January 7, 2019 Preeti Gupton, NAU Librarian

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Interpreting In-Text Citations
Advertisements

MLA Style It’s realllllllly FUN!!!. Paper Format (Hopefully a review!)  General Guidelines  12 pt. font – double spaced throughout  Set the margins.
Introduction to MLA Format
Introduction to MLA Format
MLA FORMAT.
A quick guide to APA formatting William A. Sodeman, Ph.D. Hawaii Pacific University.
MLA Format for Documenting Research
APA Style Guide.
RESEARCHING Notes on plagiarism and APA style references Please copy the information in this presentation into your class notes. You do not need to copy.
How to… APA 12 CP English.
MLA Style Modern Language Association most commonly used within the liberal arts and humanities.
Current Events Project Writing your Research Paper: Final Draft MLA Formatting and Style Guide.
CHICAGO MANUAL OF STYLE. Why use a research style? Continuity across institutions As a road map for your reader to follow the connections you’ve made.
AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION (APA) WRITING AND DOCUMENTATION STYLE.
APA Formatting Formatting, Plagiarism and Citation Note: This seminar will be recorded by the instructor.
Citations and Works Cited Page Research Essentials.
Set-up basics References In-text citations. What’s APA Style? The American Psychological Association developed this style to standardize scientific manuscripts.
APA Style American Psychological Association. Where can you find information about APA format?  Libraries/Bookstore  Writing Style Manual  Purdue Owl.
Citing Sources & Style Elements of a Research Paper Using The Appropriate Formatting Style. Data Assembled by Ms. Huggins.
A presentation by the Writing Center
 Vocabulary.com. January 12 th & 13 th, 2016 Data Assembled by Ms. Huggins.
 Vocabulary.com.  I will provide you with a copy of the MLA quiz.  You may use your notes from yesterday if you took any.  You must work alone. 
APA Formatting and Style Guide Purdue OWL staff Brought to you in cooperation with the Purdue Online Writing Lab.
APA Review.
RESEARCHING – APA Style I am NOT looking for a title page, your first page should have: Your Name Mrs. Noble Friday June 7, 2013 Law 12 Use Times New Roman.
Introduction to MLA Format. What is MLA? MLA – Modern Language Association In research writing, it is important to give credit to sources that the writer.
MLA Format MLA (Modern Language Association) Most commonly used to write papers and cite sources for liberal arts and humanities.
APA Style Workshop II: In-Text Citations and References
Please log on a computer Open the web and then Open four tabs…
APA Formatting & How to Avoid Plagiarism
MLA Format, They Say, I Say Ch. 3, and Quote Sandwiches
APA Style American Psychological Association
By Kelley Moody BSN, RN Graduate Student
APA Citations - Overview
APA Format Crediting sources
Researching Like a Scientist
APA.
Intro to MLA and Page Layout
MLA Formatting and Style Guide
APA Style: An Introduction
APA Style Tutorial Guided Notes
MLA FORMAT Get out a piece of paper for NOTES
By Kelley Moody BSN, RN Graduate Student
MLA Format MLA Format  Titles, Headings, Margins, In-text citations, Formatting Quotations and creating a Works cited .
APA TIPS.
APA Style Review & Formatting References
APA General Format Formatting your APA style academic paper
APA Citation Style & Avoiding Plagiarism
Librarian: Ms. Bacon Library Assistant: Ms. Kruper
Please log on a computer Open the web and then Open four tabs…
Librarian: Ms. Bacon Library Assistant: Ms. Kruper
HOW DO I CITE MY SOURCES?.
American Psychological Association
use 12pt. Standard font (Times New Roman), and
Introduction to the APA Style of Bibliography
Honors Biology MLA Citation Presentation
APA Style Tutorial.
APA Format for Papers Understanding
Understanding APA Format for Papers
Understanding APA Format for Papers
The Basics of Citation and Avoiding Plagiarism in Papers.
APA Research Paper Day 3: Works cited page, Citations, and Outlining
I have to cite my sources!
English II Detroit Catholic Central High School
APA Workshop Val Macias, Librarian Fullerton College 2019.
APA Style.
The Smucker Learning Center
Introduction to MLA Format
MLA Citations and Creating Your Works Cited Page
Research is Fun!.
Presentation transcript:

January 7, 2019 Preeti Gupton, NAU Librarian APA Made easy(er) January 7, 2019 Preeti Gupton, NAU Librarian

What we will be covering What is APA and why are we using it? What does an APA paper look like? What is an in-text citation, why do you need one, and how do you make one? What resources are available for help? What questions do you still have?

Library Resources NAU Library  APA Style  Formatting and Style https://national.libguides.com/apa APA references APA in-text citations APA formatting APA videos and tutorials And many more!

WHAT AND WHY? APA = American Psychological Association (NOT Awful Painful Annoying) We use APA format to keep everyone’s papers consistent. That makes it easy for your instructors to know what to expect when reading a paper, and offers students the same path for how to format their paper and cite your sources.

PLAGIARISM Why Should I Care? Any time you use the words or ideas of someone else to back up your thesis you have to cite it, so that the reader knows what parts of the paper are coming from you and what parts are coming from someone else. If you don’t cite correctly, you could be plagiarizing!

What does an APA paper look like? APA calls for: 12 pt Times New Roman font 1 inch margins all around Double-spaced throughout Page header on top left of each page Page numbers on the top right

What does an APA paper look like? Papers typically have four sections: Title Page Abstract Body of Paper References Page Your papers should include each of these sections, unless your instructor has said no abstract necessary.

Title Page No bold font, no italics, no images. Your title page should not look exciting (unless you’ve given your paper an exciting title).

Abstract This is a brief summary of your paper, typically about 150 words. Note – the word Abstract is not in bold. Or italicized. Or in a different font. Do not just copy and paste your intro paragraph and use that as an abstract. 

Body of paper Put the full title of your paper on the first line, centered. Indent the first paragraph of your paper (and subsequent paragraphs). Remember to double space!

Library Tools to Help APA Paper Fillable Template Zombie Sample Paper APA Formatting in Microsoft Word (PDF) APA Paper Fillable Template

Body of paper: In-Text citations Quoting Using someone else’s exact words. Make sure to include a page number. Paraphrasing Rephrasing someone’s writing or ideas into your own words. Page number not required but include if it will help your reader locate the relevant information. Summarizing Putting the main idea(s) of someone else’s writing into your own words. Page number not required.

Body of paper: In-Text citations Any time you paraphrase, summarize, or quote from an outside source in the body of your paper, you MUST MUST MUST include an in-text citation in the body of your paper to indicate that the information came from someone other than you! If you don’t use an in-text citation, your instructor may think you are plagiarizing.

Body of paper: In-Text citations An in-text citation usually provides the author’s last name, the year the piece of information was published and, if quoting something, the page number or paragraph number where the quoted information appeared. Author’s last name, year, and sometimes a page # or paragraph #.

Body of paper: In-Text citations Narrative - This citation indicates that credit was given to the author and is located within the text itself. Parenthetical - This citation indicates that no author has been given credit within the quote and is located at the end of the quote. Note: Either way is fine to use, as long as you cite correctly! (In-text Citation Quick-guide Reference, n.d.) This information is from the In text Citation Quick guide reference found on the online library website under the APA tab

Body of paper: In-Text citations Original passage: The partners Mars and Murrie dubbed their new candy with their initials, and M&M’s soon found their way around the world with U.S. servicemen....The story didn’t end sweetly for Murrie, though. When chocolate rationing ended after the war, Mars bought out Murrie's 20% interest in the product and went on to become one of Hershey’s biggest competitors. Author: Matt Soniak. Title: “What do the Ms on M&M’s Stand For, and How Do They Get Them on There?” Date: 2012 Retrieved from: http://mentalfloss.com/article/30494/what-do-ms-mms-stand-and-how-do-they-get-them-there Paraphrase of original, with in-text citation (where author’s name is integrated in the text): In an article about the origins of M&Ms, Soniak says that Mars and Murrie named the new candy after themselves. The candy traveled worldwide during WW2. Murrie’s shares in the company were sold to Mars after the war; Mars would later go on to become a major competitor in the chocolate market (2012).

Body of paper: In-Text citations Original passage: The partners Mars and Murrie dubbed their new candy with their initials, and M&M’s soon found their way around the world with U.S. servicemen....The story didn’t end sweetly for Murrie, though. When chocolate rationing ended after the war, Mars bought out Murrie's 20% interest in the product and went on to become one of Hershey’s biggest competitors. Author: Matt Soniak. Title: “What do the Ms on M&M’s Stand For, and How Do They Get Them on There?” Date: 2012 Retrieved from: http://mentalfloss.com/article/30494/what-do-ms-mms-stand-and-how-do-they-get-them-there Paraphrase of original, with in-text citation, where author’s name is included in parenthesis: Mars and Murrie named the new candy after themselves. The candy traveled worldwide during WW2. Murrie’s shares in the company were sold to Mars after the war; Mars would later go on to become a major competitor in the chocolate market (Soniak, 2012).

Body of paper: In-Text citations Original passage: The partners Mars and Murrie dubbed their new candy with their initials, and M&M’s soon found their way around the world with U.S. servicemen....The story didn’t end sweetly for Murrie, though. When chocolate rationing ended after the war, Mars bought out Murrie's 20% interest in the product and went on to become one of Hershey’s biggest competitors. Author: Matt Soniak. Title: “What do the Ms on M&M’s Stand For, and How Do They Get Them on There?” Date: 2012 Retrieved from: http://mentalfloss.com/article/30494/what-do-ms-mms-stand-and-how-do-they-get-them-there Quote of less than 40 words, with in-text citation: According to Soniak, “Mars bought out Murrie’s 20% interest in the product and went on to become one of Hershey’s biggest competitors” (2012, para 4). Could also cite like this: According to one historian, “Mars bought out Murrie’s 20% interest in the product and went on to become one of Hershey’s biggest competitors” (Soniak, 2012, para 4).

Body of paper: In-Text citations Try to paraphrase or summarize when possible Put the author’s ideas in your own words to support your own ideas! Quote only when needed Further advice on this: Writer’s Handbook from the Writing Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison: http://writing.wisc.edu/Handbook/QPA_paraphr ase.html

Body of paper: In-Text citations Quotes of more than 40 words, with in-text citation: http://arc.national.edu/library/docs/Zombies.pdf http://arc.national.edu/library/docs/APA_in-text.pdf

Reference Page Only include items in your References page that you created an-text citation for in the body of your paper. The reference citation gives your reader more thorough publication information than the in-text citation does -- your reader can track down the piece of information on their own if they want to with the info you provide.

Reference Page Should be double-spaced (like the rest of your paper). Should be in alphabetical order, by author’s last name. Use a hanging indent for citations that take up more than one line of text.

Reference Page Example Header Hanging indent (Rojas, n.d.).

Reference Page The APA manual provides different patterns for citing items in your reference list, depending on what type of item you are citing. Books, articles, and interviews, for example, are formatted differently.

Reference Page Regardless of what you are citing, you need to find the following for each piece of information you are citing: Author When it was published Title Where it came from

References - Author The author can be a person or a corporate author (aka, a company name). You list the author’s last name and initials only. It should be rare that you can’t find an author or corporate author. If you can’t find an author, you put the title where the author usually goes.

References – When it was published In many cases, you’ll just need the year an item was published. Some types of sources also require a month and date, if available. If you can’t find a publication date, you’ll put (n.d.) in the date field. ND=no date

References – Title This could be: The title of a book (if citing the whole book) The title of a book chapter (if only citing a chapter) The title of an article The title of a blog post

References – Where it came from This could be: The publisher’s name and city/state (if citing a book). The book title AND the publisher’s name and city/state (if citing a chapter in a book). The title of the journal where the article was published, as well as the volume, issue, and page numbers.

Library Resources Purdue OWL! NAU Librarians! APA Reference Page Examples (PDF) In-text Citation Quick Reference Guide (PDF) How to Use the Cite Function in a Database (PDF) Purdue OWL! NAU Librarians!

References – LET’s put ONE together, together! http://www.smithsonianmag.com/scien ce-nature/in-search-of-the-mysterious- narwhal-124904726/

References – LET’s put ONE together, together! Author: Abigail Tucker. When: May 2009 Title: In search of the mysterious narwhal Where it came from: Smithsonian Magazine What kind of source is it?

References – LET’s put ONE together, together! Pattern for citing an online website document or webpage: Author, A. A., Author B. B., & Author, C. C. (year, Month day). Title of document. Retrieved from http://magazine.homepage Author: Abigail Tucker. When: May 2009 Title: In search of the mysterious narwhal Where it came from: Smithsonian Magazine

References – LET’s put ONE together, together! Plug your information into the pattern: Tucker, A. (2009, May). In search of the mysterious narwhal. Retrieved from https://www.smithsonianmag.com. Author: Abigail Tucker. When: May 2009 Title: In search of the mysterious narwhal Where it came from: Smithsonian Magazine

Library Resources Purdue OWL! NAU Librarians! APA Reference Page Examples (PDF) In-text Citation Quick Reference Guide (PDF) How to Use the Cite Function in a Database (PDF) Purdue OWL! NAU Librarians!

Extra Credit Proof of attendance is your quiz score! A link to the quiz will be email to you within the hour.  Check your spam folder! Email your quiz results when you ge them to your instructor. They may offer extra credit. The library does not.

Questions? You can also contact Ask a Librarian for APA support! askalibrarian@national.libanswers.com We’re here to help!!!!!