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APA Style: Guides to APA Style

"One of the ways readers receive and decode printed material is through the conventions that grow out of usage: capital letters in important places, italics in special places, quotations in small type, lists in a column, footnotes at the bottom of a page. The conventions increase in number and complexity for readers of scientific literature who learn to expect orderly citation of references, and common forms for abstracts, tables, figures, and mathematical display.

The purpose of a publication manual is to record and sometimes establish such conventions so that authors, editors, and printers may refer to it as a manuscript moves from typewriter to printing press" (pp. 577–578).

DeVivo, A. (1974). APA revises its Publication Manual. American Psychologist, 29(8), 577–580. https://doi.org/10.1037/h0038166

Complete Guide to APA Style

  • Chapter 2 includes a sample student paper. The sample is also available at apastyle.apa.org.
  • Chapter 8 provides guidelines for creating in-text citations.
  • Chapter 9 provides guidelines for creating reference lists.
  • Chapter 9 includes a sample annotated bibliography.
  • Chapter 10 provides reference examples. Reference examples are also available at apastyle.apa.org.

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