site http//wilber.shambala.com/
  • html/misc/haberman/index.cfm/xid,1546927/yid,
    16750067

28
Still have questions?
  • Use the
  • Academic Support Centers
  • APA Hotline!
  • Call (925.969.3530)
  • or e-mail (asc_at_jfku.edu)
  • us with your question
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