APA Style Helper - Royal Roads...

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Running head: APA HELP GUIDE APA Help Guide October 2014 © 2014 Royal Roads University

Transcript of APA Style Helper - Royal Roads...

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Running head: APA HELP GUIDE

APA Help Guide October 2014

This document is to be used only for additional information, and does not take the place of the APA publication manual.

© 2014 Royal Roads University

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APA HELP GUIDE 2

Document Overview

The information provided within this document comes from The Publication Manual of

the American Psychological Association (6th ed.), which in this document is referred to as the

APA manual. In most cases, the information provided in the APA manual aligns with the

expectations of RRU programs, but if your instructor or your thesis/major paper handbook

provides a differing requirement, your program’s rules take precedence over those of the APA

manual. If your program’s requirement is that you follow the rules of the APA manual, then the

program’s rules and those of the APA are the same thing. Each section of this document provides

page references where you can find more information on the particular topic within the APA

manual.

Whenever possible, this document has been formatted according to APA standards, but in

the interests of shortening the total length of the document, you’ll find 1.5 line-spacing. Please

format your academic papers according to your program’s requirements.

Remember that this document does not replace the APA manual; therefore, if you have a

question that is not answered within this document, it is your responsibility to consult the APA

manual. For more information, please refer to APA Style and WriteAnswers.

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Table of Contents

Formatting Guidelines.....................................................................................................................7

Alignment....................................................................................................................................7

Bulleted/Numbered Lists.............................................................................................................7

Font..............................................................................................................................................7

Footnotes.....................................................................................................................................7

Headings......................................................................................................................................8

Indentation...................................................................................................................................9

Line-Spacing...............................................................................................................................9

Margins........................................................................................................................................9

Page Numbers..............................................................................................................................9

Running Head..............................................................................................................................9

Tables and Figures Formatting..................................................................................................10

Title Page...................................................................................................................................11

Quoting and Paraphrasing...................................................................................................12

Adding Words or Emphasis......................................................................................................12

Block Quotations.......................................................................................................................12

Changes in Quotations Requiring No Explanation...................................................................12

Incorrect Grammar or Spelling within a Quotation...................................................................13

Omitting Words in Quotations..................................................................................................13

Paraphrasing..............................................................................................................................13

Quotation Punctuation...............................................................................................................13

In-text Citations.............................................................................................................................14

One Work by One Author.........................................................................................................14

Corporate or Group Author.......................................................................................................15

Two Authors..............................................................................................................................15

Three to Five Authors................................................................................................................15

Six or More Authors..................................................................................................................16

Two or More Works by the Same Author and in the Same Publication Year..........................16

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Citing an Ebook Without Page Numbers..................................................................................17

Secondary Source Citations.......................................................................................................17

Works by Anonymous or Without a Listed Author..................................................................17

Personal Communication (e.g., RRU discussion forum postings, email, interviews)..............18

Citing Results of Original Research..........................................................................................18

References: General Information...................................................................................................19

Alphabetize References.............................................................................................................20

Author and Editor Information..................................................................................................20

Publication Date........................................................................................................................20

Title Information.......................................................................................................................20

Publication Information.............................................................................................................21

Reference Examples.......................................................................................................................22

Periodicals.................................................................................................................................22

Periodicals – General Reference Format...................................................................................22

Journal Article with DOI...........................................................................................................23

Journal Article without DOI......................................................................................................23

Daily Newspaper Article, No Author........................................................................................24

Online Newspaper Article.........................................................................................................24

Non-Periodicals.........................................................................................................................24

Entire Book, Print Version........................................................................................................25

Book Chapter, Print Version.....................................................................................................25

Ebook........................................................................................................................................25

Ebook Chapter...........................................................................................................................26

Entry in an Online Reference Work, No Author or Editor.......................................................26

Technical and Research Reports...............................................................................................26

Authored Report from a Governmental Department.................................................................26

Report from a Private Organization..........................................................................................27

Report from a Private Organization, Available on Organization Website................................27

Doctoral Dissertation or Master’s Thesis from a Database Service..........................................27

Unpublished Dissertation or Thesis..........................................................................................27

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Master’s Thesis, from a University Outside the United States, Retrieved from a Commercial

Database....................................................................................................................................27

Specific Section of Website......................................................................................................28

Specific Section of Website, No Identified Author, No Date...................................................28

Information Retrieved from a Website, e.g., blog postings, press releases, tweets..................28

Entire Website (Not a Specific Document)...............................................................................28

Online Video (e.g., YouTube or Ted Talks).............................................................................28

Canadian Legislative Documents..............................................................................................28

APA Resources..............................................................................................................................29

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List of Figures

Figure 1. The hanging indent option used to format a paragraph.................................................21

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APA Help Guide

Formatting Guidelines

Alignment

Align the text in the body of your paper flush against the left margin with a ragged right

margin (e.g., the alignment of this page). Do not use justified alignment (when the text is equally

spread across the width of the page) (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 229).

Bulleted/Numbered Lists

When considering the use of a bulleted or numbered list in your academic writing, please

take a moment to consider if the list will encourage understanding of the topic, or if the list is a

technique to avoid using full sentences to explain a concept. As you might imagine, the latter

isn’t a valid reason to use a bulleted or numbered list in a formal academic paper because

bulleted lists do not generally include analysis, but instead only provide surface-level

information. Since the focus of academic writing is to demonstrate your critical thinking, you

will more fully communicate your ideas by writing complete sentences. However, should you

choose to use bullets to separate three or more elements within a sentence, “capitalize and

punctuate the list as if it were a complete sentence” (American Psychological Association, 2010,

p. 64). Please refer to pages 63 and 64 for more information about using bulleted and numbered

paragraphs or lists in your writing.

Font

Serif fonts (Times New Roman, Century Schoolbook etc.) are preferred over sans serif

fonts (Arial, Comic Sans etc.). The preferred font within APA style is Times New Roman in a 12

point font (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 228).

Footnotes

The APA divides footnotes into two categories: content or copyright permission

footnotes. Content footnotes “supplement or amplify substantive information in the text; they

should not include complicated, irrelevant, or nonessential information. Because they can be

distracting to readers, such footnotes should be included only if they strengthen the discussion”

(American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 37). The APA guide further notes that, “in most

cases, an author integrates an article best by presenting important information in the text, not in a

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footnote” (p. 38).

Use a copyright footnote to indicate that you have received permission from a publisher

to reproduce another author’s table or figure in your text. Attaining copyright permission is only

required for documents that will be published outside of RRU (e.g. major research project or

thesis). For assistance with attaining copyright permission, please contact the RRU Copyright

Office. For the correct wording for a copyright permission footnote, please refer to page 38 in the

APA manual.

Headings

Headings help to give structure to your document and allow your reader to clearly

understand the levels of organization within your paper:

Levels of heading establish the hierarchy of sections via format or appearance. All topics

of equal importance have the same level of heading throughout a manuscript. For

example, in a multiexperiment paper, the headings for the Method and Results sections in

Experiment 1 should be the same level as the headings for the Method and Results

sections in Experiment 2.

Avoid having only one subsection heading and subsection within a section, just as

you would in an outline. Use at least two subsection headings within any given section,

or use none. (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 62)

Please see below for the five levels of headings and their respective formatting:

Centred, Boldface, Uppercase and Lowercase Heading (1)

Flush Left, Boldface, Uppercase and Lowercase Heading (2)

Indented, boldface, lowercase paragraph heading ending with a period. (3)

Indented, boldface, italicized, lowercase paragraph heading ending with a period. (4)

Indented, italicized, lowercase paragraph heading ending with a period. (5)

(p. 62)

When using paragraph headings, begin your paragraph text on the same line after the heading.

Use Word styles to format your headings, and format them consistently within each level

throughout the entire document. Use the levels sequentially; that is, use heading one for your top

level of heading, heading two for your next level of heading, and so forth. For example:

Literature Review

Definitions

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Historical perspective

Pre-1700s.

Modern history. (Body text starts on same line as the heading)

Methodology

Research Strategy

Definitions.

Philosophies.

Indentation

Indent each line of a new paragraph one tab space, which should be set at 1.27 cm or ½

inch (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 229).

Line-Spacing

Unless directed otherwise by an instructor or a program handbook, double-space

“between all text lines of the manuscript. Double-space after every line in the title, headings,

footnotes, quotations, references, and figure captions” (American Psychological Association,

2010, p. 229).

Margins

For regular assignments, format margins to 2.5 cm or one inch at the top, bottom, and on

both sides of the text (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 229).

Page Numbers

Place all page numbers in the top right-hand corner in the document header. Include your

title page within the total page count; however, do not provide a number on the title page. Use

Arabic numerals (e.g., 1, 2, 3) throughout the document, and continue the page numbers

sequentially to the end of the report, including all appendices.

Running Head

The running head is an abbreviated title that is printed at the top of the pages of a

published article to identify the article for readers. The running head should be a

maximum of 50 characters, counting letters, punctuation, and spaces between words. It

should appear flush in all uppercase letters at the top of the title page and all subsequent

pages. (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 229)

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In this document, you can see the running head in the top left corner of each page. Note that the

running head has a different format on the title page than on the other pages. For another

example, please see the APA’s sample papers.

Tables and Figures Formatting

Present tables and figures according to the rules provided in the APA manual. Please see

below for more information about formatting tables and figures, and refer to the APA manual for

detailed instructions.

Tables. Please refer to pages 127-150 of the APA manual for rules for formatting tables.

Tables may be single- or double-spaced, depending on what is best for readability

(American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 141)

Include a table title (p. 133), table headings (pp. 133-137), the table body (pp. 137-

138), and a table note (general, specific, probability) (pp. 138-141)

Limit the use of ruling, or lines, “to those that are necessary for clarity” (p. 141).

Using tables from another source in a thesis or major project requires copyright

permission; note the granted permission in the table note (see p. 38).

See pages 129-149 for sample tables

See page 150 for a table checklist

Figures. Please see pages 150-167 of the APA manual for the rules for formatting figures.

Figures are any type of illustration other than a table, including graphs, charts, maps,

drawings, and photographs (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 151)

See pages 152-156 for the standards for figures

Legend and caption required (p. 158-159)

o “Figure legend should be positioned within the borders of the figure” (p. 159)

o Italicize “Figure x.” that precedes the caption but not the caption text (p. 159)

Lettering in a figure should be in a simple typeface (e.g., Arial), and should be no

smaller than 8 points and no larger than 14 points (p. 161)

Using figures from another copyrighted source in a thesis or major project requires

copyright permission; give credit in the figure caption (p. 167)

See pages 152-166 for sample figures

See page 167 for a figure checklist

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Title Page

Instructors may have individual preferences for title page content, so use the title page

approved by your instructor. The title page may include, but not be limited to, the “title, running

head, author byline, [and] institutional affiliation” (American Psychological Association, 2010,

p. 229). For your thesis or major project, check with each of your supervisors and sponsors who

are listed on your title page to see what academic degrees they would like listed after their name.

For information regarding creating an effective title for a paper, see page 23 in the APA manual.

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Quoting and Paraphrasing

Quoting from another source involves integrating words or phrases taken directly from

another author’s work. In order to avoid plagiarizing material, be sure to enclose short quotations

(fewer than 40 words) within double quotation marks and properly cite the source material (see

In-text Citations within this document). Format a quotation of 40 words or more as a block

quotation; see “Block quotations” within this section, and page 170 in the APA manual for more

information.

Adding Words or Emphasis

To insert material in a quotation, “use brackets, not parentheses” (American

Psychological Association, 2010, p. 173). To “emphasize a word or words in a quotation,

italicize the words or words. Immediately after the italicized words, insert within brackets the

words emphasis added, that is, [emphasis added]” (p. 173). For example, “They [the judges]

were convinced that the swimmer had missed the two-handed [emphasis added] turn.”

Block Quotations

A quotation 40 words or more in length must be formatted as a block quotation

(American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 171). Do not use quotation marks, and indent the

quotation 1.27 cm or one-half inch from the left margin (i.e. the same position as a new

paragraph) (p. 171). When a block quotation exceeds one paragraph, indent the first line of each

paragraph a further 1.27 cm or one-half inch (p. 171). If there is a quotation within the block

quotation, use double quotation marks to indicate the quotation (p. 92). The parenthetical citation

should follow the last punctuation mark in the quote, and as with all quotations, the author, year,

and location reference (e.g., page or paragraph number) must be provided. Double-space the

entire quotation (p. 171). Please see the block quotation under Running Head for a sample block

quotation.

Changes in Quotations Requiring No Explanation

In order to better integrate your quotation into your text, you can change the

capitalization of the first letter of the first word without indicating that you changed the text

(American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 172). As well, the closing punctuation mark at

the end of a quoted sentence may also be changed, and single and double can quotation marks be

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exchanged, where appropriate (p. 172). Note all other changes according to APA rules. Please

refer to page 172 for more information.

Incorrect Grammar or Spelling within a Quotation

If “incorrect spelling, grammar, or punctuation in the source might confuse readers, insert

the word sic, italicized and bracketed, immediately after the error in the quotation” (American

Psychological Association, 2010, p. 172). For example, “they made they're [sic] lunches.”

Omitting Words in Quotations

If you remove words from the middle of quotation, use three spaced ellipsis points (. . .)

to indicate the change from the original quotation (American Psychological Association, 2010, p.

172). If you remove text from the end of a sentence but continue quoting from the following

sentence, use four spaced ellipsis points (. . . .) to indicate the removal of material from between

the sentences (pp. 172-173). Start your quotation at the point where the text is relevant; ellipses

are not necessary at the beginning or end of a quotation (p. 173).

Paraphrasing

Paraphrasing refers to summarizing or presenting another author’s work in your own

words. Accordingly, quotation marks are not necessary around the paraphrased text, but it is

important that the text is significantly different from the original; simply rearranging words or

changing a couple of words is not sufficient to qualify as paraphrasing. When preparing the

citation, “you are encouraged to provide a page or paragraph number, especially when it would

help an interested reader locate the relevant passage in a long or complex text” (American

Psychological Association, 2010, p. 171).

Quotation Punctuation

For a quotation of 39 words or fewer in the text, place the sentence punctuation after the

closing bracket of the reference: “A terrible storm started last night as I took the dog for our

nightly walk” (Jamieson, 1999, p. 12). For a block quotation, the closing punctuation appears

before the reference citation. See the block quotation under Running Head in this document for

an example.

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In-text Citations

An in-text citation provides sourcing information about quoted or paraphrased text. The

purpose of the citation is to indicate that the preceding information originated with someone else

and to give your reader sufficient information that they can then find the corresponding entry in

your reference list. Please note that, “if the quotation appears in mid-sentence, end the passage

with quotation marks, cite the source in parentheses immediately after the quotation marks, and

continue the sentence” (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 171). The same approach

would also apply to paraphrased information. The standard format for a citation is (Author’s last

name/corporate or group author, year of publication/copyright, location reference). For a printed

resource or a document in PDF format, the location reference will be a page number. For

electronic resources that are not paginated, use a paragraph number (e.g. para. 4) or “if the

document includes headings and neither paragraph nor page numbers are visible, cite the heading

and the number of the paragraph following it” (p. 172). For example: (Government of Canada,

1968, p. 5), (Bell, 2008, para. 7), or (Jones, 2006, Recommendations section, para. 4). For more

information, please see page 177 in the APA manual for a chart that compares the basic citation

styles, as well as the information provided below. For information on how to create a citation

when source information such as the author name or date is missing, please see “Writing in-text

citations in APA Style”.

When presenting information in a paragraph, you may find that you’re citing repeatedly

from the same resource. While APA style doesn’t use ibid., you can use a shortened citation that

provides only the page number after the first full citation, as long as you don’t introduce another

resource into the paragraph or begin a new paragraph. For more information and examples,

please see page 174 in the APA manual, Section 6.04 (“One Work by One Author”).

One Work by One Author

When citing a resource by one author, provide the last name of the author and the date of

publication at the appropriate point. To decide the placement of the citation, “if the name of the

author appears as part of the narrative…cite only the year of publication in parentheses.

Otherwise, place both the name and the year, separated by a comma, in parentheses” (p. 174).

For example, “According the APA (2010), …” (p. 4), or “cite only the year of publication in

parentheses” (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 174).

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Corporate or Group Author

You may use a corporate or group author name in place of a person’s name. When using

a source that uses an abbreviation as its title, you must spell out the full title in the first citation

of that source and insert the abbreviation in parentheses after the full title. Regarding whether to

abbreviate the title of the author,

the names of groups that serve as authors. . . are usually spelled out each time they appear

in a text citation. The names of some group authors are spelled out in the first citation and

abbreviated thereafter. In deciding whether to abbreviate the name of a group author, use

the general rule that you need to give enough information in the text citation for the

reader to locate the entry in the reference list without difficulty. If the name is long and

cumbersome and if the abbreviation is familiar or readily understandable, you may

abbreviate the name in the second and subsequent citations. If the name is short or the

abbreviations would not be readily understandable, write out the name each time it

occurs. (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 176)

Use the full name of the author in the reference list. See page 176 in the APA manual for more

information.

First citation: (Royal Roads University (RRU), 2001)

Second and following citations: (RRU, 2001)

Reference list entry:

Royal Roads University. (2001). The university. Retrieved from

http://www.royalroads.ca/about-rru/the-university/

Two Authors

If a work has two authors, insert an ampersand (&) between the authors’ names in the

citation. Cite both authors every time the resource is referenced (American Psychological

Association, 2010, p. 175). For example, (Green & Doble, 1988, p. 34).

Three to Five Authors

Cite all the authors in the first reference citation, but “in subsequent citations, include

only the surname of the first author followed by et al. (not italicized and with a period after al)”

(American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 175).

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First citation of source: The study concluded that the sky is not actually blue (Smith, Robertson,

& White, 1999, p. 14).

Second citation of source: Smith et al. (1999) further concluded that clouds are not actually white

(p. 16).

Reference list entry:

Smith, A., Robertson, B., & White, C. (1999). What colour is your sky? Victoria, Canada:

Authors.

Six or More Authors

For documents that have six or more authors, “cite only the surname of the first author

followed by et al. … and the year for the first and subsequent citations” (American Psychological

Association, 2010, p. 175). If you have two references that shorten to the same form, please refer

to page 175 in the APA manual for instructions on the proper citation format. Please refer to

page 198 in the APA manual for a sample reference list entry with more than six authors.

Two or More Works by the Same Author and in the Same Publication Year

To distinguish between works by the same author with the same publication date, use the

suffixes a, b, c, etc. after the year (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 178). This

format must also be used in the corresponding references. To determine which resource gets

what suffix, order the resources alphabetically by the title of the article (excluding "a" or "the").

The first resource would be (2013a), the second resource would be (2013b), etc. You can append

the lowercase letters to n.d. as well: n.d.-a, n.d.-b. In your in-text citations, please make sure

that you're using the same lower-case letter as you did in your references. For example, (Royal

Roads University, n.d.-a, para. 3) and (Royal Roads University, n.d.-b, para. 2) would

correspond to the following references:

Royal Roads University. (n.d.-a). Education & technology. Retrieved

from http://www.royalroads.ca/prospective-students/programs/education-technology

Royal Roads University. (n.d.-b). Humanitarian studies. Retrieved

from http://www.royalroads.ca/prospective-students/programs/humanitarian-studies

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Multi-author Citation

Use a semi-colon between authors in a multi-author citation; listing of authors must be in

alphabetical order: (Raise the Dam, 1988; Roy, 1999; Smart & Weston, 2001) (p. 178).

Citing an Ebook Without Page Numbers

Citing from an ebook can be a bit tricky because some ebooks don't have page numbers.

Please see “Ebook” and “How do you cite an e-book (e.g., Kindle Book)?” for information and

examples of how to cite an ebook.

Secondary Source Citations

When referencing a secondary source, name the text where you found the information

(American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 178). For example, if you quote Souper’s text,

which you found in Green’s book, you should reference Green because you read Green’s book:

“Souper (as cited in Green, 1999) notes that…”. Please note that it is always best to work with

original research, so if, for example, Souper’s study is important to your study, read Souper’s

original work so that you can derive your own conclusions, rather than relying on Green’s

interpretation. If you need help finding primary sources, please contact the RRU librarians.

In the reference list, provide the author of the secondary text that you read, not the

primary author (i.e. reference Green). Do not list the primary source (e.g. Souper) in your

reference list unless you directly refer to it elsewhere in your text.

Works by Anonymous or Without a Listed Author

If your document was authored by “Anonymous”, instead of the author’s last name, cite

“Anonymous” in the citation (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 177). For example,

(Anonymous, 2005, p. 42). “Anonymous” would also appear in the author field in the reference

list.

If the work you are referencing does not name an author, you can instead use the first few

words of the title (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 176). Enclose the title of an

article or chapter in double quotation marks, and italicize the title of all other resource types (p.

176). For example, “the current reservoir capacity is insufficient for the water use needs of the

community” (Raise the Dam, 1988, p. 12), or as stated in Raise the Dam (1988), “the current

reservoir capacity is insufficient for the water use needs of the community” (p. 12). The

reference list entry is as follows:

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APA HELP GUIDE 18

Raise the Dam Higher. (1998). Sooke, Canada: Concerned Sooke Community Members

Coalition.

Personal Communication (e.g., RRU discussion forum postings, email, interviews)

Personal communication (e.g., a phone call, conversation, interview, email, lecture, non-

archived discussion group posting) does not provide recoverable data; therefore, the resource is

only cited within the text but not in the reference list (American Psychological Association,

2010, p. 179). When citing personal communication, provide the first initial and last name of

your contact, “personal communication”, and the date the communication took place. It is

unnecessary to specify the type of communication within your citation. For example, (J.

Greenwood, personal communication, January 15, 2004), or J. Greenwood (personal

communication, January 15, 2004).

Citing Results of Original Research

If you’re writing up the results of your original research for your major project or thesis,

please check with your academic supervisor to see how he or she would prefer that you present

quoted or paraphrased information taken from your research. The usual approach is that a

citation isn’t necessary; rather, please provide sufficient information within the text so that your

reader can tell that the information came from your original research. A citation isn’t necessary

since the information is a product of your original and as yet unpublished research. For example,

“In response to the first survey question, Participant A noted that, ‘insert response here’, whereas

Participant B stated that, ‘insert statement here’”. If you have promised anonymity to your

research subjects in your ethical review, please make sure that you use pseudonyms or otherwise

mask your participants’ identity when you provide the attribution to the quoted or paraphrased

information.

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References: General Information

When formatting a document according to APA style, include a reference list rather than

a bibliography or a works cited page. Remember that all the reference list entries must be

formatted according to APA rules, and all recoverable resources cited in the text must be

included in the reference list. Likewise, all resources listed in the reference page must be cited

within the text.

Unless your program or instructor directs you to do otherwise, your references should be

double-spaced (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 180) and the title of the page

should be “References” in regular font without bolding or underlining. If only one reference

appears on the page, the title should be “Reference”. Format each reference with a hanging

indent, which means that the first line of each reference entry is aligned flush with the left

margin and each subsequent line is indented 1.27 cm or 0.5 inches (p. 180). The text must be

able to wrap naturally; do not hit “enter” at the end of each line of information. To format a

hanging indent, use the appropriate path for your version of Microsoft Word to access the

Paragraph format options, and choose the “hanging indent” option.

Figure 1. The hanging indent option used to format a paragraph.

Choose “Hanging” for indent style.

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APA HELP GUIDE 20

Alphabetize References

Alphabetize your references by the last name of the author (American Psychological

Association, 2010, p. 181). You may encounter situations where you are unsure of how to order

your references; please refer to pages 181-183 in the APA manual for more information and

examples.

Author and Editor Information

Please refer to page 184 in the APA manual for detailed instructions on presenting

authorial information.

Publication Date

In general, “give in parentheses the year the work was published” (American

Psychological Association, 2010, p. 185). Please refer to page 185 in the APA manual for more

information regarding presenting the publication date of resources, including magazines,

newsletters, and newspapers, as well as in-press publications and papers and posters presented at

meetings. If it’s appropriate to provide the full date of publication, the order of information in the

is (year, Month day) without any abbreviations or suffixes: (2013, October 31). For resources

where no date is available, use (n.d.), which stands for “no date” (p. 185).

Title Information

In an article or chapter title, “capitalize only the first word of the title and of the subtitle,

if any, and any proper nouns; do not italicize the title or place quotations marks around it. Finish

the element with a period” (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 185). In a periodical

title (e.g., journals), “give the periodical title in full, in uppercase and lowercase letters. Italicize

the name of the periodical” (p. 185). In a non-periodical title (e.g., books and reports), “capitalize

only the first word of the title and of the subtitle, if any, and any proper nouns; italicize the title”

(p. 185). For materials found on a web page, use the formatting outlined above. For example, the

title of an article would use sentence case but wouldn’t be italicized; the title of a report would be

presented using sentence case but would be italicized (see “How do you reference a web page

that lists no author?”). For more information about formatting more complicated titles (e.g.,

edition or volume number) and other non-routine information, please refer to pages 185-186 in

the APA manual.

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Publication Information

Provide the italicized volume number after the periodical title (American Psychological

Association, 2010, p. 186). Only provide an issue number “along with the volume number if the

journal is paginated separately by issue…. Give the issue number in parentheses immediately

after the volume number; do not italicize it. Give inclusive page numbers on which the cited

material appears” (p. 186).

When referencing books and reports (non-periodicals), “give the location (city and state

or, if outside the United States, city and country) where the publisher is located as noted on the

title page” (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 186). If two or more locations are

provided, note the first location in your reference list (p. 187), and “use a colon after the

location” (p. 187).

When providing the publisher name, be as brief as possible: “Write out the names of

associations, corporations, and university presses, but omit superfluous terms, such as

Publishers, Co., and Inc…. Retain the words Books and Press” (American Psychological

Association, 2010, p. 187).

Please see pages 186-187 in the APA manual for more detailed information about

presenting publication information.

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Reference Examples

For detailed information on how to reference authors, publication dates, titles, and

publication information, and electronic sources and locator information, please refer to pages

184-192 of the APA manual. See the examples below for some common resource types, but if

you do not see your resource type, please look at the comprehensive index on pages 193-198 in

the APA guide and/or refer to pages 198-224 in the manual. For assistance with all reference

types, please refer to WriteAnswers.

Periodicals

A periodical is anything that is published on a regular, predictable schedule, such as a

journal, a report from an annual conference, or a corporate annual report. For examples of many

types of periodical references, please see pages 198-202 of the APA manual. The primary

method used by the APA manual to identify the retrieval location of electronic periodical articles

is the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) system. A DOI “is a unique alphanumeric string assigned

by a registration agency (the International DOI Foundation) to identify content and provide a

persistent link to its location on the Internet” (American Psychological Association, 2010, p.

189). The DOI may “be hidden under a button labeled Article, Crossref, PubMed, or another

full-text vendor name” (p. 189) when you retrieve the article from one of RRU’s electronic

databases. Click on the button to see the DOI. If a DOI is available for an article, no other

retrieval information is required; however, if the article hasn’t been assigned a DOI but was

retrieved from a password-protected database, provide the name of the database instead of a

DOI. For more information on DOIs, please view the short video here. To check if your resource

has a DOI, use this search tool: http://www.crossref.org/guestquery/. To check your entire

reference list for available DOIs, give this tool a try: http://www.crossref.org/SimpleTextQuery/.

You’ll need to sign up for that function, but it’s free. If you’re unsure whether you should be

providing a DOI or URL, please see this flowchart for help. Finally, “do not include retrieval

dates unless the source material may change over time (e.g., Wikis)” (p. 192).

Periodicals – General Reference Format

Author, A.A., Author, B. B., & Author, C. C. (year). Title of article. Title of Periodical, xx, pp-

pp. doi: xxxxxxxxx

Please refer to page 198 for more information regarding referencing periodicals.

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Journal Article with DOI

Godfrey, D. (2005). Adapting historical citations to APA Style. Journal of Broadcasting &

Electronic Media, 49(4), 544-547. doi: 10.1207/s15506878jobem4904_15

Godfrey, D. (2005). Adapting historical citations to APA Style. Journal of Broadcasting &

Electronic Media, 49(4), 544-547. http://dx.doi.org/10.1207/s15506878jobem4904_15

See page 198, e.g. #1, of the APA manual.

In this example, “49” is the volume number, and “(4)” is the issue number of the journal.

As per APA rules, “if each issue of a journal begins on page 1, give the issue number in

parentheses immediately after the volume number” (American Psychological

Association, 2010, p. 198).

In-text citation: (Godfrey, 2005, p. X)

CrossRef, which is one of the organizations that assigns DOIs to resources, recently

switched the format for DOIs to include http://dx.doi.org/ before the identifier (Hume-

Pratuch, 2014, para. 4) to "insure that [the DOI] resolves into a working link" (para. 5).

To reflect this shift while also allowing for a period of adjustment to the new approach,

the APA is allowing either DOI format in a reference. See "What is a DOI and how is it

used in APA style?" in WriteAnswers for more information.

Journal Article without DOI

Cuddy, C. (2002). Demystifying APA Style. Orthopaedic Nursing, 21(5), 35-42. Retrieved from

the Academic Search Premier database.

In-text citation: (Cuddy, 2002, p. X)

The standard APA approach to referencing resources without DOIs from a subscription-

based database is to provide the database’s home page URL after the “Retrieved from”.

However, if you accessed a subscription-based database by going through the RRU

Library’s website, rather than directly from that database’s home page, you had to log in

to gain that access. The requirement to log in means providing the database’s home page

URL isn’t a useful step for students, and providing a direct URL to the resource isn’t

useful to anyone outside the RRU community. Therefore, as is recommended in the

APA’s (2009b) DOI and URL flowchart, RRU students are encouraged to provide the

database name instead of a URL.

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APA HELP GUIDE 24

See p. 200, e.g. #9, of the APA manual.

Daily Newspaper Article, No Author

New drug helps Alzheimer patients. (2002, October 30). The Times Colonist, p. A2.

In text, “use a short title (or the full title if it is short) enclosed in quotation marks for the

parenthetical citation” (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 200). For example:

(“New Drug”, 2002).

See p. 200, e.g. #10, of the APA manual.

Online Newspaper Article

Brody, J. E. (2007, December 11). Mental reserves keep brain agile. The New York Times.

Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com

“Give the URLs of the home page when the online version of the article is available by

search to avoid nonworking URLs” (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 201).

See pages 200-201, eg. #11, of the APA manual.

In-text citation: (Brody, 2007, para. X)

Non-Periodicals

A non-periodical is a resource that is a unique resource, such as a book or audio-visual

media such as a movie. Please see pages 202-210 of the APA manual for more information.

Entire book. For more information, please see page 202 in the APA manual.

Author, A. A. (year). Title of work. Location: Publisher.

Author, A. A. (year). Title of work. Retrieved from http://www.xxxxx

Author, A. A. (year). Title of work. doi:xxxx OR http://dx.doi.org/xxxxx

Editor, A. A. (Ed.). (year). Title of work. Location: Publisher.

Chapter in a book or entry in a reference book. For more information, please see

pages 202-203 in the APA manual.

Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (year). Title of chapter or entry. In A. Editor, B. Editor, & C.

Editor (Eds.), Title of book (pp. xxx-xxx). Location: Publisher.

Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (year). Title of chapter or entry. In A. Editor, B. Editor, & C.

Editor (Eds.), Title of book (pp. xxx-xxx). Retrieved from http://www.xxxxxx

Author, A. A., & Author, B. B. (year). Title of chapter or entry. In A. Editor, B. Editor, & C.

Editor (Eds.), Title of book (pp. xxx-xxx). doi:xxxxxxx OR http://dx.doi.org/xxxxx

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Entry in a reference book with no byline. Please see page 203 in the APA manual for

more information.

Title of entry. (year). In A. Editor (Ed.), Title of reference work (xx ed., Vol. xx, pp. xxx-xxx).

Location: Publisher.

Title of entry. (year). In Title of reference work (xx ed., Vol. xx). Retrieved from

http://www.xxxx

Entire Book, Print Version

Fforde, J. (2001). The Eyre affair. London, England: New English Library.

See page 203, e.g. #18 of the APA manual.

In-text citation: (Fforde, 2001, p. X)

Book Chapter, Print Version

Maasing, X. (1982). Foreign affairs in Canada. In J. D. Sampson & M.M. Millstone (Eds.),

International trade Canada (pp. 1009-1020). Boston, MA: Oxford University Press.

See page 204, e.g. #25 of the APA manual.

In-text citation: (Maasing, 1982, p. X)

Ebook

Gladwell, M. (2008). Outliers: The story of success [Kindle DX version]. Retrieved from

Amazon.com

Patterson, K., Grenny, J., McMillan, R., & Switzler, A. (2012). Crucial conversations: Tools for

talking when stakes are high (2nd ed.). Retrieved from the Books24x7 database.

Keep in mind that, "if the book was read or acquired through an online library (e.g.,

Google Books, ebrary, NetLibrary) and not on an e-reader device, omit the bracketed

information from the reference” (Lee, 2011, para. 2). Therefore, if you accessed the

ebook through the RRU Library’s subscription to an online database, such as Books24x7

or ebrary, you don’t need to note the version of the book after the title of the resource in

the reference.

See “Journal Article with DOI” for information regarding how electronic retrieval details

should be presented for resources with DOIs.

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APA HELP GUIDE 26

See “Journal Article without DOI” for information regarding how electronic retrieval

details should be presented for resources that don’t have DOIs.

See “How do you cite an e-book (e.g., Kindle Book)?” for more information on

formatting an ebook in-text citation or reference

First in-text citation: (Patterson, Grenny, McMillan, & Switzler, 2012, Chapter 2,

Dialogue)

Subsequent in-text citation: (Patterson et al., 2012, Chapter 9, How to choose)

Ebook Chapter

Rogers, K. (2009). Leadership giftedness: Is it innate or can it be developed?. In L. Shavinina

(Ed.), International handbook on giftedness (pp. 633-645). Houten, Netherlands: Springer

Netherlands. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4020-6162-2_31

See “Ebook” and “How do you cite an e-book (e.g., Kindle Book)?” for information and

examples on formatting an ebook reference and in-text citations

In-text citation: (Rogers, 2009, p. X)

Entry in an Online Reference Work, No Author or Editor

Heuristic. (n.d.). In Merriam-Webster’s online dictionary (11th ed.). Retrieved from

http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/heuristic

See page 205, e.g. #30, in the APA manual.

In-text citation: (Heuristic, n.d.)

Technical and Research Reports

Author, A. A. (date). Title of work (Report No. xxx). Location: Publisher.

“For reports retrieved online, identify the publisher as part of the retrieval statement

unless the publisher has been identified as the author: Retrieved from Agency name

website: http://www.xxxx” (American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 205).

Authored Report from a Governmental Department

Milko, R., Dickson, L., Elliot, R., & Donaldson, G. (2003). Wings over water: Canada's

waterbird conservation plan (Catalogue no.: CW66-219/2003). Ottawa, Canada:

Canadian Wildlife Service.

First in-text citation: (Milko, Dickson, Elliot & Donaldson, 2003, p. X)

Subsequent citations: (Milko et al, 2003, p. X)

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Report from a Private Organization

Employee Reform Office. (1988). Sources of unrest in the private sector (Issue Brief No. 344).

Victoria, Canada: Author.

“Use this form for issue briefs, working papers, and other corporate documents”

(American Psychological Association, 2010, p. 206). Use the appropriate document

number where the “issue brief number” is listed in the example above.

See page 206, e.g. #35, in the APA manual.

In-text citation: (Employee Reform Office, 1988, p. X)

Report from a Private Organization, Available on Organization Website

Imperial Oil Limited. (2006). Energy leadership: Yesterday, today and tomorrow. Retrieved

from http://www.esso.ca/Canada-English/Files/Investors/2006_AR.pdf

In-text citation: (Imperial Oil Limited, 2006, para. X)

Doctoral Dissertation or Master’s Thesis from a Database Service

Author, A. A. (year). Title of doctoral dissertation or master’s thesis (Doctoral dissertation or

master’s thesis). Retrieved from Name of database. (Accession or Order No.)

In-text citation: (Author, year, p. X)

See pages 207-208 in the APA manual

Unpublished Dissertation or Thesis

Author, A. A. (year). Title of doctoral dissertation or master’s thesis. (Unpublished doctoral

dissertation or master’s thesis). Name of Institution, Location.

In-text citation: (Author, year, p. X)

Master’s Thesis, from a University Outside the United States, Retrieved from a

Commercial Database

Aspirot, S. (2004). Academic coaches and leadership (Master’s thesis, Royal Roads University,

Victoria, Canada). Available from Proquest Dissertations and Theses database.

(Publication No. AAT MQ93716)

See page 207 in the APA manual.

In-text citation: (Aspirot, 2004, p. X)

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Specific Section of Website

Royal Roads University. (2013). Create a preliminary document plan. Retrieved from

http://library.royalroads.ca/writing-centre/writing-essay-start-here/create-preliminary-

document-plan

In-text citation: (Royal Roads University, 2013, para. X)

Specific Section of Website, No Identified Author, No Date

Leadership. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://management.about.com/od/leadership/Leadership.htm

In-text citation: (“Leadership”, n.d., para. X)

Information Retrieved from a Website, e.g., blog postings, press releases, tweets

Please see “How to cite something you found on a website in APA Style” for more

information. Note that as per “When do you include a retrieval date in a citation?”, including a

retrieval date in the reference is only necessary when the source material may change over time

(e.g., wiki).

Entire Website (Not a Specific Document)

Cite the website in the text. For example, “Royal Roads University has a many great

pictures on the university’s website

(http://www.royalroads.ca/about-rru/life-at-rru/hatley-park/image-gallery-02.htm)”. Refer to

“How do you cite an entire website (but not a specific document on that site)? for more

information regarding this type of citation.

Online Video (e.g., YouTube or Ted Talks)

Creator of video (e.g. Company/individual). (copyright year). Title of video. Retrieved from URL

In-text citation: (Creator of video, year, time of quoted material within video e.g. 1:25)

Canadian Legislative Documents

Appendix 7.1 of the APA manual explains that legal materials are referenced in a

different manner than what is provided in the APA guide. Appendix 7.1 provides the rules for

referencing American documents, but to cite the Canadian versions (e.g. House of Commons

proceedings (Hansard), Parliamentary committees, bills, statutes), please refer to Citing

Canadian statutes, cases, and legislation to be directed to websites with referencing rules and

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examples. Please note that the Canadian Guide to Legal Citation (7th edition) uses footnotes

rather than in-text citations.

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APA Resources

For more information, please refer to WriteAnswers and the following resources:

American Psychological Association. (n.d.). APA Style blog. Retrieved from

http://blog.apastyle.org/apastyle/

American Psychological Association. (n.d.). Sample one experiment paper. Retrieved from

http://supp.apa.org/style/PM6E-Corrected-Sample-Papers.pdf

American Psychological Association. (2009). The basics of APA Style. Available from

http://apastyle.org/learn/tutorials/basics-tutorial.aspx

American Psychological Association. (2009). DOI and URL flowchart. Retrieved from

http://blog.apastyle.org/files/doi-and-url-flowchart-8.pdf

American Psychological Association. (2009). Frequently asked questions about APA Style.

Available from http://www.apastyle.org/learn/faqs/index.aspx?imw=Y

American Psychological Association. (2010). Publication manual of the American Psychological

Association (6th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.

Royal Roads University. (n.d.) APA (6th ed.). Retrieved from

http://library.royalroads.ca/writing-centre/writing/citing-resources/apa-style-6th-edition

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References

American Psychological Association. (2009). DOI and URL flowchart. Retrieved from

http://blog.apastyle.org/files/doi-and-url-flowchart-8.pdf

American Psychological Association. (2010). Publication manual of the American Psychological

Association (6th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.

Hume-Pratch, J. (2014, July 25). How to use the new DOI format in APA Style [Blog post].

Retrieved from http://blog.apastyle.org/apastyle/2014/07/how-to-use-the-new-doi-format-

in-apa-style.html

Lee, C. (2011, June 3). How do you cite an e-book (e.g., Kindle book) [Blog post]?. Retrieved

from http://blog.apastyle.org/apastyle/2011/06/how-do-you-cite-an-e-book.html