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APA vs. MLA

APA vs. MLA. What’s the Difference?. Overview. What hasn’t changed What has changed What APA resources you can use. What hasn’t changed. What you document Where you document. What hasn’t changed. What you document

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APA vs. MLA

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  1. APA vs. MLA What’s the Difference?

  2. Overview • What hasn’t changed • What has changed • What APA resources you can use

  3. What hasn’t changed • What you document • Where you document

  4. What hasn’t changed • What you document • Direct quotations“Quotation marks should be used to indicate the exact words of another” (APA, 2001, p. 349).

  5. What hasn’t changed • What you document • Direct quotations • ParaphrasesWhenever you express an author’s ideas in your own words, omit quotation marks, but provide parenthetical documentation (APA, 2001).

  6. What hasn’t changed • What you document • Direct quotations • Paraphrases • Where you document

  7. What hasn’t changed • What you document • Direct quotations • Paraphrases • Where you document • Parenthetical documentation • At the end of a quotation • At the end of a paraphrase

  8. What hasn’t changed • What you document • Direct quotations • Paraphrases • Where you document • Parenthetical documentation • At the end of a quotation • At the end of a paraphrase • Page of bibliographic references

  9. What hasn’t changed • Basic principles: • Give credit where credit is due.

  10. What hasn’t changed • Basic principles: • Give credit where credit is due. • Provide enough information so you(or interested readers) can find the original source.

  11. What hasn’t changed • Basic principles: • Give credit where credit is due. • Provide enough information so you(or interested readers) so find the original source. • Identify the source in parenthetical documentation, and provide complete bibliographic information in a separate page at the end.

  12. What has changed • Cover page • Emphasis on dates • Style for Internet citations • Block quotations • Acknowledging material quoted by the author you’re citing • Reference list

  13. APA Cover Page First words of title Page # TITLE Sub title Name Class Teacher Date

  14. Emphasis on dates In parenthetical citation: “Each time you paraphrase another author (i.e., summarize a passage or rearrange the order of a sentence and change some of the words), you will need to credit the source in the text” (APA, 2001, p. 349).

  15. Emphasis on dates In text: In an influential article, Terrance, Petitto, Sanders, and Bever (1979) argued that apes in language experiments were not using language spontaneously but were merely imitating their trainers, responding to conscious or unconscious cues.

  16. Emphasis on dates In reference list entry: Terrace, H. S., Petitto, L. A., Sanders, R. J., & Bever, T. G. (1979). Can an ape create a sentence? Science, 206, 891-902.

  17. Emphasis on dates In reference list entry: Terrace,H. S., Petitto, L. A., Sanders, R. J., & Bever, T. G. (1979). Can an ape create a sentence? Science, 206, 891-902. Note:authors are last name, first initial(s) Titles use sentence cap., not title case (capitalize only the first word, proper nouns, and words after a colon)

  18. Style for Internet citations Basic format: Levy, S. (2002, May 27). Great minds, great ideas. Newsweek, 139,54-58. Retrieved May 29, 2002, from http://www.msnbc.com/news/754336.asp

  19. Style for Internet citations If site is important: Chou, L., McClintock, R., Moretti, F., Nix, D. H. (1993). Technology and education: New wine in new bottles: Choosing pasts and imagining educational futures. Retrieved August 24, 2000, from Columbia University, Institute for Learning Technologies Web site: http://www.ilt.columbia.edu/publications /papers/newwine1.html

  20. Style for database citations Basic format for an EBSCO article: Holliday, R. E., & Hayes, B. K. (2001). Dissociating automatic and intentional processes in children's eyewitness memory. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 75(1), 1-5. Retrieved February 21, 2001, fromMasterFILE Premier database(A59317972).

  21. Definition of block quotations In APA style, long quotations are set off: Display a quotation of 40 or more words in a freestanding block of typewritten lines, and omit the quotation marks. Start such a block quotation on a new line, and indent the block about .5 inch. (APA, 2001, p. 117)

  22. A source within a source Wright (1999) argues that “the early discharge of patients after surgery is the Trojan Horse of increased privatization in the field of health care” (as cited in Frost & Krahn, 2000, p. 10). Note: Wright does not appear in Reference List. As cited in gives credit, but allows readers to match parethentical dcumentation to reference list entry.

  23. Reference List • Use author-date citation system. • Include only the references cited in the paper. • References that others cannot access, such as personal interviews, are cited parenthetically, but do not appear in the reference list.

  24. APA Resources • Best use: 1. Find a model that matches your source 2. Imitate the capitalization, punctuation, and order of information 3. Double-check citation against model(remember, EasyBib lies!)

  25. Recommended APA Resources • www.dianahacker.com/resdoc • APA in-text citations • APA list of references • APA manuscript format • Sample paper: APA style

  26. Recommended APA Resources • www.dianahacker.com/resdoc • www.apastyle.org • www.bedfordstmartins.com/online/cite6.html • Google for APA and “EBSCO article” CAUTION: be sure models are based on 5th edition • Hamilton Style Guide (available at www.word-crafter.net/CompII)

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