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APA- American Psychological Association Research Paper

APA- American Psychological Association Research Paper. Brought to you by: Georgina Armendariz RG Writing Center. Cover Page: Header - (0.5” margin). Header: (appears on every page) Purpose: To identify the manuscript without the author’s name Note: Double-spaced throughout manuscript

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APA- American Psychological Association Research Paper

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  1. APA-American Psychological AssociationResearch Paper Brought to you by: Georgina Armendariz RG Writing Center

  2. Cover Page: Header-(0.5” margin) • Header: (appears on every page) • Purpose: To identify the manuscript without the author’s name • Note: • Double-spaced throughout manuscript • 12 inch sepia font • Page number • Title page is page 1 • Flush Right • Running Head (yes, you write “Running Head”) • An abbreviated version of the title • Max 50 words (does not include “Running Head”) • Avoid commas • ALL CAPS • Flush Left

  3. Cover Page-(1” margins all around) • Mid-Section (centered) • Title • Review main idea of your paper • First letter of each main word is capitalized • 10-12 words • Author’s Name • That’s you! • School • El Paso Community College • Last Section (centered) • Instructor • Class • Date

  4. Abstract • Center the word “Abstract” • Don’t indent paragraph • Use one paragraph (150-250 words) • Review/ summarize your paper • Write concisely • State thesis statement *Ask your instructor if an Abstract is required.

  5. Thesis • One sentence that says what your trying to prove, your conviction • Tips for creating your thesis • What is the purpose of your paper? • Be specific to your topic you are discussing • Your thesis statement should be at the end of your first paragraph (introduction). • Ex: • “The life of a typical college student is characterized by the time spent studying, attending classes, and socializing. • The paper should then explain how the students spend their time studying, attending classes, and socializing.

  6. Body • Title • Repeat the title (centered) • Experiment Research paper sections : Introduction, Method, Results, Discussion, References. All Headers in the paper. • Essay style research paper: sections not identified by headers, but rather by topic sentence. Headers can be used but not necessary. • What format are we using in this class?

  7. Body-Headers • There are five ways to do proper APA headings: • Centered, Boldface, Uppercase and Lowercase Heading • Flush Left, Boldface, Uppercase and Lowercase Heading • Indented, boldface, lowercase paragraph heading ending with a period. • Indented, boldface, italicized, lowercase paragraph heading ending with a period. • Indented, italicized, lowercase paragraph heading ending with a period.

  8. In-Text Citations • Author-date method of citation • (author’s last name, date of publication) • Two basic ways to cite: • 1) According to Smith (2009), humans have one less • chromosomes than animals. • 2) Chimpanzees are the closest ancestors that humans have to another species (Smith, 2009).

  9. In-Text Citations • Two Authors • Smith and Foster (2009) • (Smith & Foster, 2009) • Three Authors • Smith, Foster, and Ross (2009) • Smith et al. (2009) • (Smith, Foster, & Ross, 2009) • (Smith et al., 2009) • Et al. subsequent times • Five Authors • Smith, Foster, Ross, Butler, and Xavier (2009) • Smith et al. (2009) • (Smith, Foster, Ross, Butler, & Xavier, 2009) • (Smith et al., 2009) • Et al. subsequent times • Six Authors or more • Smith et al. (2009) • (Smith et al., 2009) • Et al. Initially and subsequent times

  10. Quote: word for word/ verbatim “Chimpanzees carry the SIV virus that mutates into the HIV virus in humans” (Smith et al., 2009). Paraphrase: Summarize author’s idea in your own words/ interpret the text According to Smith et al. (2009), he states that Kaprowski was guilty of accidentally infecting the human population with AIDS. Documents show that chimpanzee kidneys were kept in Kaprowski’s facility even though he refutes such claims (Smith et al., 2009). Should I favor one over the other? Paraphrase vs. Quotation

  11. Number Rules • General Rule: • Numbers 10 and above are expressed as numerals. • Nine or below are written as words • Basic exceptions to the rule: • 1. Measurements are always numerals • 2. Statistical functions are always numerals • 3. Numbers that represent time, dates, ages, scores and point scales, exact sums of money are numerals. • However, approximations are represented by words • 4. If a sentence starts with a number, it is always a word. • Use % symbol when preceded by a number. • Use “percent” when you begin with a written number or when number is undetermined.

  12. References • Purpose: To provide the complete reference for every citation mentioned in the manuscript • Centered heading • Alphabetical order • First line of each reference is flush left and the subsequent lines are indented 1/2 inch. • Basic Format: • Author, A.A. (year). Title of article. Source, volume (ed.), page numbers. • Smith, J.R. (2009). Chimpanzees: Nature’s driving force. Scientific American, 14(5), 73-91.

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