fall 2006 rules for apa writing used with permission from: john r. slate, ph.d

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Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D.

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Page 1: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

RULES FOR APA WRITING

Used with permission from:John R. Slate, Ph.D.

Page 2: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

GUIDELINES FOR WRITING IN

AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

4TH EDITION STYLE

Page 3: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

TYPING INSTRUCTIONS

All margins are 1 inch. The page header is printed at the 1 inch margin line, not above it [p. 240].

If using WORD, you will need to set FIVE margins: left margin, right margin, top margin, bottom margin, and header margin

Page 4: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

All writing is DOUBLE-SPACED [p. 239]. NO exceptions.

Page 5: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Number all pages BEGINNING with title page [p. 240].

Page 6: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Information about what is included on the title page can be found on pages 248-250.

Page 7: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Manuscript is LEFT-justified (results in right side being uneven). [p. 240]

No hyphenation unless word is written as such (e.g., at-risk, t-test).[pp. 70-74]

Page 8: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Space ONCE, after ALL punctuation. After internal periods in abbreviations, no space occurs (e.g., a.m., U.S.). [p. 244]

Page 9: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Avoid leaving a single line at the bottom of a page (i.e., first line of a paragraph begins at the bottom of a page and then carries over to the next page--called a widow).

Avoid leaving a single line at the top of a page (i.e., last line of a paragraph is carried over to the next page--called an orphan).

In WORD or in WordPerfect, go into format; page; keep text together; and set the widow/orphan protection.

Page 10: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Headings are: Level One (centered, first letters capitalized); Level Three (flush left margin, underlined, first

letters capitalized); Level Four (indented five spaces, underlined,

and followed by a period). Information regarding headings and their levels

can be found on pages 242-243.

Page 11: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Words/phrases are not artificially emphasized using bold, single or double quote marks, underlining, or by any other means.

The only words that have quote marks around them are quotations and you must cite the specific pages from which the quote was taken.

Page 12: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Use Arial or Times New Roman 10 or 12 point font size. Use the same font size and font type throughout your paper.

Be careful when typing your page header that it is the same font and same font size as your text. You must set it with most word processing programs.

Page 13: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

CITATIONS

Do NOT have studies cited in your reference section UNLESS they are cited in the text of your paper.

Just because you read an article does NOT mean it belongs in your reference section.

Every study cited in the text of your paper MUST be referenced on your reference page.

Page 14: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

ALWAYS provide a citation for anyone else's work you use in paraphrased or quoted form to write paper. [p. 168]

Page 15: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

ALWAYS provide a page number(s) for any quotations you use, as well as the authors.

‘&’ is used within parentheses. ‘and’ is used in text of paper.

Page 16: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

When citing a study with more than two authors: List all authors the first time (e.g. Slate,

Smith, Gonzalez, Jones, & Sloan, 1995) after the first citation in which all names

listed, cite the first author's last name and then et al., year (e.g., Slate et al., 1995) [pp. 169-170]

Page 17: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

REFERENCES

See pages 174-188 in APA 4th edition manual.

The references are begun on a new page.

Page 18: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Referencing Electronic Materials

• website at:

http://www.beadsland.com/weapas/#AV

Page 19: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

GENERAL INFORMATION

Write the literature review in PAST TENSE. PAST TENSE writing does not have to be

passive or boring, but should be ACTIVE. [pp. 32-33]

Page 20: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Writing is FORMAL and TECHNICAL FEELING words are not used Do NOT write the way in which you carry

on a conversation

Page 21: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Paragraphs must be more than two sentences. NO one or two sentence paragraphs.

Avoid long paragraphs greater than seven sentences. Paragraphs should range in size from three to seven sentences.

Count: 3 to 7 sentences per paragraph. Only exceptions are: Definitions of Term section and Hypotheses section.

Page 22: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Contractions are NOT used. Don’t have any in your paper.

The word data is a plural term: data ARE, the word datum is singular.

Page 23: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Make sure that nouns and verbs are in agreement; if one is singular, so should be the other; if one is plural, so should be the other. [pp. 34-35]

Make sure your nouns and pronouns are in agreement as well. That is, if you use student in the beginning of your paper, then the pronoun used later should NOT be ‘their’ ...

Page 24: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Avoid using, ‘There is’ or ‘There are’, as this writing is very passive. When you find a sentence that begins this way, delete the there is/are and add a verb after the first noun present in the sentence.

Do NOT write, ‘This is’, as ‘This’ always refers to something. Along the same lines, do not write, those are, because those always refers to those what.

Page 25: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

It's means ‘it is’ and is NOT a possessive pronoun.

Its is a possessive pronoun and may be used, when and where appropriate.

Avoid using IT as it, many times, is unclear to what the IT refers. Always be clear to the reader about what you are discussing.

Page 26: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Do NOT use the word DONE unless you are or have cooked something. Done does NOT mean completed or finished in technical writing.

Connect your sentences together with integrating phrases or words. Avoid jumpy writing [pp. 24-28]. One way to integrate sentences together is to use a few of the key words from the previous sentence in writing a new sentence.

Page 27: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Alternate sentence beginnings so that your sentences do NOT begin the same way all the time. Avoid using THE to begin your sentences.

Page 28: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Connect your paragraphs with integrating phrases or words. Avoid jumps between paragraphs [pp. 24-28]. One way to integrate paragraphs is to use some of the words from the previous paragraph in beginning the next paragraph or through use of such phrases as: In contrast to the findings above...Similar to Smith’s findings...

Page 29: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Alternate paragraph beginnings so that your paragraphs do NOT begin the same way all the time. Avoid using The to begin paragraphs.

While and since can be used ONLY in terms of time. Since does NOT mean because in technical writing. Words such as though, although, and whereas are acceptable alternatives to while. [pp. 42-43]

Page 30: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Do NOT begin a sentence with an abbreviation. [p. 89] If you have to spell the term out again, then do so.

Do NOT begin a sentence with a numeral, spell it out or use a leading word (50 students… vs. Fifty students…)

Avoid using colloquial expressions (e.g., write up for report or set up for develop) [p. 28].

Avoid using pronouns as pronouns confuse readers unless the referent is obvious. [pp. 36-38]

Page 31: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Avoid bias in your writing. See pages 46-60.

When referring to gender of participants, use boy and girl when referring to people of high school age and younger; men and women for persons 18 years of age and older. [p. 53]

Page 32: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Avoid using superlatives such as “very” or “great.”

Please use the spell check function of your word processing program prior to submitting your paper. NO excuse for having misspelled words. [p. 255] Please proof or have a colleague proof your paper for errors that a spell check cannot catch (e.g., you when you mean your).

Page 33: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Fall 2006

Avoid having inanimate objects engaging in animate activities. That is, do not write "Research shows" or "Techniques indicated" or "Results proved." When you have an inanimate object engaging in an animate activity (e.g., techniques which improved), you need to rearrange the wording as follows: techniques in which students' vocal responses were improved. Only people can do things in your paper.

Page 34: Fall 2006 RULES FOR APA WRITING Used with permission from: John R. Slate, Ph.D

Do not use words such as "proven" or "proved." Instead use “demonstrated.”