Referencing Guidelines
Referencing Guidelines
Referencing Guidelines
TH
APA 7 Edition
Topics to be covered…
SOURCE: http://library.curtin.edu.au/research_and_information_skills/referencing/apa.pdf
What is Citing and Referencing?
SOURCE: http://library.curtin.edu.au/research_and_information_skills/referencing/apa.pdf
Why do we cite?
▪ To give credit to the author whose work you used to help you write
your paper
▪ Cite sources to document all ideas, facts, data, and findings you
mention in your paper that are not common knowledge.
▪ Cite only works you have read and ideas you have incorporated into
your writing.
▪ Include in-text citations for both paraphrases and quotations.
▪ In general, each work cited in text must have an entry in the
reference list, and each work in the reference list must be cited in the
text.
APA 7th Edition Style Manual
APA Style – Key Components
▪ In-text citations
▪ Quotations
▪ Reference List
In-Text Citations
In-text Citations ✪ Personal communications, do
not have a reference list entry.
▪Mention the author in the narrative of your paper, usually followed by the date in
parentheses.
Hargrett et al. (2018) reported
▪If multiple sources appear within the narrative of a sentence, they can be listed in any
order.
Studies by Warren (2018), Gutiérrez et al. (2013, 2016), and Stone and
Stein (2019) have examined
APA 7th Edition Section 8.11
Works by one author
Crépeaux (2019)
▪ Write the first author’s name and then shorten the rest of the names to “et al.” in every in-text
citation, including the first in-text citation.
(Browning et al., 2014)
Browning et al. (2014)
▪ Include additional author names when two or more works would shorten to the same in-text
citation to avoid ambiguity. For instance, instead of having identical in-text citations for Chavez
et al., 2016:
Shorten Chavez, Luis, Rodriguez, & Mayers, 2016 to (Chavez, Luis, et al., 2016).
Leave Chavez, Luis, & Byer, 2016 as (Chavez, Luis, & Byer, 2016)
▪ You can use an acronym for a group author if the group has a well-known acronym and you cite works by
it at least three times in your paper.
✔Spell out the name of the group and provide an acronym on first use.
✔Use the acronym consistently in the rest of your paper.
✔Do not include the acronym in the reference list entry.
▪ Credit paraphrases with an author–date citation in text using either the parenthetical or narrative
format.
Self-confidence increases across the lifespan (Thurman, 2019).
Montez et al. (2020) evaluated 5-year-old children as they engaged in a series of social–emotional
tasks.
▪ If a long paraphrase refers to the same source for several sentences, it is not necessary to repeat the author–
date citation in every sentence.
▪ Reintroduce a citation if the paraphrase continues in a new paragraph, the source changes, or you incorporate
other sources.
▪ Dotzen (2018) experimentally manipulated . . . Dotzen then provided participants . . . These findings and those
of other reports show . . . (Dotzen, 2018; Suarez, 2015, 2016; Xu et al., 2002, 2019b).
APA 7th Edition Section 8.10
Quotations
▪ Limit use of direct quotations to cases in which it is important to reproduce both what and how it
was said—e.g., reproducing an exact definition or responding to exact wording.
▪ All quotations need an in-text citation with the author, year, and location of the quotation.
✔For works without page numbers (e.g., webpages and websites), use a heading name, section
name, or paragraph number.
✔For audio-visual works, provide a time stamp for the beginning of the quotation.
APA 7th Edition Section 8.25 – 8.33
Short Quotation
▪ Always include a full citation (parenthetical or narrative) in the same sentence as the quotation and
include the page number or range (or other location information, e.g., paragraph number).
▪ Place periods and commas that are part of the quote within closing quotation marks. Place other
punctuation marks inside quotation marks only when they are part of the quoted material.
▪ Place the citation immediately after the quotation or at the end of the
sentence. If the citation is at the end of the sentence, put end punctuation
after the closing parenthesis.
▪ Include the author and year in the sentence and place the page number or other locator in
parentheses after the quotation.
Quartz and Suarez (2020) considered each participant’s “annual household income,
each parent’s level of education, and the number of children under 16 years old in the
household” (p. 162).
If the quotation precedes the narrative citation, put the page number or location
information after the year and a comma.
“Change is coming, whether you like it or not,” as Greta Thunberg said (2019, para. 4).
▪Provide the author, year, and page number (or other location information) in
parentheses after the quotation’s final punctuation.
We followed methods described in Porkey et al. (2000) study to arrange the testing area:
A square desk was placed at the back of the room. Two yellow pencils, a green pen, and a
purple eraser were arranged in a line on it. The judges’ table was placed 2 m from the desk and
was covered with a black cloth that reached the floor. Three chairs were placed behind the
table and facing the desk. No other objects were in the room during the testing session. (pp.
173–174)
▪ Start the reference list on a new page after the text and before any tables,
figures, footnotes, and/or appendices.
▪ Write the label “References,” centered and in bold at the top of the page.
▪ Alphabetize reference entries by the last name of the first author (but see
Publication Manual Sections 9.44–9.49 for exceptions).
▪ Double-space all reference entries (both within and between entries).
▪ Apply a hanging indent to references automatically using the paragraph-
formatting function of your word-processing program
▪ The first line of the reference entry is flush left and subsequent lines are
indented 0.5 in.
Reference Elements
Author Who?
Date When?
Title What?
Source Where?
Publication Manual (7th ed.) Section 9.4
✪ On a page from an organizational or government
Author website, the organization or government agency itself
is considered the author, unless otherwise specified.
GENERAL FORMAT
▪ Separate authors’ names with a comma.
▪ Use an ampersand (&) before the final author, even when there
are only two authors. End with a period.
Author, A. A., & Author, B. B.
▪ For a work with no author, start the reference with the title of
Publication Manual (7th ed.) Sections 9.8–9.12
the work.
Author
APPROXIMATE DATE
▪ When the date of original publication is approximate (for religious or classical works), use
“ca.” (which stands for “circa”).
(ca. 1886).
Publication Manual (7th ed.) Sections 9.13–9.17
NOT YET PUBLISHED
▪ When a journal article has been accepted for publication but is not yet published, use “in
press.”
Eyenga, F. (in press).
Date
SPECIFIC DATE
▪ Use more specific dates for works published on a regular basis, including:
▪ newspaper and magazine articles
▪ blog posts
▪ YouTube videos
▪ social media posts
▪ Include the year first, then a comma and the month, day, and/or season in parentheses,
followed by a period and a space.
Adler, S. E. (2018, November). Publication Manual (7th ed.) Sections 9.13–9.17
▪ Locate and cite another work that your readers can retrieve.
Source
FORMAT
▪ Put a period after the periodical, publisher, database or archive, social media site, or website
name.
▪ Do not include a physical location for most works.
▪ End with a DOI or URL if the work has one; do not put a period after.
Adler, S. E. (2018, November). Puppy cuteness is perfectly timed to manipulate humans. The
Atlantic. https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/11/survival-of-the-
cutest/570799/
Publication Manual (7th ed.) Sections 9.23–9.37
▪ When the author and the publisher are the same, such as with many reports, books, and websites
by group authors, omit the publisher name from the reference to avoid repetition.
✪ If an online work has both
Source a DOI and a URL, include only
the DOI.
▪ Do not write “DOI:” before a DOI or “Retrieved from” before a URL (except in rare
cases; see Publication Manual Section 9.16 for more).
▪ Copy and paste DOIs and URLs directly into your paper to avoid errors.
▪ Do not put a period after the DOI or URL.
Wentzel, K. R., Muenks, K., McNeish, D., & Russell, S. (2018). Emotional support,
social goals, and classroom behavior: A multilevel, multisite study. Journal of
Educational Psychology, 110(5), 611–627. https://doi.org/10.1037/edu0000239