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APA Sample Papers

Ever wonder how to format your research paper in APA style? If so, you’re in luck! The team at EasyBib.com has put together an example paper to help guide you through your next assignment. (Actually, looking for MLA? Here’s a page on what is MLA format .)

The featured example is a research paper on the uses of biometrics to inform design decisions in the tech industry, authored by our UX Research Intern Peace Iyiewuare. Like most APA style papers, it includes an APA title page , tables, and several references and APA in-text citations to scholarly journals relevant to its topic. References are an important aspect of scientific research papers, and formatting them correctly is critical to getting a good grade.

This paper follows the formatting rules specified in the 6th edition of The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (the APA is not directly associated with this guide) . We’ve left comments and tips throughout the document, so you’ll know the specific rules around how to format titles, spacing, and font, as well as the citations on the APA reference page .

The reference list needs special care, as it demonstrates to the reader that you have accurately portrayed your outside sources and have given credit to the appropriate parties. Be sure to check our full APA citation guide for more information on paper formatting and citing sources in APA style. There is also a guide on  APA footnotes in case that is your preferred form of citation.

Download the APA Visual Guide

When citations are done, don’t forget to finish your paper off with a proofread—EasyBib Plus’s plagiarism and grammar check can help! Got a misspelled adverb ? Missed capitalizing a proper noun ? Struggling with subject-verb agreement ? These are just a few things our checker could help you spot in your paper.

D. Complete Sample APA Paper

We’ve included a full student paper below to give you an idea of what an essay in APA format looks like, complete with a title page, paper, reference list, and index. If you plan to include an APA abstract in your paper, see the Professional Paper for an example.

If you’re looking for an APA format citation generator, we’ve got you covered. Use EasyBib.com! Our APA format machine can help you create every reference for your paper.

Below is an example of a student APA format essay. We also have PDF versions of both a student paper and a professional paper linked below.

See Student Paper                                 See Professional Paper

Using Biometrics to Evaluate Visual Design

Jane Lisa Dekker

Art Department, Northern California Valley State University

UXAD 272: Strategic Web Design

Professor Juan Liu, PhD

January 29, 2020

      A vast amount of research has been conducted regarding the importance of visual design, and its role as a mediator of user’s experience when browsing a site or interacting with an interface. In the literature, visual design is one aspect of website quality. Jones and Kim (2010) define website quality as “the perceived quality of a retail website that involves a [user’s] perceptions of the retailer’s website and comprises consumer reactions towards such attributes as information, entertainment/enjoyment, usability, transaction capabilities, and design aesthetics” (p. 632).  They further examined the impact web quality and retail brand trust has on purchase intentions. Additional research examining e-commerce sites has shown web quality has an impact on both initial and continued purchase intention (Kuan, Bock, & Vathanophas, 2008), as well as consumer satisfaction (Lin, 2007). Moreso, research on the relationship between visual design and perceived usability (Stojmenovic, Pilgrim, & Lindgaard, 2014) has revealed a positive correlation between the two. As users’ ratings of visual quality increase, their ratings of perceived usability follows a similar trend. Although this research spans various domains, the reliance on self-report measures to gauge concepts like visual design and web quality is prevalent throughout much of the literature.

Although some self-report scales are validated within the literature, there are still issues with the use of self-report questionnaires. One is the reliance on the honesty of the participant. This tends to be more of an issue in studies related to questionnaires that measure characteristics of the participant, rather than objective stimuli. More relevant to this study is the issue of introspection and memory. Surveys are often distributed after a task is completed, and its accuracy is dependent on the ability of the participant to remember their experience during the study. Multiple research studies have shown that human memory is far from static. This can

be dangerous if a researcher chooses to solely rely on self-report methods to test a hypothesis. We believe these self-report methods in tandem with biometric methods can help ensure the validity of the questionnaires, and provide information beyond the scope of self-report scales.

Research Questions

      We know from previous research that the quality of websites mediates many aspects of e-commerce, and provides insight as to how consumers view the webpages in general.  However, simply knowing a webpage is perceived as lower quality doesn’t give insight as to what aspects of a page are disliked by a user. Additionally, it’s possible that the user is misremembering aspects of the webpage or being dishonest in their assessment. Using eye tracking metrics, galvanic skin response, and facial expression measures in tandem with a scale aimed at measuring visual design quality has a couple of identifiable benefits. Using both can potentially identify patterns amongst the biometric measures and the questionnaire, which would strengthen the validity of the results. More so, the eye tracking data has the potential to identify patterns amongst websites of lower or higher quality.

If found, these patterns can be used to evaluate particular aspects of a page that are impacting the quality of a webpage. Overall, we are interested in answering two questions:

Research Question 1 : Can attitudinal changes regarding substantial website redesigns be captured using biometric measures?

Research Question 2 : How do biometric measures correlate with self-reported measures of visual appeal?

      Answering these questions has the potential to provide a method of justification for design changes, ranging from minor tweak to complete rebrands. There is not an easy way for companies to quantitatively analyze visual design decisions. A method for doing so would help companies evaluate visual designs before implementation in order to cost-justify them. To this end, we hope to demonstrate that biometric measurements can be used with questionnaires to verify and validate potential design changes a company or organization might want to implement.

      By examining data from test subjects during a brief exposure to several websites, we hoped to explore the relationship between the self-reported evaluation of visual design quality and key biometric measurements of a subject’s emotional valence and arousal. Subjects were exposed to ten pairs of websites before and after a substantial visual design change and asked to evaluate the website based on their initial impressions of the site’s visual design quality using the VisAWI-S scale, as shown in Table 1.  

During this assessment we collected GSR, facial expressions (limited by errors in initial study configuration), pupillary response, and fixation data using iMotions software coupled with a Tobii eye tracker, Shimmer GSR device, and Affdex facial expression analysis toolkit. This data was analyzed, in Table 2, to discover relationships between the independent and dependent variables, as well as relationships between certain dependent variables.  

Jones, C., & Kim, S. (2010). Influences of retail brand trust, off-line patronage, clothing involvement and website quality on online apparel shopping intention: Online apparel shopping intention. International Journal of Consumer Studies , 34 (6), 627–637. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1470-6431.2010.00871.x

Kuan, H.-H., Bock, G.-W., & Vathanophas, V. (2008). Comparing the effects of website quality on customer initial purchase and continued purchase at e-commerce websites. Behaviour & Information Technology , 27 (1), 3–16. https://doi.org/10.1080/01449290600801959

Lin, H.-F. (2007). The impact of website quality dimensions on customer satisfaction in the B2C e-commerce context. Total Quality Management & Business Excellence , 18 (4), 363–378. https://doi.org/10.1080/14783360701231302

Stojmenovic, M., Pilgrim, C., & Lindgaard, G. (2014). Perceived and objective usability and visual appeal in a website domain with a less developed mental model. Proceedings of the 26 th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference on Designing Futures: The Future of Design , 316–323. https://doi.org/10.1145/2686612.2686660

Factor Item
Simplicity Everything goes together on the site.
Diversity The layout is pleasantly varied.
Colorfulness The color composition is attractive
Craftsmanship The layout appears professionally designed
Familiarity* I am familiar with this website
Participants were asked about agreement with the item using a 7-point likert scale.
* question is simply to gauge familiarity for the study, and is not part of the Vis-AWI-S instrument

Before After
Website Mean

Difference

Joy Kitchen 3.49 1.30 5.61 0.93 2.12 0.00
Seacom 3.27 1.59 5.35 1.20 2.08 0.00
Food Blog 3.59 1.30 5.59 0.80 2.00 0.00
Credit Union 3.29 1.26 5.18 1.07 1.89 0.00
Travelers 3.61 1.39 5.38 1.24 1.78 0.00
Sporcle 4.23 1.23 2.45 1.12 -1.78 0.00
Eagle 3.93 1.47 5.45 0.82 1.52 0.00
Oberlin 4.00 1.25 5.47 0.84 1.47 0.00
Valve 3.88 1.56 5.10 1.42 1.22 0.00
Hospital 4.47 1.33 5.48 0.85 1.01 0.00
Travel Blog 4.71 1.23 5.69 1.01 0.98 0.00
Space 4.35 1.55 5.29 1.09 0.94 0.00
School 5.04 1.44 5.63 0.80 0.60 0.06
Book Publisher 5.12 1.27 5.63 1.17 0.51 0.10
Sneakers 4.78 1.37 5.20 1.34 0.42 0.14
Stance 5.08 0.88 5.41 0.95 0.33 0.09
City 4.79 1.18 5.12 0.88 0.32 0.07
IEEE 3.95 1.30 4.26 1.40 0.31 0.24
Rise 5.08 1.00 4.89 1.27 -0.18 0.30
Audio Technica 3.94 1.52 4.05 1.37 0.11 0.71
Bloomberg 3.63 1.35 3.52 1.26 -0.11 0.73
Stimuli are ranked by largest to smallest absolute mean difference.

APA Formatting Guide

APA Formatting

  • Annotated Bibliography
  • Block Quotes
  • et al Usage
  • In-text Citations
  • Multiple Authors
  • Paraphrasing
  • Page Numbers
  • Parenthetical Citations
  • Reference Page
  • Sample Paper
  • APA 7 Updates
  • View APA Guide

Citation Examples

  • Book Chapter
  • Journal Article
  • Magazine Article
  • Newspaper Article
  • Website (no author)
  • View all APA Examples

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APA Style -6th edition

  • Sample APA Paper
  • General Guidelines
  • A. One Author or Editor
  • B. Two Authors or Editors
  • C. Three to Five Authors or Editors
  • D. Article or Chapter in an Edited Book
  • E. Article in a Reference Book
  • F. No Author
  • H. Edition other than the First
  • I. Translation
  • J. Government Publication
  • A. Journal Article with One Author
  • B. Journal Article with 2 Authors
  • C. Journal Article with 3-5 Authors
  • D. Journal Article with 6 or more Authors
  • E. Magazine Article
  • F. Newspaper Article
  • A. Basic Web Page
  • B. Web Page from a University Site
  • C. No Author
  • D. Blog Post
  • E. Entry in a Reference Work
  • F. Government Document
  • A. Motion Picture
  • B. Youtube Video
  • C. Audio Podcast
  • A. Electronic Image
  • A. Interview
  • D. Classical Works
  • E. Secondary Sources
  • F. Legal Materials
  • Evaluating Sources
  • Zotero This link opens in a new window

Sample APA Formatted Paper

  • Sample APA Formatted Paper How to format your paper in APA style

Sample Reference List

  • Sample End of Text Citations
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APA Style 6th Edition: Citing Your Sources

  • Basics of APA Formatting
  • In Text Quick View
  • Block Quotes
  • Books & eBooks
  • Thesis/Dissertation
  • Conference Presentations
  • Course Documents
  • Social Media
  • Government Documents

Standard Formatting

Abbreviations.

  • Academic Integrity and Plagiarism
  • Additional Resources
  • Sample Reference Page
  • Use 1" margins for the entire document.
  • Use a 1/2" indent for every paragraph and footnote.
  • Indent set-off quotations 1/2" from the left margin.

Text Formatting

  • Use 12 pt Times New Roman font.
  • Do not justify the text or use hyphenation.
  • commas, colons, and semicolons;
  • periods that separate parts of a reference citation
  • periods following the initials in personal names (e.g., J. R. Zhang) (American Psychological Association, 2010, pp. 87-88).
  • Do not insert space after periods in abbreviations or around colons in ratios
  • Space twice after punctuation marks at the end of a sentence

Page Header (Running Head)

  • Include a running head on every page.
  • Page number should be flush right.
  • Type the entire title in capital letters. Title should be flush left.
  • Shorten the title if necessary. It cannot exceed more than 50 characters.
  • Actual words "Running head" only appear on title page
  • Title should not include abbreviations or exceed more than 12 words.
  • Title should be typed using upper and lower case letters.
  • Center the title and position in the upper half of the page.
  • Center the author's name directly under the title.
  • Format the name omitting titles (Dr, Prof, etc.) and degrees: First name, middle initial, last name.
  • Center the institutional affiliation directly under the author's name.
  • Author's notes are not required for dissertations and theses.

Introduction

  • Begin introduction on a new page.
  • Identify it with the running head or abbreviated title and the page number.
  • Type the title of the manuscript in upper and lower case letters, centered, at the top of the page.
  • The summary itself should be single spaced without indentation.

References (Reference Page)

  • Starts on new page
  • The word "References" should appear (without quotation marks) centered at the top of the page
  • Double-space all reference entries
  • Use a hanging indent for reference- first line of each reference is flush with the left margin while subsequent lines are indented.
  • Use footnotes to provide additional content or acknowledge copyright permission
  • Content footnotes convey just one idea and only include simple, relevant or essential information
  • Use a footnote to acknowledge the source of lengthy quotes, scale adn test items, and figures or tables that have been reproduced or adapted
  • Number all footnotes consecutively in the order they appear, use superscript Arabic numerals within the text
  • Begin each appendix on a new page.
  • Center the word Appendix and the identifying capital letter (A, B, etc.) at the top of the page.
  • Center the title of the appendix, and use upper and lower case letters.
  • Begin the text of the appendix flush left, followed by indented paragraphs.

Adapted from American Psychologial Association (2010) Publication manual (6th ed.).  Washington, D.C.: American Psychologial Association

  • APA Quick Answers- Formatting Find quick answers to basic APA formatting directly from APA Style

The correct form of abbreviation must be used in reference lists:

chap. chapter
ed. edition
Rev. ed. Revised edition
2nd ed. second edition
Ed. (Eds.) Editor (Editors)
Trans. Translators
n.d. no date
p. (pp.) Page (pages)
Vol. Volume (as in Vol. 4)
Vols. Volumes (as in 4 vols.)
No. Number
Pt. Part
Tech. Rep. Technical Report
Suppl. supplement
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APA Style (6th ed.)

  • Position of the citation
  • Secondary Referencing
  • Date of Publication
  • Page numbers
  • Citing Sources Multiple Times
  • Citing from Web pages
  • Paraphrasing and Summarising
  • Reference Lists and Bibliographies
  • Examples of References in APA (6th ed.) style

Examples of References in APA style (6th edition)

  • Examples of References in APA style
  • APA Reference Examples A-Z
  • Comparison of 6th and 7th editions of APA
  • Setting the Bibliographic Style
  • Inserting In-text Citations
  • How to create a Reference List
  • Managing Sources
  • Editing Citations
  • Updating your Reference list
  • Find Sources
  • Evaluate Sources
  • Write the Reference
  • Write the Annotation
  • Examples of Annotations
  • Journal Articles
  • Web pages and social media
  • Newspaper articles

Dictionary or Encyclopaedia

Thesis or dissertation.

  • Reports and Datasets
  • Conferences
  • Images, figures and tables

Exhibitions

  • Audiovisual and Digital Media
  • Lecture Notes and Presentations
  • Author/Editor (Surname, Initials) ,
  • (Year of publication).
  • Title (in italics) .
  • Edition (other than first edition) .
  • Place of publication: Publisher.

example essay apa 6th edition

An e-book retrieved from an academic database that does not have a DOI (Digital Object Identifier) is referenced as though it were the print version, as above. (A DOI is a unique alphanumeric string that identifies content and provides a persistent link to its location on the internet. DOIs can be found in database records and the reference lists of published works).

Books with a URL or a DOI can be referenced like this:

  • Author/editor (Surname, Initials)
  • (Year of publication)
  • Title of book (in italics)
  • (Edition) (if not the 1st edition)
  • DOI or Retrieved from URL

example essay apa 6th edition

Book Chapter

  • Author of chapter/section (Surname, Initials)
  • ‘Title of chapter/section’.
  • ‘In:’ followed by author/editor of book, (in direct order)
  • Title of book (in italics) .
  • (Page reference).
  • Place of publication: Publisher,

example essay apa 6th edition

Journal article (print)

  • Author(s) (Surname, Initials)
  • Title of article
  • Title of journal (in italics, first letter of each word should be capitalised, except for words such as and, of, the)        
  • Issue information (volume, issue, pages) (volume in italics)

example essay apa 6th edition

Journal article (online)

  • Title of article.
  • Title of journal (in italics, first letter of each word should be capitalised, except for words such as and, of, the)
  • Issue information (date, volume, issue no., pages) (volume in italics)
  • Retrieved from: URL

example essay apa 6th edition

Journal article (database without DOI)

Journal articles retrieved from databases without a DOI can be referenced like a print journal, as above.

example essay apa 6th edition

Journal article (with DOI)

  • Issue information (date, volume , issue no., pages) (volume in italics)

example essay apa 6th edition

Journal article (more than 7 authors)

List the first six authors followed by three spaced ellipsis points (...) and then the last author's name.

example essay apa 6th edition

Journal article (pre-publication)

“Pre-print”, “In press” and “advanced online publication” usually refer to articles that have been accepted for publication, but may not yet have been assigned to a publication volume/issue. These articles can be cited using the year of online publication and the DOI.

  • Issue information (date, volume, issue no., pages) (if any available)
  • Advance online publication.

example essay apa 6th edition

arXiv is a collection facility for scientific 'e-prints'. Some of them have been published and some have not. APA recommends updating your references when you're close to finishing your assignment. If you've cited a preprint that has since been published, cite the published journal article.

In the example below, you will see that the title is in italics. This is because it hasn't yet been accepted in a journal and is, therefore, considered a stand-alone work.

example essay apa 6th edition

Journal Article (with article numbers, not page numbers)

If the journal article has an article number instead of a page range, include the word “Article” and then the article number instead of the page range.

  • Journal Title  (in italics)
  • Volume ,  (in italics)
  • Article number 

example essay apa 6th edition

Magazine Article

  • (Year of publication, Month day)
  • Title of magazine (in italics, first letter of each word should be capitalised, except for words such as and, of, the)      

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Author (Surname, Initials or Organisation name)
  • (Year)  (Month Day, if applicable).
  • Title of webpage   (in italics)

example essay apa 6th edition

If no date can be established, use n.d. to indicate no date in the citation and the reference.

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Author of message
  • (Year, Month Day).
  • Title of message
  • [Blog post]

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Author (surname followed by initials) and/or [screen name]
  • (Year, Month day) tweet posted
  • full text of tweet (If a tweet is longer than 40 words, write the first 40 words)

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Author and/or [given name]
  • (Year, month day)
  • Title of page   or post
  • [Facebook status update].
  • For individual authors, provide their full first name in square brackets after their initial as this is their social media identity information.
  • For the title, provide the name of the page or the content or caption of the post (up to the first 40 words).

 

example essay apa 6th edition

LinkedIn Profile

  • Author (name associated with the account)
  • Title of page ( Use the page title in the reference (e.g., “Home,” “About,” “Jobs”).)
  • [LinkedIn page].
  • Retrieved date from: URL ( Provide a retrieval date because the content is designed to change over time and is not archived)

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Author and/or [screen name]
  • (Year posted, month day)
  • Content of the post (up to the first 20 words)
  • [Photograph]
  • Retrieved from URL

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Author and/or [Username]
  • Content of the post up to the first 20 words. Count a URL or other link, a hashtag, or an emoji as one word each, and include them in the reference if they fall within the first 20 words. Do not italicize emojis.
  • [Video]  description of the audiovisuals

example essay apa 6th edition

Wikipedia is a free online encyclopaedia, created and edited by volunteers around the world. It is not a scholarly source, so your lecturer may not be happy for you to use it as a source in your assignments. Scholarly assignments should generally rely on peer-reviewed and other scholarly work vetted by experts in the field. However, it may be a good starting point for you in your research to find citations to original source materials that you do want to use.

Wikipedia is a constantly changing site, so cite an archived version of the page, if you can (select 'view history' and then the date of the version you used). If it doesn't have a permanent link to an archived version of the page, include a URL for the entry and the retrieval date. The retrieval date is always required because the source material may change over time. 'n.d.' is an abbreviation of 'no date' and it is used as Wikipedia is constantly changing.

  • Title of wiki (in italics)
  • Retrieved date, from URL

example essay apa 6th edition

Newspaper article (print)

  • Author (Surname, Initials) 
  • (Year of publication, Month day).
  • Title of article 
  • Title of newspaper (in italics) .
  • Page reference.

example essay apa 6th edition

Newspaper article (online)

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Author of entry (if there is one) (Surname, initials)
  • Title of entry.
  • ‘In:’ Editor (initial and surname) (Ed.)
  • Title of dictionary or encyclopaedia  (in italics) .
  • (Edition, page numbers of entry)

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Author (Surname, Initials)
  • (Year of submission).
  • Title of thesis (in italics) .
  • (Type of thesis or dissertation)  e.g. Unpublished Master's thesis
  • Degree awarding body, location (if unpublished)
  • Name of database or archive, URL  (if published)

example essay apa 6th edition

 

 

  • Title of data (version)   (in italics)
  • [Type of work]  (i.e. dataset)

example essay apa 6th edition

Government Publication

  • Name of Government Department
  • Title (in italics)
  • (Report Series and number) (if available)
  • Place of publication: Publisher (if in print)
  • URL (if online)

example essay apa 6th edition

Company Report

  • Title of report . (in italics)
  • Place of Publication: Publisher or URL 

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Name of authority or organisation.
  • Number and title of standard (in italics) .
  • Place of publication: Publisher (if in print) .
  • URL (if accessed online)

example essay apa 6th edition

Conference Paper (in edited book)

  • Title of the contribution paper
  • In: Name of editor or conference chair (Initial, Last name (Ed (s).)
  • Title of conference proceedings (in Italics)
  • (Page numbers)
  • Place of publication: Publisher

example essay apa 6th edition

Conference Paper (Journal)

  • Author of paper
  • Title of paper
  • Title of Journal (in italics)
  • Issue information (volume, issue, date)

example essay apa 6th edition

Conference Paper or Poster Presentation 

  • (Year, month of conference).
  • Paper or Poster presented at Title of conference: Subtitle of conference

example essay apa 6th edition

Images, illustrations, photos (print)

If you are citing an illustration, figure, diagram or table, start with the source in which it appeared. In your in-text citation, give the page number and any caption number that will help to identify the illustration, using the terminology in the book or article (for example, illus./fig./diagram/logo/table). The reference list entry will be for the whole article or book.

In-text citation:

example essay apa 6th edition

Reference List:

In the reference list, you list the book in which the image is found:

example essay apa 6th edition

When you include an image or photo in your text, as well as citing the source, you will also need to include a caption and list it in a Table of Figures ( click here for more information ). Images you created yourself don't have to be cited, but should still be included in the list of figures.

Image, illustration, photo or table (online)

  • Creator  (Surname, initial(s))
  • [Internet handle] (if appropriate)
  • Title of image, figure, illustration or table 
  • [Type of image]. (image, chart, diagram, graph, illustration or photograph)

example essay apa 6th edition

Photographs (Online Collection)

  • Photographer
  • Title of photograph/video (or collection) 
  • [Type of image].  

example essay apa 6th edition

If you viewed an image in person rather than online (e.g. in a museum or gallery), the source information is different. You will need to include the name and location of the institution where you viewed the image.

  • (Year of creation)  (if available)
  • Title of the work (in italics)
  • [Format description]  (in square brackets)
  • City, Country: Institution or collection that houses the work

example essay apa 6th edition

If you haven't seen the artwork in person and saw it online, use the website in the location part of your reference.

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Originator (Name of organisation)
  • Sheet number, scale.
  • Publisher (if different from author)
  • URL (if viewed online)

example essay apa 6th edition

It can often be hard to find accurate information about images accessed online.  However, if you do need to cite an image with no author, date or title listed, there are ways around this.  For untitled images, include a description of the image, in square brackets, where the title would usually go. If there is no publication date, add “n.d.” in place of the date, and add the date that you accessed the image.

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Curator(s) (Surname, Initial(s)) .
  • (Year or years ran).
  • Exhibition Title [Exhibition].
  • Museum name,
  • City, Country.
  • URL of exhibition website (if available)

example essay apa 6th edition

When the curator is unknown, move the title of the exhibition to the author position of the reference.

example essay apa 6th edition

Exhibition Catalogue

  • Artist (Surname, Initial) (or Gallery/Institution).
  • [Exhibition catalogue].
  • City of publication, Country/State: Publisher.

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Director(s) (Surname, Initial) (Director) &
  • Producer(s) (Surname, Initial) (Producer)
  • (Year of original release).
  • [Description]. (e.g. Film)
  • Country of origin: studio.

example essay apa 6th edition

Film (from Streaming Service)

  • (Year) (in round brackets)

example essay apa 6th edition

Online Video

  • Creator (Surname, Initial). [Screen name].
  • (Year, Month day).
  • Title of video [Video file]

example essay apa 6th edition

TV Programme

  • Producer(s) & Director(s)
  • (Year, Month day)
  • Title (in italics) [Television broadcast].
  • Place of broadcast: Name of broadcaster.

example essay apa 6th edition

Episode of a TV Series

  • Writer (surname and initial(s)) & Director (surname and initial(s))
  • (Date of broadcast or copyright)
  • Title of episode [Television series episode]
  • Producer (initials and surname)
  • Series title (in italics)
  • Place of publication: Production company

example essay apa 6th edition

Radio Programme (Online)

Presenter (Surname, Initial) (Host).

  • ( Year, Month Day of broadcast).

Title of programme [Description i.e. Radio broadcast ].

Place of production: Broadcast channel.

Retrieved from URL (if heard online)

example essay apa 6th edition

  • Name of primary contributor (Host or Producer)
  • Title of podcast (in italics)

example essay apa 6th edition

Lecture Notes

Notes you took during a lecture or class handouts that are not posted online are not retrievable by someone else, so do not belong in your reference list. Instead, you treat them like personal communication and just refer to them in your text.

example essay apa 6th edition

Lecture Notes or Powerpoint Slides (online)

  • Lecturer (Surname, Initial(s))
  • Course/Module and T it le of lecture [Lecture notes or PowerPoint slides]. (in italics)

example essay apa 6th edition

Recorded Lectures/Talks

  • Author (Surname, Initial(s))
  • (Year, Month).
  • Title of lecture [file format].

example essay apa 6th edition

Online Course or Massive Open Online Course (MOOC)

  • Instructor(s)  (Surname, Initial(s))
  • (Year of course creation  if known ).
  • Title of course [format].
  • Site that holds the course

example essay apa 6th edition

Open Educational Resource

  • Author  (Surname, Initial(s))
  • (Year added with Month day).
  • Retrieved date from URL

example essay apa 6th edition

Vinyl

Music on CD or Vinyl

  • Writer ( Surname, Initial ).
  • Title of song
  • [Recorded by Artist (Initial, Surname or Band name, if different from writer) ].
  • Title of album (in italics)
  • [Medium of recording].
  • Location: Record Label.

example essay apa 6th edition

Music Streaming

  • Name of artist.
  • Title of album/track (in italics)
  • [Description; Name of streaming service].
  • Record Label

example essay apa 6th edition

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APA Style (6th Edition)

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example essay apa 6th edition

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APA Style: APA 6 & 7 Comparison Tables

Apa 6 & 7 comparison tables.

Many students come to Walden having used APA 6 in their previous education programs.

These comparison tables offer highlights of some changes between APA 6 and APA 7, which students may find helpful in transitioning to APA 7. Note that these are not comprehensive tables of all changes between the two editions, but the table highlights the most common changes students will use in their writing at Walden.

  • APA 6 and 7 Comparison Tables Download a PDF version of these tables.

Citations

Topic APA 6 (location and old guideline) APA 7 (location and new guideline)
In-text citation format for three or more authors Table 6.1: In in-text citations of sources with three to five authors, list all authors the first time, then use et al. after that; for sources with six or more authors, use et al. for all citations. 8.17 (Table 8.1): In in-text citations, use et al. for all citations for sources with three or more authors.
Direct quotation from audiovisual works No guidance from the manual itself (only the APA Style Blog). 8.28: To quote directly from an audiovisual work, include a time stamp marking the beginning of the quoted material in place of a page number.
Dates listed in secondary source citations 6.17: Secondary source citation does not include the date of the original source. 8.6: Secondary source citation includes the date of the original source.

References

Topic APA 6 (location and old guideline) APA 7 (location and new guideline)
Number of author names listed in a reference 6.27: Provide surnames and initials for up to seven authors in a reference entry. If there are eight or more authors, use three spaced ellipsis points after the sixth author, followed by the final author name (no ampersand). 9.8: Provide surnames and initials for up to 20 authors in a reference entry. If there are 21 or more authors, use the ellipsis after the 19th, followed by the final author name (no ampersand).
Reference format when publisher and author are the same 7.02: When a work's publisher and author are the same, use the word "Author" as the name of the publisher in its reference entry. 9.24: When a work's publisher and author are the same, omit the publisher in its reference entry.
Issue numbers for journal articles in references 6.30; see also 7.01: Include issue number when journal is paginated separately by issue. 9.25: Include issue number for all periodicals that have issue numbers.
Publisher location 6.30: Provide publisher location (city, state, etc.) before publisher name. 9.29: Do not include publisher location (city, state, etc.) after publisher name in a reference.
Reference for online work with no DOI 6.32: If an online work has no DOI, provide the home page URL of the journal or of the book/report publisher. 9.34: If an online work (e.g., a journal article) has no DOI and was found through an academic research database, generally, no URL is needed. The reference will look just like the print version.
Hyperlinks in DOI and URL formatting 6.32: DOI begins with either "doi:" or with "https://doi.org/" in references. The recommendation that URLs should be in plain black text, not underlined, follows examples from APA 6 and the APA Style Blog. 9.35: Both DOIs and URLs should be presented as hyperlinks (beginning with "http://" or "https://"). Standardize DOIs as starting with "https://doi.org/". In documents to be read online, use live links. Blue/underlined or plain black text, not underlined, are both acceptable.
URL retrieval information in references 7.01: URLs include a retrieval phrase (e.g., "Retrieved from"). 9.35: The words "Retrieved from" or "Accessed from" are no longer necessary before a URL. The only time the word "Retrieved" (and not "Retrieved from") is needed is in those rare cases where a retrieval date is necessary (see p. 290, 9.16).
Website name in references for online media Chapter 7: List the URL but not the website in the publication information. 10.15-10.16: Include the name of the website in plain text, followed by a period, before the URL.

Avoiding Bias

Topic APA 6 (location and old guideline) APA 7 (location and new guideline)
Singular usage of "they" 3.12: No mention of singular human pronouns other than traditional, binary "he" and "she" and their related forms. 4.18: Use singular "they" and related forms (them, their, etc.) when (a) referring to a person who uses "they" as their preferred pronoun (b) when gender is unknown or irrelevant.
Disability 3.15: Use person-first language. 5.4: Both person-first and identity-first language "are fine choices overall" (p. 137). Okay to use either one until you know group preference.
Gender and noun/pronoun usage n/a: No guidance. 5.5: Use individuals' preferred names and pronouns even if they differ from official documents, keeping in mind concerns about confidentiality.
Race and ethnicity--Latin@ n/a: No guidance. 5.7: "Latin@" for Latino and Latina can be used to avoid "Latino," which is gendered.
Race and ethnicity--Latinx n/a: No guidance. 5.7: "Latinx" can be used to include all gender identities.

General Formatting/Mechanics

Topic APA 6 (location and old guideline) APA 7 (location and new guideline)
Italics vs. quotation marks 4.07: Use italics to highlight a letter, word, phrase, or sentence as a linguistic example (e.g., they clarified the distinction between and ). 6.07: Use quotation marks to refer to a letter, word, phrase, or sentence as a linguistic example of itself (e.g., they clarified the difference between "farther" and "further").
Numbers 4.31: Numbers in the abstract of a paper should be expressed as numerals. 6.32: Use numerals for numbers 10+ for all sections of the paper including the abstract (numbers in abstracts now follow general APA number rules).
Numbers expressing time 4.31: Although numerals should be used for numbers that represent time (among other things) even if below 10, the number should be spelled out if it refers to an approximate amount of time (e.g., about three months ago). 6.32: Numbers representing time are written as numerals, not spelled out, regardless of whether the time is exact or approximate (e.g. “about 7 weeks,” “3 decades,” or “approximately 5 years ago”).
Punctuation for bulleted lists within a sentence 3.04: For bulleted lists within a sentence (i.e., when each list item is a word or phrase, not a complete sentence), use punctuation after each list element in the same way you would if the sentence had no bullets (i.e., commas or semicolons as appropriate and a period after the last item). 6.52*: For bulleted lists withina sentence, there is the option to either (a) use no punctuation after any of the list items, including the last, or (b) use punctuation after each bulleted item in the same way you would if the sentence had no bullets (as was the case in APA 6). The manual suggests that using no punctuation may be more appropriate for lists of shorter, simpler items. *Note: The term "seriation" does not appear in APA 7 and has been replaced by "lists" (see 6.50 for lettered lists, 6.51 for numbered lists, and 6.52 for bulleted lists).
Spacing after punctuation marks 4.01: Recommendation to space twice after punctuation marks at the end of sentences to aid readers of draft manuscripts. 6.1: Insert only one space after periods or other punctuation marks that end a sentence.
Preferred spellings of technology terms Based on how words were written in 6th edition manual, not explicit examples of spelling, preferred spellings were as follows: "e-mail," "Internet," and "web page." 4.12 indicates spelling should conform to standard American English as in . 6.11: Commonly used technology terms are listed and should be spelled as follows: "email," "internet," and "webpage."
Use of abbreviations in headings n/a: No guidance in manual; On the archived sixth edition APA Style Blog, APA experts recommended not using abbreviations in headings. (see post titled ) 6.25: Abbreviations can be used in headings if they were previously defined in the text (but cannot be defined in the heading itself), or if the abbreviation is exempt from needing definition because it appears as a term in the dictionary.
Acceptable fonts 8.03: The preferred typeface is Times New Roman, 12-point. 2.19: A variety of fonts are acceptable, with focus on accessibility for readers. APA accepts sans serif fonts such as Calibri 11, Arial 11, and Lucida Sans Unicode 10, as well as serif fontssuch as Times New Roman 12, Georgia 11, and Computer Modern 10. Note: Per our institutional requirement, Walden doctoral capstones should use Times New Roman 12. Walden coursework templates also use Times New Roman 12, but the other APA-endorsed fonts arealso acceptable in Walden coursework.

Paper-Specific Formatting

Topic APA 6 (location and old guideline) APA 7 (location and new guideline)
Paper title length 2.01: Recommended title length is no more than 12 words. 2.4: No prescribed limit for title length (though recommendation for conciseness).
Title formatting 2.1: Title in regular type (not bold).

2.4: Title in bold type.

There is an institutional variation for titles in doctoral capstone documents (i.e., dissertations, doctoral studies, or projects): The title is in plain type. Doctoral capstone students should refer to the APA 7 template for their program posted on the page after June 1 to see this Walden institutional variation in place.

Heading levels 3,4, and 5 formatting 3.03: Levels 3, 4, and 5 are all indented and sentence case. 2.27-2.28: Levels 3, 4, and 5 are all title case. Level 3 is now flush left, while 4 and 5 remain indented.

Tables and Figures

Topic APA 6 (location and old guideline) APA 7 (location and new guideline)
Tables 5.1 and 5.16: Table number is plain type, table title is title case and set in italics; see Sample Tables 5.1 to 5.16. 7.2 and 7.24: Table number is bold; table title is title case and set in italics. See Sample Tables 7.2 to 7.24.
Figures 5.1 and 5.12: Figure number and caption are on same line and are placed below the figure; see Sample Figures 5.1 to 5.12. 7.2-7.21: Figure number and caption are on separate lines and are placed above the figure, and the style matches that for tables: Figure number is bold, figure caption is title case and set in italics; see Sample Figures 7.2 to 7.21.

Updated July 14, 2020.

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example essay apa 6th edition

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Sample essay apa 6th edition.

Steven A. McDonald , Liberty University Follow

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American Psychological Association

Figure Setup

All types of visual displays other than tables are considered figures in APA Style. Common types of figures include line graphs, bar graphs, charts (e.g., flowcharts, pie charts), drawings, maps, plots (e.g., scatterplots), photographs, infographics, and other illustrations.

This page addresses the basics of figure setup, including figure components, principles of figure construction, and placement of figures in a paper. Note that tables and figures have the same overall setup.

View the sample figures to see these guidelines in action. Information is also available on how to use color to create accessible figures .

Figure components

APA Style figures have these basic components:

  • number: The figure number (e.g., Figure 1) appears above the figure title and image in bold font. Number figures in the order in which they are mentioned in your paper.
  • title: The figure title appears one double-spaced line below the figure number. Give each figure a brief but descriptive title, and capitalize the figure title in italic title case .
  • image: The image portion of the figure is the graph, chart, photograph, drawing, or other illustration itself. If text appears in the image of the figure (e.g., axis labels), use a sans serif font between 8 and 14 points .
  • legend: A figure legend, or key, if present, should be positioned within the borders of the figure and explains any symbols used in the figure image. Capitalize words in the figure legend in title case .
  • note: Three types of notes (general, specific, and probability) can appear below the figure to describe contents of the figure that cannot be understood from the figure title, image, and/or legend alone (e.g., definitions of abbreviations, copyright attribution, explanations of asterisks use to indicate p values). Include figure notes only as needed.

This diagram illustrates the basic figure components.

Diagram of the components of a prototypical figure (here, a line graph), including the figure number, title, graph, axis labels, legend and notes.

Figures are covered in the seventh edition APA Style manuals in the Publication Manual Sections 7.22 to 7.36 and the Concise Guide Sections 7.22 to 7.32

example essay apa 6th edition

Related handout

  • Student Paper Setup Guide (PDF, 3MB)

Principles of figure creation

The most important principle to follow when creating a figure is to present information in a way that is easy for readers to understand. Provide sufficient information in the figure itself so that readers do not need to read the text to understand it.

When creating a figure, ensure you meet the following standards:

  • images are clear
  • lines are smooth and sharp
  • font is legible and simple
  • units of measurement are provided
  • axes are clearly labeled
  • elements within the figure are clearly labeled or explained

Use graphics software to create figures in APA Style papers. For example, use the built-in graphics features of your word-processing program (e.g., Microsoft Word or Excel) or dedicated programs such as Photoshop or Inkscape.

Placement of figures in a paper

There are two options for the placement of figures (and tables) in a paper. The first is to embed figures in the text after each is first mentioned (or “called out”); the second is to place each figure on a separate page after the reference list.

An embedded figure may take up an entire page; if the figure is short, however, text may appear on the same page as the figure. In that case, place the figure at either the top or bottom of the page rather than in the middle. Also add one blank double-spaced line between the figure and any text to improve the visual presentation.

View the sample figures for more information on figures.

Generate accurate APA citations for free

  • Knowledge Base
  • APA Style 6th edition
  • How to write and format an APA abstract (6th edition)

How to write and format an APA Abstract (6th edition)

Published on November 6, 2020 by Courtney Gahan .

An APA abstract is a summary of your paper in 150–250 words. It describes the research problem , methods , results and conclusions of your research. For published papers, it also includes a list of keywords.

Write the abstract after you have finished your paper, and place it on a separate page after the title page .

The formatting of the abstract page is the same as the rest of an APA style paper : double-spaced, Times New Roman 12pt font, one-inch margins, and a running head at the top of the page.

Table of contents

Apa format abstract example, how to write an apa abstract, apa abstract keywords.

SCRIBBR APA ABSTRACT EXAMPLE RUNNING HEAD 1

What is the problem? Outline the objective, problem statement, research questions and hypotheses. What has been done? Explain your method. What did you discover? Summarize the key findings and conclusions. What do the findings mean? Summarize the discussion and recommendations. What is the problem? Outline the objective, problem statement, research questions and hypotheses. What has been done? Explain your method. What did you discover? Summarize the key findings and conclusions. What do the findings mean? Summarize the discussion and recommendations. What is the problem? Outline the objective, problem statement, research questions and hypotheses. What has been done? Explain your method. What did you discover? Summarize the key findings and conclusions. What do the findings mean? Summarize the discussion and recommendations. What is the problem? Outline the objective, problem statement, research questions and hypotheses. What has been done? Explain your method. What did you discover? Summarize the key findings and conclusions. What do the findings mean? Summarize the discussion and recommendations. What is the problem? Outline the objective, problem statement, research questions and hypotheses. What has been done? Explain your method. What did you discover? Summarize the key findings and conclusions. What do the findings mean? Summarize the discussion and recommendations.

Keywords : example keyword, example keyword, example keyword

An APA abstract must be formatted as follows:

  • Include the running head aligned to the left at the top of the page
  • On the first line, write the heading “Abstract” (centered and without any formatting)
  • Do not indent any part of the text
  • Double space the text
  • Use Times New Roman font in 12 pt
  • Set one-inch (or 2.54 cm) margins
  • If you include a “keywords” section at the end of the abstract, indent the first line and italicize the word “Keywords” while leaving the keywords themselves without any formatting

Are your APA in-text citations flawless?

The AI-powered APA Citation Checker points out every error, tells you exactly what’s wrong, and explains how to fix it. Say goodbye to losing marks on your assignment!

Get started!

example essay apa 6th edition

Simply answer the following questions and put them together, then voila! You have an abstract for your paper.

  • What is the problem? Outline the objective , research questions and/or  hypotheses .
  • What has been done? Explain your research methods .
  • What did you discover? Summarize the key findings and conclusions .
  • What do the findings mean? Summarize the discussion and recommendations .

If you need more guidance writing your abstract, read our detailed instructions on what to include and see an abstract example.

How to write an abstract

At the end of the abstract, you can also include a short list of keywords that will be used for indexing if your paper is published on a database. Listing your keywords will help other researchers find your work.

Make sure that your keywords:

  • Accurately represent the content
  • Are specific to your field

APA abstract keywords example

Here is an example of an APA format paper published as a chapter in a book, where the author has included a set of keywords. The author has chosen the terms listed in the title as keywords as well as several other related keywords that feature in their research.

Book chapter title: Nonparalytic Polio and Post-Polio Syndrome

From: Post-Polio Syndrome: A Guide for Polio Survivors and Their Families (pp. 21-26), Julie K. Silver, Yale University Press (2001)

Keywords: Polio, Paralysis, Symptoms, Postpoliomyelitis syndrome, Medical diagnosis, Legs, Physicians, Strokes, Misdiagnosis

Cite this Scribbr article

If you want to cite this source, you can copy and paste the citation or click the “Cite this Scribbr article” button to automatically add the citation to our free Citation Generator.

Gahan, C. (2020, November 06). How to write and format an APA Abstract (6th edition). Scribbr. Retrieved September 3, 2024, from https://www.scribbr.com/apa-style/6th-edition/archived-abstract/

Is this article helpful?

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Scribbr apa citation checker.

An innovative new tool that checks your APA citations with AI software. Say goodbye to inaccurate citations!

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    Generate accurate APA citations with Scribbr. The most important APA format guidelines in the 6th edition are: Use 12 pt Times New Roman. Set 1 inch page margins. Apply double line spacing. Insert a running head on every page. Indent every new paragraph ½ inch.

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    1. Annotated APA Sample Paper and Style Guide for Student Writers (6th Edition) Center and double-space your title, author(s), and institutional affiliation in the top half of your first page (p. 23). If your title runs more than one line (here and on page 3), you may insert a break wherever you want or can just let your title wrap onto a new ...

  3. APA Formatting and Style Guide (6th Edition)

    Types of APA Papers. APA (American Psychological Association) style is most commonly used to cite sources within the social sciences. This resource, revised according to the 6th edition, second printing of the APA manual, offers examples for the general format of APA research papers, in-text citations, endnotes/footnotes, and the reference page.

  4. APA Sample Paper

    Cite your source automatically in MLA or APA format. Cite. Using citation machines responsibly. Powered by. Media File: APA Sample Paper. This resource is enhanced by an Acrobat PDF file. Download the free Acrobat Reader. Click this link to download the PDF handout of the APA Sample Paper.

  5. Sample Essay APA 6th Edition

    Running head: SAMPLE ESSAY 2 Sample Essay: An Example to Follow Repeat your title at the beginning of your essay. Place a one half inch indent (one tab) at the beginning of each new paragraph. American Psychological Association (APA) format is double spaced lines, one-inch margins, and two spaces between each sentence. This section serves as a ...

  6. APA Sample Paper

    Media Files: APA Sample Student Paper , APA Sample Professional Paper This resource is enhanced by Acrobat PDF files. Download the free Acrobat Reader. Note: The APA Publication Manual, 7 th Edition specifies different formatting conventions for student and professional papers (i.e., papers written for credit in a course and papers intended for scholarly publication).

  7. APA Sample Papers

    Below is an example of a student APA format essay. We also have PDF versions of both a student paper and a professional paper linked below. See Student Paper See Professional Paper. 1. Using Biometrics to Evaluate Visual Design. Jane Lisa Dekker. Art Department, Northern California Valley State University.

  8. LibGuides: APA Style -6th edition: Sample APA Paper

    APA Style -6th edition; Sample APA Paper; Search this Guide Search. APA Style -6th edition. This guide provides resources for learning how to cite your sources using APA Style guidelines. Overview; General Guidelines; Books Toggle Dropdown. A. One Author or Editor ; B. Two Authors or Editors

  9. APA headings (6th edition)

    APA recommends using 12pt. Times New Roman font for both the body text as the headings. APA heading format. Heading 1. Centered, Bold, Title Case Capitalization *. Heading 2. Left-Aligned, Bold, Title Case Capitalization*. Heading 3. Indented, bold, sentence case capitalization,** a final period.

  10. Sample Papers

    The following two sample papers were published in annotated form in the Publication Manual and are reproduced here as PDFs for your ease of use. The annotations draw attention to content and formatting and provide the relevant sections of the Publication Manual (7th ed.) to consult for more information.. Student sample paper with annotations (PDF, 5MB)

  11. Quick Guide to APA Citation (6th ed.)

    APA Style citations consist of two parts: In-text citation: A brief citation in parentheses when you mention a source, citing the author's last name and the year of publication, e.g. (Smith, 2019). It identifies the full source in the reference list. Reference list entry: Full publication details listed on the reference page, which appears at ...

  12. Quick Answers—Formatting (6th edition)

    Publication Manual (6th ed., sections 5.07-5.19, pp. 128-150; Table 5.1, p. 129, illustrates the basic components of a table; section 8.03, p. 228) From the APA Style website: APA publishes a companion guide to the manual that focuses exclusively on tables: Presenting Your Findings: A Practical Guide for Creating Tables. From the APA Style ...

  13. APA Style 6th Edition: Citing Your Sources

    Adapted from American Psychologial Association (2010) Publication manual (6th ed.). Washington, D.C.: American Psychologial Association APA Quick Answers- Formatting

  14. Examples of References in APA (6th ed.) style

    DOIs can be found in database records and the reference lists of published works). Books with a URL or a DOI can be referenced like this: Author/editor (Surname, Initials) (Year of publication) Title of book (in italics) (Edition) (if not the 1st edition) DOI or Retrieved from URL.

  15. General Format

    General APA Guidelines. Your essay should be typed and double-spaced on standard-sized paper (8.5" x 11"), with 1" margins on all sides. You should use a clear font that is highly readable. ... OWL staff learned that the APA 6th edition, first printing sample papers have incorrect examples of running heads on pages after the title page.

  16. Instructional Aids

    These instructional aids will help you improve your APA Style skills. Access free tutorials and webinars, handouts and guides, and sample papers; learn about instructional products such as the Mastering APA Style Student Workbook; and request desk or exam copies of APA Style books as well as ancillary materials related to course adoption.New to APA Style?

  17. APA Formatting and Citation (7th Ed.)

    Throughout your paper, you need to apply the following APA format guidelines: Set page margins to 1 inch on all sides. Double-space all text, including headings. Indent the first line of every paragraph 0.5 inches. Use an accessible font (e.g., Times New Roman 12pt., Arial 11pt., or Georgia 11pt.).

  18. APA Style (6th Edition)

    APA Style Workshop. This workshop provides an overview of APA (American Psychological Association) style and where to find help with different APA resources. It provides an annotated list of links to all of our APA materials and an APA overview. It is an excellent place to start to learn about APA format.

  19. Academic Guides: APA Style: APA 6 & 7 Comparison Tables

    APA 6 (location and old guideline) APA 7 (location and new guideline) In-text citation format for three or more authors. Table 6.1: In in-text citations of sources with three to five authors, list all authors the first time, then use et al. after that; for sources with six or more authors, use et al. for all citations.

  20. Title Page Setup

    Follow the guidelines described next to format each element of the student title page. Place the title three to four lines down from the top of the title page. Center it and type it in bold font. Capitalize major words of the title. Place the main title and any subtitle on separate double-spaced lines if desired.

  21. APA Title Page (6th edition)

    An APA title page must include: A running head (including page number) The title of your paper (one or two lines long) The full name of the author (s) Your university or institution. Additional information, such as a course number or an author's note, should be placed on a separate line below the institution. APA title page template.

  22. "Sample Essay APA 6th Edition" by Steven A. McDonald

    By Steven A. McDonald, Published on 08/01/09. Recommended Citation. McDonald, Steven A., "Sample Essay APA 6th Edition" (2009).

  23. Figure Setup

    Figure setup - APA Style

  24. APA reference page formatting

    This article reflects the APA 6th edition guidelines. Click here for APA 7th edition guidelines. The APA reference page is a separate page at the end of your paper where all sources you cited in the main text are listed. The references are sorted alphabetically, double spaced, and formatted using a hanging indent of ½ inch.

  25. How to write and format an APA Abstract (6th edition)

    Include the running head aligned to the left at the top of the page. On the first line, write the heading "Abstract" (centered and without any formatting) Do not indent any part of the text. Double space the text. Use Times New Roman font in 12 pt. Set one-inch (or 2.54 cm) margins.