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Reference - APA - Citations & Referencing

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Documentation:

The APA style


RULES ON THE AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL
ASSOCIATION (APA)
FORMAT AND STYLE

 The APA Format and Style observes


double space throughout the text.

 Space once after colon ( following: x),


comma, semicolon ( following; x),
after periods that separate parts of
reference citations, after periods of
the initials of personal names.
Handling Quotations
In the Text

 Follow the author-date method of in-


text citation.
 This means that the author's last
name and the year of publication
for the source should appear in the
text, and a complete reference should
appear in the reference list at the end
of the paper.
 When referring to an idea from
another work but NOT directly quoting
the material, or making reference to
an entire book, article or other work,
make reference to the author and
year of publication in the in-text
reference.
For example:

 Jones (1998) compared student


performance ...
 In a recent study of student
performance (Jones, 1998), ...
 In 1998, Jones compared student
performance...
 When paraphrasing an idea from
another work, make reference to the
author and year of publication in
the in-text reference.
 When directly quoting from a work,
include the author, year of
publication, and the page number
for the reference.
 If there is no author to cite, such as
when citing a web page that lists no
author, use an abbreviated version
of the title of the page in quotation
marks to substitute for the name of
the author.
 For example:
A similar study was done of students
learning to format research papers
("Using APA," 2001).
 When citing a work that has no author
and no date, use the first few words
from the title, then the abbreviation
n.d. (for "no date").
 For example:
In another study of students and
research decisions, it was discovered
that students succeeded with tutoring
("Tutoring and APA," n.d.).
 Personal communications, such as e-
mail messages, or private interviews
conducted with another person,
should be referred to in the in-text
citations but NOT in the reference
list.
 To cite a personal communication,
provide initials and last name of the
communicator, the words personal
communication, plus an exact date in
the body of the paper.
For example:
A. P. Smith also claimed that many of
her students had difficulties with APA
style (personal communication,
November 3, 2002).
 When a work has two authors, cite
both names every time the reference
appears in the text. Join the authors'
names with the word and.
 When a work has three, four, or five
authors, cite all of the authors the
first time you refer to the work in the
text. The next time you refer to the
work, shorten the citation to the last
name of the first author plus the
words et al.
 Join the authors' names with the word
and when referring to them in the text;
join the authors' names with an
ampersand (&) when referring to
them in a parenthetical citation.
 When a work has six authors (or
more), cite only the last name of the
first author plus the words et al.
Short Quotations

 To indicate quotations of fewer than


40 words in the text, enclose the
quotation within double quotation
marks (“”). Provide the author, year,
and specific page citation in the text,
and include a complete reference in
the reference list.
Examples:

 She stated, "Students often had


difficulty using APA style," (Jones,
1998, p. 199), but she did not offer an
explanation as to why.
 According to Jones (1998), "Students
often had difficulty using APA style,
especially when it was their first time"
(p. 199).
 When citing a work that has no
author, no date, and no page
numbers, use the first few words from
the title, then the abbreviation n.d. (for
"no date"), and then use paragraph
numbers (if available) or simply leave
out any reference to pages.
For example:

 In another study of students and


research decisions, it was discovered
that students succeeded with tutoring
("Tutoring and APA," n.d.).
Long Quotations (block
quotes)

 Place quotations longer than 40 words


in a free-standing block of
typewritten lines, and omit quotation
marks. Start the quotation on a new
line, indented five spaces from the left
margin.
 Type the entire quotation on the new
margin, and indent the first line of any
subsequent paragraph within the
quotation five spaces from the new
margin. Maintain double-spacing
throughout. The parenthetical
citation should come after closing
punctuation mark.
For example:

Jones's 1993 study found the following:


Students often had difficulty using
APA style, especially when it was
their first time citing sources. This
difficulty could be attributed to the
fact that many students failed to
purchase a style manual or to ask
their teacher for help. (p. 199)
Reference List

 The reference list appears at the end


of the paper. It provides the
information necessary for a reader to
locate and retrieve any source cited in
the body of the paper. Each source
cited in the paper MUST appear in
the reference list; likewise, each
entry in the reference list must be
cited in the text.
Reference List

 References should begin on a


separate page from the text of the
essay under the label References
(with no quotation marks, underlining,
etc.), centered at the top of the page.
It should be double-spaced just like
the rest of the paper.
Reference List: Basic Rules

 Authors' names are inverted (last


name first); give the last name and
initials for all authors of a particular
work.
 Reference list entries should be
alphabetized by the last names of the
first author of each work.
For example:

Calfee, R. C., & Valencia, R. R.(1991).


APA guide to preparing manuscripts
for journal publication. Washington,
DC: American Psychological
Association.
Reference List: Basic Rules

 If you have more than one article by


the same author(s), single-author
references or multiple-author
references with the exact same
authors in the exact same order are
listed in order by the year of
publication, starting with the earliest.
For example:

Berndt, T. J. (1996). Exploring the effects of


friendship quality on social development.
In W. M. Bukowski, A. F. Newcomb, & W.
W. Hartup, (Eds.), The company they keep:
Friendship in childhood and
adolescence. (pp. 346-365). Cambridge,
UK: Cambridge University Press.
Berndt, T. J. (2002). Friendship quality and
social development. Current Directions in
Psychological Science, 11, 7-10.
 All lines after the first line of each
entry in your reference list should be
indented one-half inch from the left
margin. This is called hanging
indentation.
 Article in an Internet Periodical

Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Date of


publication). Title of article. Title of
journal, volume number (issue
number if available). Retrieved
month day, year, from http://web
address.
 Nonperiodical Internet Document
(e.g., a Web page or report)

Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (Date of


publication). Title of article.
Retrieved month date, year,
from http://Web address.
Please refer to the Graduate
school APA manual for more
information 

Thank you.

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