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Citations Education

Harvard Format and Referencing Guide Made Simple

The Harvard format, also known as the Harvard referencing style, is a system for citing sources in academic writing. It is characterized by using author-date in-text citations and a comprehensive reference list at the end of the document. This system ensures that readers can easily locate the sources referenced within the text. This guide is developed in line with the book Pears, R. and Shields, G. (2016) Cite Them Right: The Essential Referencing Guide. 10th ed. Basingstoke: Palgrave.

The following guidelines should be followed when using the Harvard format:

  • Arial 12 pt. font (unless the instructions require a different font)
  • 1” (2.54 cm) margins from all sides (This applies to APA, MLA, and Chicago Style)
  • Alphabetical order of sources at the end of a document according to the author’s surname or title (if no author). If you have cited more than one item by the same author, they should be listed chronologically (earliest first) and by letter (1996a 1996b) if more than one item has been published in the same year.
  • No indentation is required on the reference list on a Harvard-formatted paper.
  • Sentence case capitalization for book/article/chapter titles
  • Single quotation marks in the reference list

Title Page

On the title page of a Harvard-styled paper, the following guidelines should be followed:

  • Your title should be inserted in the upper half of the first page.
  • You should not use more than 12 words for your title
  • Use upper and lower case (avoid abbreviations and redundant words).
  • The title page should be double-spaced.
  • Insert the author’s name below the title.
  • Insert the educational institution below the author’s name.
  • In the header of the Harvard-style paper, you must include your surname and the page number, just like in MLA format.
Harvard Cover Page Layout.

Headings

As a rule, two types of subheadings are used when formatting a paper at Harvard:

Level 1 – Centered, Capitalized, Not Bold, Not Italicized

Level 2 – Flush Left, Italicized, Capitalized, Not Bold

Harvard Heading Levels

Reference List Rules

The Harvard reference list is inserted at the end of your paper; any source that you use needs to be included in the reference page and cited in the text.

  • Do not forget to invert authors’ names, such as last name and initials. Example: Lankshear, C. and Knobel, M..
  • The reference list is always alphabetized by the first word in the reference entry (from A to Z).
  • When alphabetizing titles or group names as authors, go by the first significant word (disregard a, an, the)
  • In the titles of your sources (except journal, magazine, and database titles), use sentence case capitalization.
  • Italicization is applied to titles of books and periodical journals.
  • Single quotation marks are used for the titles of articles and book chapters.
Example of Harvard Reference List

General book format

Harvard referencing style of books follows the following general format.

Last Name, Initials. (Publication Date) Title of book. City: Publisher.

Single author

Sebold, A. (2002) The Lovely Bones. London: Hachette.

Two or three authors

Lankshear, C. and Knobel, M. (2006) New literacies: everyday practices and classroom learning. Maidenhead: Open University Press.

Four or more authors

Evans, J. et al. (2003) Equal subjects, unequal rights: Indigenous peoples in British settler societies. Manchester: Manchester University Press.

Note:

  • List only the first author, while others are represented by “et al.”

Corporate Author

Institute of Chartered Accountants in Australia and New Zealand (2016) AASB 128 investments in associates and joint ventures. Sydney: Pearson Education.

Unknown author

The Oxford dictionary of abbreviations (1998) Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Multiple works by the same author

King, S. (2008) The Shining. New York, NY: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.

King, S. (2010) Insomnia. London: Hachette.

Note:

  • On the Reference list, works by the same author are arranged by year of publication, with the earliest work first.

Multiple works published in the same year by the same author

King, S. (2008a) The shining. New York, NY: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.

King, S. (2008b) The stand. New York, NY: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.

Note:

  • Both in the in-text citations and on the Reference list, works published in the same year by the same author should be distinguished by adding an alphabetical designator to the publication date.

Different editions

Feldman, R. (2011) Understanding psychology. 10th in. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.

Note:

  • When using any edition of the book other than the first one, use the publication date of that particular edition and make sure to add the edition number to the entry on the Reference list.

Author with an editor

Howells, W. D. (1968) Their wedding journey. Edited by John K. Reeves. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

Note:

  • Write editor(s) full first name(s) followed by last name.

Editor with no author

Baker, R. (ed.) (1986) The Norton Book of Light Verse. New York, NY: W. W. Norton.

Note:

  • Use either (ed.) for one editor or (eds.) for two or more.

Translated book

Homer (1997) The Odyssey. Translated by R. Fagles. Introduction and notes by B. Knox. London: Penguin Books.

Note:

  • Make sure to mention all contributors, such as translators, editors, co-authors, or illustrators

if mentioned on the book’s cover page.

Multi-volume book

Ersoy, A., Górny, M. and Kechriotis, V. (2010) Discourses of Collective Identity in Central and

Southeast Europe 1770–1945: Texts and Commentaries (3 vols.). Budapest: Central European University Press.

If you cite a separate volume, use the following format:

Ersoy, A., Górny, M. and Kechriotis, V. (2010) Discourses of Collective Identity in Central and Southeast Europe 1770–1945: Texts and Commentaries. Part 1: Modernism: The Creation of Nation-States. Budapest: Central European University Press.

Collected works

Jung, C.G. (1989–1995) Gesammelte werke (24 vols). Olten: Walter Verlag.

Chapter in an edited book

Johnson, J.L. and Repta, R. (2012) ‘Sex and gender: beyond the binaries’, in Oliffe, J.L. and Greaves, L.J. (eds.) Designing and conducting gender, sex, and health research. Los Angeles: SAGE Publishing, pp. 17–37.

Note:

  • Use either (ed.) for one editor or (eds.) for two or more.
  • Remember to include chapter page numbers at the end of the entry.

E-book

Marr, A. (2012) A history of the world. Available at: http://www.amazon.co.uk/kindle-ebooks (Downloaded: 22 June 2018).

Book found online

Salinger, J.D. (1951) Catcher in the Rye. Available at:

09&FileName=Catcher%20In%20The%20Rye.pdf (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

The Bible

When citing the bible in the Harvard referencing style, the following format is followed:

Book of the Bible. (Year) Title of the Bible, Edition (if applicable). Publisher.

Example:

Matthew 5: 3–12, Holy Bible. New International Edition.

Note:

  • Mention the Book of the Bible first (not in italics), then chapter: verse, ‘Holy Bible.” (not in Italics) and the version of the Bible you have read.
  • Do not include the place of publication or publisher.

The Torah

Torah. Shernot 3: 14.

Note:

  • Mention “Torah.” first (not in italics), then the book, followed by the chapter: verse.

The Qur’an

Qur’an 20: 24 (2010) Translated by Abdel Haleem, M.A.S. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Note:

  • Mention “Qur’an” first (not in italics), then Surah or chapter: verse, year of publication, translator, and place of publication: publisher.

Journal article

The format that the Harvard referencing style follows when citing a journal article is as follows:

Author(s) Last Name, First Initial(s). (Year) ‘Title of the article,’ Title of the Journal, Volume(Issue), Page numbers.

Examples:

Smith, J. (2020) ‘The impact of social media on mental health’, Journal of Psychology, 12(3), pp. 45-67.

Breslau, J. and Engel, C. (2016) ‘Information and communication technologies in behavioral health: a literature review with recommendations for the airforce’, RAND Health Quarterly, 5(4), pp. 17-18.

Note:

  • If a journal has no issue, it should be omitted.
  • If an article is printed on one page, “p.” should be used instead of “pp.”
  • If there is a colon in the title of an article, do not capitalize the subtitle.
  • Capitalize all the words except conjunctions and articles only in the journal-titles.

Journal article (no author)

‘Perioperative blood salvage’ (2006) Vox Sanguinis, 91(2), pp. 185-192.

Online journal article with doi

Williams, J. (2000) ‘Tools for achieving sustainable housing strategies in rural Gloucestershire’, Planning Practice & Research, 15(3), pp.155–174. doi: 10.1080/02697450020000131

Online journal article without doi

Springborn, M. (2015) ‘Accounting for behavioral responses during a flu epidemic using home television viewing’, BMC Infectious Diseases, 15(21). Available at: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2334/15/21 (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Magazine article in print

Biello, D. (2011) ‘Coal fires burning bright,’ Scientific American, 304(March), p. 14.

Note:

  • Enter month(s) in brackets in the issue number field.

Online magazine article

Rosner, H. (2018) ‘Palm oil is unavoidable. Can it be sustainable?’, National Geographic, (December). Available at: https://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/2018/12/palm-oil-products[1]borneo-africa-south-america-environment-impact/ (Accessed: 4 December 2018).

Newspaper article in print

O’Sallivan, J. (2016) ‘Sanders, Clinton fight on credentials’, The Boston Globe, 4 February, p. 3.

Note:

  • Make sure that you add a full publication date (year, day, and month) with no shortenings. Do not forget that it should be separated by the article and newspaper titles.
  • Capitalize all words except conjunctions and articles only for the name of a newspaper.

Newspaper article without author

The Independent (2014) ‘Google Doodle honors Emmeline Pankhurst,’ 15 July, p.1.

Note:

  • When no author is given, the title of the newspaper becomes the author.

Online newspaper/magazine article

Baker, P. and Stolberg, S.G. (2018) ‘Bush’s coffin arrives at the capitol, where the former President will lie in state’, The New York Times: Politics, 3 December. Available at:

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/03/us/politics/trump-george-bush-capitol.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage (Accessed: 4 December 2018).

Note:

  • When referencing a section of a newspaper where page numbers may be the same as in the main part of the paper or absent, mention the section (e.g., Newspaper: Section).

Full conference proceedings

Gretzel, U., Law, R. and Fuchs, M. (eds.) (2010) Information and Communication Technologies in Tourism. Lugano, Switzerland, 10-12 February. Vienna: Springer.

Paper from a published conference proceedings

Tran, C.K., Tseng, C.D. and Lee, T.F. (2016) ‘Improving the face recognition accuracy under varying illumination conditions for local binary patterns and local ternary patterns based on Weber-Face and singular value decomposition’, 3rd International Conference on Green Technology and Sustainable Development (GTSD) conference proceedings. The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, 24-25 November. Danvers: Conference Publishing Services, pp. 5-9.

Note:

  • Make sure to include the location and date of the conference, followed by the place of publication and publisher.
  • If an article is printed on one page, “p.” should be used instead of “pp.”

Paper from conference proceedings available online

Mendes, L. and Romão, T. (2011) ‘Children as teachers’, Proceedings of the 8th international conference on advances in computer entertainment technology, Lisbon, Portugal, 8–11 November. doi: 10.1145/2071423.2071438

Dissertation/thesis in print

Smith, W.B. (2012) Data structures and principles of programming. PhD thesis. University of Calgary.

Note:

  • Make sure to include the degree statement and degree awarding body (for example, “PhD thesis. the University of Calgary.”)

Online dissertation/thesis

Deines, T. (2007) Global warming coverage in the media: trends in a Mexico City newspaper. PhD Thesis. Kansas State University. Available at: http://krex.k[1]state. edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/2097/497/TinaDeines2007.pdf?sequence=4 (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Note:

  • If the thesis is available online, provide a current link and fill in the date that you last accessed the document.

Document on World Wide Web

When citing a document on a website in Harvard referencing style, you should include the author’s name, the year of publication, the title of the document, and the URL where the document is available along with the date you accessed it.

Example:

Folkman, J. (2013) Top 9 leadership behaviors that drive employee commitment. Available at: http://zengerfolkman.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/ZFA-9-Behaviors.pdf (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Note:

  • Be sure not to use quotation marks for the title of a page but make it italicized.

Document on World Wide Web (no author)

Seven Steps for effective leadership development (2012) Available at: http://www.oracle.com/us/media1/steps-effective-leadership-dev-1657106.pdf (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Web page with neither author nor title

https://www.brookes.ac.uk (2014) (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Web page with neither author, title, nor date

 https://www.brookes.ac.uk (no date) (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Image on World Wide Web

Maslow’s hierarchy of needs (2016) Available at: https://fthmb.tqn.com/oYE4xPDfBJJLBn8LcdE[1]6rz6Gng=/768×0/filters:no_upscale () /about/hierarchy-of-needs-56a791433df78cf772972cac.png  (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Blog

Witt, D. (2017) ‘When facing pressure, don’t just try to survive: learn to thrive’. Weblog, 25 January. (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Note:

  • Be sure to add the entire date when the blog post was published.

Facebook

Tynemouth outdoor pool (2012) [Facebook] 29 August. Available at: http://www.facebook.com/ (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Twitter

Fry, S. (2012) [Twitter] 13 January. Available at: http://twitter.com/stephenfry (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Computer programs

TechSmith Corporation (2012) Camtasia Studio (Version 3) [Computer program]. Available at: http://techsmith.com/download.html (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Films and video recordings

Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004) Directed by Michael Moore [Film]. Santa Monica, Calif: Lions Gate Films.

Note:

  • Add either [Film] or video record medium in square brackets (for example, [DVD], [Blu-ray])

YouTube videos

Leponline (2008) Ask the experts – plastering a wall. Available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J9wpcellxCU (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Television programs

The Apprentice (2012) BBC One Television, 23 June.

‘Asylum of the Daleks’ (2012) Doctor Who, Series 33, episode 1. BBC One Television, 1 September.

Note:

  • If an episode is cited, enter the title first in single quotes.

Grand Designs (2011) Channel 4 Television, 28 September. Available at: http://www.channel4.com/programmes/grand-designs/episode-guide/series-7/episode-30 (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Note:

  • If you cite a TV program available online, make sure to provide a link and state the date of access.

Newspaper interview

Riley, B. (2008) ‘The life of Riley’. Interview with Bridget Riley. Interview by Jonathan Jones for The Guardian, 5 July.

Television interview

Blair, A. (2003). Interview with A. Blair. Interview by Jeremy Paxman for Newsnight, BBC Two

Television, 2 February.

Interview published on the internet

Obama, B. (2008). Interviewed by Terry Moran for ABC News, 19 March. Available at: http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/Vote2008/Story?id=4480133 (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Press releases/announcements

Google Inc. (2012) Google Maps heads north … way north [Press release]. 23 August. Available at: http://www.google.com/intl/en/press (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Lectures and course materials

When referencing lecture notes and course resources in the Harvard style, it is important to include key details such as the lecturer’s name, year, the title of the lecture or resource, course title, institution, and URL (if available online).

The following is an example of how lecture notes and course materials can be cited in the Harvard referencing style:

Stellar, V. (2016) ‘Introduction to Java Week 5 Lecture’. MIT6_092IAP10: Access control, class scope, packages, Java API. Available at: https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/electrical-engineering-and[1]computer-science/6-092-introduction-to-programming-in-java-january-iap-2010/download[1]course-materials/ (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Note:

  • Module code and title are to be separated by a colon and written in Italics.

PowerPoint presentations

‘Module 1: The Accounting’ (2012) [PowerPoint presentation]. ACC5203. Available at:

http://usqstudydesk.usq.edu.au (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Note:

  • Add [PowerPoint presentation] as a supplement after the title
  • If there is no author, put the title in the first place.

Messages from course discussion boards

Thomas, D. (2008) ‘Word count and referencing style.’ Frequently Asked Questions discussion board, in PHYS 2011: Housing Studies. Available at: http://duo.dur.ac.uk/ (Accessed: 14 October 2012).

Lectures/seminars/webinars/PowerPoint presentations/videoconferences

Brown, T. (2012) Contemporary furniture [Lecture to BSc Design Year 4], DE816: Design for

Industry. Northumbria University. 21 April.

Electronic discussion groups and bulletin boards

Peters, W.R. (2013) International finance questions, British Business School Librarians Group discussion Iist, 11 March. Available email: lisbusiness@jiscmail.com.

Note:

  • Mention “Available email: email address”.

Entire discussion groups or bulletin boards

Photography news Iist (2013). Available email: pnl@btinfo.net. (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Acts and statutes

When citing acts and statutes in Harvard referencing style, you should include the title of the act, the year it was enacted, the chapter number, the location where it is available (usually a website), and the date you accessed it. Here’s a guideline based on the provided example:

Example:

Health and Social Care (Control of Data Processing) Act (Northern Ireland) 2016 (2016), c. 12. Available at: http://www.legislation.gov.uk/nia/2016/12/contents (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Legal material papers

Harvard referencing style provides a guideline on how to cite legal materials. The following is an example of how to cite a legal paper on Harvard referencing style.

Example:

Parliament. House of Commons (2000) Compensating victims of violent crime, Session 1999-2000. (HC 1999-2000 472). London: The Stationery Office.

Law Commission reports and consultation papers.

Law Commission (2017) 13th Programme of Law Reform. (Law Com No 377, HC 640). London: The Stationery Office.

Departmental publications

Ministry of Justice (2011) Sentencing statistics quarterly brief: July to September 2010, England and Wales (Provisional data). Available at:

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/218041/sentencing-statistics-brief-july-sept-2010 .pdf (Accessed: 24 November 2018).

Legal reports (cases)

‘R v K (M) (R v Gega, MK v R)’ (2018) EWCA Crim 667. BAILII [Online]. Available at:

http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2018/667.html (Accessed: 7 December 2018).

In Harvard referencing style, in-text citations include the author’s last name and the year of publication. If you are directly quoting or referring to a specific part of the source, include the page number as well. Here are some general guidelines and examples for in-text citations

One author/editor

A book with one author is in-texted as follows in Harvard referencing style:

Direct quote: A personal tone is established on the very first page: “In my junior high yearbook, I had a quote from a Spanish poet” (Sebold, 2002, p. 5).

Paraphrasing: The narrator reveals a lot of personal details throughout the story (Sebold, 2002).

Note: use page numbers only when summarizing an idea from a particular page.

Two or three authors/editors

A book with two or three authors is in-texted as follows in Harvard referencing style:

Direct quote: Lankshear, Smith, and Knobel (2006, p. 17) argue that “The cultural and critical facets of knowledge integral to being literate are considerable.”

Paraphrasing: Literacy encompasses many aspects of knowledge (Lankshear, Smith and Knobel,2006, p. 17).

Four or more authors/editors

Direct quote: Evans et al. (2003, p. 137) state that the Australian colonists aimed “to eliminate the political rights of Aborigines” in the late 19th century.

Paraphrasing: Between 1870 and 1890, many efforts have been made to constrict the rights of the indigenous populations (Evans et al., 2003, p. 137).

Corporate Author

Direct quote: The Institute of Chartered Accountants in Australia and New Zealand (2016, p. 18) claims that “the relief in AASB 128 should apply to the ultimate Australian entity”.

Paraphrasing: The Institute of Chartered Accountants in Australia and New Zealand (2016, p. 18) explains the use of the relief in AASB 128.

A source with no author/editor

Direct quote: The Oxford Dictionary of Abbreviations (1998, p. ix) explains that in the pronunciation guide, “Unstressed syllables are not preceded by stress marks”.

Paraphrasing: It is common for unstressed syllables not to be preceded by stress marks (The Oxford Dictionary of Abbreviations, 1998, p. ix).

Multiple sources

Paraphrasing: In both works, the author uses remote locations to emphasize the feeling of helplessness (King, 2008; King, 2010).

Same year/same author

Paraphrasing: In both works, the author uses remote locations to emphasize the feeling of helplessness (King, 2008a; King, 2008b).

Same work, different editions

Paraphrasing: Despite the structural similarities between the two editions, there are still some differences in the topics covered (Feldman, 2008; 2011).

A source quoted in another work

Direct quote: “Green’s study (1999) (cited in Farmer, 2003, p. 13), unlike many of its predecessors, explores the “macro-logics of power” without sacrificing ethnographic depth.”

Note: you can either use a direct quote from the later work that quotes the earlier source or use a

paraphrase to summarize the original idea from the primary source that is addressed in the secondary source. Both cases require you to acknowledge the use of secondary sources in the work you are using for reference.

The Bible

Either direct quote or paraphrasing: (Matthew 5: 3–12)

The Torah

Either direct quote or paraphrasing: (Shernot 3: 14)

The Qur’an

Either direct quote or paraphrasing: (Qur’an 20: 24)

Journal article

Direct quote: “Despite the lack of solid research evidence to date, ICTs hold promise in addressing the challenges of mental health care” (Breslau and Engel, 2016, p. 17).

Paraphrasing: Breslau and Engel (2016, p. 17) state that, in the future, ICTs could be used to diagnose and treat patients with mental dysfunctions and illnesses.

Journal article (no author)

Direct quote: The DUP leader states that the upcoming Assembly election “should not be seen as a referendum on her handling of the Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) scheme” (‘Assembly election: most important vote since 1998’, 2017, para. 2).

Newspaper article without author

Paraphrasing: The Independent (2014) states that …

Web page

Direct quote: “The key sign of central diabetes insipidus is extreme thirst and excessive urination” (WebMD, 2016, para. 3).

Paraphrasing: It is a common misconception that the disease called central diabetes insipidus is related to diabetes and is caused by metabolic dysfunction (WebMD, 2016, para. 1).

Video or film

Direct quote: “The front lines of the invasion moved west to the nations of the Ohio Valley: The Lenape, Shawnee, Miami, and others” (500 nations, 1995).

Lecture

Direct quote: As stated by Stellar (2016, p. 13), the classification of public and public class “applies to any field or method.”

Paraphrasing: The main reason for the importance of imposing access control is the need to protect the private information of students and staff (Stellar, 2016, p, 16).

Government publication

Direct quote: A recent review of the cooperation practices used in PFRAs and the local universities revealed that “about half of the research users indicated that they obtained a high or very high level of value from the collaboration” (Department of Education, Science and Training, 2004, p. 4).

Paraphrasing: The review outlines the opportunities to enhance the cooperation between PFRAs and the universities (Department of Education, Science and Training, 2004)

How do I reference a source with multiple authors?

Include all authors in the in-text citation if the source has more than one author

How do I reference a source without page numbers?

If the source doesn’t have page numbers, don’t include any in your citation.

How do I reference a secondary source?

If you’re referencing a title through a secondary source, you can include the details of the book you read in your reference at the end.

What’s the difference between a reference list and a bibliography?

The reference list and bibliography aren’t counted in your word count, but in-text citations are.

QUICK QUOTE

Approximately 250 words

Categories
Citations Education

Chicago Citation Style Guide (17th ed.)-Author and Date

The Chicago Citation Style Guide (17th ed.)-Author-Date is a referencing format developed in accordance with The Chicago Manual of Style, 17th edition, published by the University of Chicago Press in 2017. This manual is intended for writers and practitioners as the guidelines for citing sources in the right format and technique. The author-date system is followed by scientists and social science scholars and writers, where each quoted material includes the author’s last name and the year the material being quoted was published exactly the same as the full bibliographies on the reference list at the last part of the document.

General Principles of Formatting

  • The margins should be 1″ (2.54 cm) on all sides, which is similar to MLA, APA, and Havard format.
  • Use Arial 12 pt. font (unless the instructions require a different font), double-spaced.
  • Name reference list either “References” or “Works Cited.”
  • Alphabetize the sources on the reference list by the author’s last names (or, if no author or editor is given, by the title or, failing that, a descriptive phrase).
  • For successive entries by the same author(s), translator(s), editor(s), or compiler(s), a 3-em

dash replaces the name(s) after the first appearance. The entries are arranged chronologically by year of publication in ascending order, not alphabetized by title

Title Page

The title is placed in the center of the page and written in UPPERCASE. Use a colon to separate the main title from the subtitle. The subtitle should be written below the title line. The student’s name, tutor’s name, other class information, date, and year are located in the lower part of the page, written in sentence case. There should be no page numbers on the title page or page with the table of contents/outline.

Title Page of Chicago Style Guide

Headings and Subheadings

Level 1: Centered, Bold, Each Word is Capitalized

Level 2: Centered, Non-Emphasized Font, Capitalized

Level 3: Flush Left, Bold, Capitalized

Level 4: Flush left, regular font, sentence case

Level 5: Placed at the beginning of the paragraph. It can be italicized or bold, sentence case. A period is used to separate the subheading and the rest of the text in the paragraph.

Reference List

The reference list is inserted at the end of your paper; any source that you use needs to be included in the reference page and cited in the text.

Indent all lines after the first line in the entry (hanging indent); the lines should be indented one[1] half an inch (1.27 cm) from the left margin of your paper.

  • Remember to invert authors’ names: Last Name, First Name. For example, Clifton, Lucille.
  • The reference list is always alphabetized by the first word in the reference entry (from A to Z).
  • When alphabetizing titles or group names as authors, go by the first significant word (disregard a, an, the)
  • All words except for articles and prepositions should be capitalized in the titles of your sources in the text and on a reference page.
  • Italicization is applied to books and periodical journals’ titles.
  • Double quotation marks are used for the titles of articles and book chapters.

References

The references list is centred and the heading for the page reads: References. If you have used but one (1) source, the heading is Reference. Maximum capitalization is used in the heading, i.e. capitalize the first word, the last word and all principal words including those that follow hyphens in compound terms. Every source you refer to on the reference page must be cited in the body of the text. Every source you cite in the body of the text must have a reference entry on the reference page.

Reference List in Chicago Referencing Style

Citing Books

General format

Author’s Last Name, First Name. Year of Publication. Title of the Book. Publisher’s Location: Publisher’s Name.

One author

Clifton, Lucille. 1993. The Book of Light. Washington: Copper Canyon Press.

Two to ten authors

Lechner, Mildred, and Ralph Lechner. 1998. The World of Salt Shakers: Antique & Art Glass Value Guide. Paducah: Collector Books.

Budker, Dmitry, Derek F. Kimball, and David P. DeMille. 2004. Atomic Physics: An Exploration through Problems and Solutions. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

More than ten authors

The names of the first ten authors are listed, and then “et al.” is added.

Mehrer, Mark, John Flatman, Natt Flemming, Jill Baxter, Caleb Orser, Keit Wescot, Din Dale, Derek F. Kimball, Ralph Lechner, David Morgan et al. 2015. Molecular Biology of the Cell. 6th ed. New York: Garland Science.

Corporate Author

World Health Organization. 2006. Comprehensive Cervical Cancer Control: A Guide to Essential Practice. Geneva: World Health Organization.

No author

Articles at the beginning of book titles are omitted to maintain alphabetical order. Mythology: Myths, Legends and Fantasies. 2003. Sydney: Hodder Headline Australia.

Multiple works by the same author

The works are arranged in chronological order. A 3-em dash and period replace the author’s name in every subsequent reference entry.

Fromm, Erich. 1942. The Fear of Freedom. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

—. 1987. The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books.

—. 1992. The Art of Being. New York: Continuum.

Multiple works published in the same year by the same author

The works are arranged in alphabetical order by title. The letters “a,” “b,” “c,” etc. follow the year of publication in each entry. These assist readers in distinguishing the sources cited parenthetically.

Brodsky, Joseph. 2011a. Less than One: Selected Essays. London: Penguin Press.

—. 2011b. On Grief And Reason: Essays. London: Penguin Press.

Edition other than the first

Alberts, Bruce. 2015. Molecular Biology of the Cell. 6th ed. New York: Garland Science.

Reprint edition

Austen, Jane. (1813) 2003. Pride and Prejudice. London: T. Egerton. Reprint, New York: Penguin Classics. Citations refer to the Penguin edition.

An edited book with no author

Monanty, Chandra Talpade, Ann Russo, and Lourdes Torres, eds. 1991. Third World Women and the Politics of Feminism. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

Multivolume works

Nichols, Bill, ed. 1985. Movies and Methods. Vol. 2 of An Anthology. Los Angeles: University of California Press.

Tillich, Paul. 1951–63. Systematic Theology. 3 vols. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

A translated book

Dostoyevsky, Fyodor. 1992. The Idiot. Translated and edited by Alan Myers. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Encyclopedia/dictionary

Swators, William H., Peter Kivisto, Barbara J. Denison, and James McClennon, eds. 1998. Encyclopedia of Religion and Society. Walnut Creek: AltaMira Press.

Chapter in an edited book

Balsamo, Anne. 1995. “Forms of Technological Embodiment.” In Cyberspace/Cyberbodies/Cyberpunk: Cultures of Technological Embodiment, edited by Mike Featherstone and Roger Burrows, 215–237. London: Sage Publications.

E-book

Austen, Jane. 2007. Pride and Prejudice. New York: Penguin Classics. Kindle.

Borel, Brooke. 2016. The Chicago Guide to Fact-Checking. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ProQuest ebrary.

Tolkien, John Ronald Reuel. 2001. The Hobbit or There and Back Again. New York: Harper Collins. https://www.readanybook.com/ebook/the-hobbit-17.

Citing Articles in Periodicals

General format

Author’s Last Name, First Name. Year of Publication. “Title of the Article.” Full Title of the Journal volume number (issue number): page numbers.

Note: URL or DOI is added at the end of the entry for online sources.

Journal article in print

Seaton, Philip, and Takayoshi Yamamura. 2015. “Japanese Popular Culture and Contents Tourism

– Introduction.” Japan Forum 27 (1): 1–11.

Meyerovitch, Eva. 1959. “The Gnostic Manuscripts of Upper Egypt.” Diogenes, no. 25, 84–117.

Note:

  • If there is no volume but only an issue, write “no.” before the issue.

Online journal article

Spielmann, Katherine, Matthew Peeples, Donna Glowacki, and Andrew Dugmore. 2016. “Early Warning Signals of Social Transformation: A Case Study from the US Southwest.” Plos ONE 11 (10): 1–18. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0163685.

Newspaper and magazine articles in print

Burchard, Hank. 1998. “Van Gogh: The Full Palette.” The Washington Post, October 2, 1998, 24–25.

New York Times. 2002. “In Texas, Ad Heats Up Race for Governor.” July 30, 2002.

Note:

  • If there is no author, the magazine/newspaper title stands for the author.

Online newspaper and magazine articles

Bressan, David. 2017. “From Art to Myth, the Relationship of Our Ancestors with Volcanoes.”  Forbes, January 19. https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidbressan/2017/01/19/from-art-to-myth-the-relationship-of-our-ancestors-with-volcanoes/#418763153b6b .

Meikle, James. 2015. “Nearly 75% of Men and 65% of Women in UK to Be Overweight by 2030—Study.” Guardian (UK edition), May 5, 2015. http://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/may/05/obesity-crisis-projections-uk-2030-men-women .

Note:

  • State edition of the magazine in parentheses after the magazine title.

Citing Conferences

Conference proceedings/presentations

Dally, David, and Paul Gross. 2003. “Modernization Concepts: Utilizing Bayer Countercurrent Packed

Bed Technology.” Paper presented at the 64th Annual International Water Conference,

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, October 19-23.

Citing Dissertations and Theses

Thesis or dissertation

Hernandez, Ivonne. 2014. “Acculturation, Self-Efficacy and Breastfeeding Behavior in a Sample

of Hispanic Women.” PhD diss., University of South Carolina.

Rutz, Cynthia Lillian. 2013. “King Lear and Its Folktale Analogues.” PhD diss., University of

Chicago.

Note:

  • If the thesis/dissertation contains a title of the book, write only the book name in Italics.

Citing Learning Environment

Lecture/presentation

Mahoney, Karen Murrey. “Overview of the Over-the-Counter Drug Monograph Process.” U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, MD, June 10, 2016.

Citing Online Sources

Entire website: corporate author

WHO. 2017. World Health Organization (website). Accessed March 22, 2018.

http://www.who.int/en/.

Website (no date)

CivicPlus Content Management System. n.d. City of Ithaca, New York (website). Accessed April 6,

2018. http://www.cityofithaca.org/.

Page from a website

Frank, Anne. 2017. “Education.” AnneFrankHouse. Accessed April 3, 2018. http://www.annefrankhouse.org/en/Education/.

Page with an unknown author

Oath Inc. 2018. “Privacy Center.” Privacy & Terms. Last modified April 2018. Accessed December 7, 2018. https://policies.oath.com/us/en/oath/privacy/index.html.

Note:

  • Use website name as author

Image

Jean, James. 2014. “MIZU”. Accessed January 24, 2018.

http://www.jamesjean.com/work2014/2quig9crt4wfqa7io7w42ak3a0e3ah.

Blog

Germano, William. 2017. “Futurist Shock.” Lingua Franca (blog), Chronicle of Higher Education. February 15, 2017. http://www.chronicle.com/blogs/linguafranca/2017/02/15/futurist[1]shock/.

Saunders, Rip. 2017. “Fintech Groups Express Support for OCC Charter,” RipSaunders (blog). January 20, 2017. http://ripsaunders.livejournal.com/375181.html.

Social media

Díaz, Junot. 2016. “Always surprises my students when I tell them that the ‘real’ medieval was more diverse than the fake ones most of us consume.” Facebook, February 24, 2016. https://www.facebook.com/junotdiaz.writer/posts/972495572815454.

O’Brien, Conan (@ConanOBrien). 2015. “In honor of Earth Day, I’m recycling my tweets.” Twitter, April 22, 2015, 11:10 a.m. https://twitter.com/ConanOBrien/status/590940792967016448.

Souza, Pete (@petesouza). 2016. “President Obama bids farewell to President Xi of China at the conclusion of the Nuclear Security Summit.” Instagram photo, April 1, 2016. https://www.instagram.com/p/BDrmfXTtNCt/.

YouTube

Jones, Steve. 2013. “Accounting Basics.” YouTube video. Accessed May 24, 2018. http://youtube.com/watch?v=mpNmcFzy6-22.

Video/Film

Akira. Directed by Katsuhiro Otomo. 1987. London: Manga Entertainment, 2003. DVD.

Citing Governmental Sources

Government publication/standard

U.S. Department of Agriculture. 2011. Let’s Eat for the Health of It. No. 232-CP. https://www.fns.usda.gov/sites/default/files/27_DGCB-LEFTHOI.pdf.

In-Text Citations

Books

one author

Note that no punctuation is used between the name and the date, but a comma separates the page number.

Example: According to the observations, “traditional industrial psychology no longer met the

varied needs of organizations” (Gallos 2006, xv).

When the information from the source is paraphrased, the page number is not required. Example: The most commonly used definition of organization development is unsuitable for contemporary corporate reality (Gallos 2006).

Two or three authors

All authors are listed after the citation in the same order as in the references list. The word “and” is

used to separate the authors.

Example: “Morality, it could be argued, represents the way that people would like the world to work —

whereas economics represents how it does work” (Levitt and Dubner 2005, 11).

More than three authors

List only the first of the authors from the list, followed by et al.

Example: There is a visible shift towards experience-based incentives in the HRM field

(Sunders et al. 2012).

Chapter in an edited book

Provide the name of the chapter’s author.

Example: Applicability of school education is currently a priority among educators (Savery 2014).

Multiple sources

If more than one source is cited in the same sentence, list them alphabetically and separate them with a semicolon.

Example: Most definitions characterize OD as managed vertically (Chang 2009; Smith 2013; Wright 2010).

Different authors with the same surnames

Use initials before last names to distinguish between the authors.

Example: Globalization is credited for fueling the off-shore practices (H. Wang 2012). However, according to Y. Wang (2012), its impact on the diversification of markets is often overlooked in this context.

Same year/same author

If an author has more than one publication in one year, write the author’s last name followed by the date and a corresponding letter from the references list.

Example: Perceived conflict is a stage at which the events are identified as a source of disturbance (Finkelman 2012a).

A source with no date

If the date of publication cannot be ascertained, write the author’s last name followed by Example: Despite the best efforts of the researchers, neither of these claims was

corroborated (Maxwell n.d.).

A source quoted in another work

Example: The original work by Einstein contained numerous arithmetical errors (as cited in

Aslan 2013).

Scholarly journal article

Journal citations share citation style with books but require mentioning the page.

Example: There is a direct relationship between employee engagement and productivity (Johnson et al.

2014, 533).

Newspaper article

Example: The procession participants were “treated in the most unacceptable way” (Barber 2011,

D2).

Entire website

Use the name of the website followed by the date of publication or the date of accessing the source.

Example: The rules of the site explicitly forbid using it only for business purposes (WHO 2016).

Page from a website

Include the name of the author instead of the name of the resource.

Example: Value added may or may not result in changes in the product’s price (Stephens 2016).

Corporate Author

If the information comes from an organization or other corporate entity, list its name in the place of

the author.

Example: Privacy and integrity are the focus of the new regulations (British Government 2014).

Page with an unknown author

Use the name of the website in an in-text citation.

Example: (Oath Inc. 2018).

Page with unknown author and date

Use the name of the website followed by n.d.

Example: Despite the best efforts of experts, the content of the manuscript remains unknown (WHO

n.d.).

Video/Film

List the title of the video and a publication/access date.

The absurdity of the situation reaches its peak in the apprehension scene (Boyz n the Hood 1991).

Lecture/presentation

Write the lecture author and date.

Example: Economies of scale have a strong influence on off-shoring practices (Donnerly 2014).

Government publication/standard

List the name of the organization followed by the year of publication.

Example: Ethylmercury in standard doses has no known effect on health (USFDA 2014).

Social media

Example:

(Díaz, 2016)

(O’Brien 2015)

(Souza 2016)

Dissertation/thesis

List the author’s name and publication date.

Example: The traditional shrimp industry was the first to feel the impact of globalization (Janet 2005).

Conference Proceedings

Authors’ names are followed by the year of the publication.

Example: The critical approach was considered evident only in a fraction of cases (Gentry and  Simmons 2001)

QUICK QUOTE

Approximately 250 words

Categories
Citations Education

Chicago Citation Style Guide (17th ed.)-Notes and Bibliography Made Easy

The Chicago Citation Style Guide (17th ed.) – Notes-Bibliography is a referencing guide developed in accordance with The Chicago Manual of Style, 17th edition, published by the University of Chicago Press in 2017. This kind of referencing is used in the humanities, particularly in areas such as history, literature, and the arts. This includes a system of footnotes or endnotes supported by a bibliography, therefore allowing for detailed referencing/ commentary in the text whilst providing all complete bibliographic information in a separate section. This style is clear and consistent for the purpose of reference; it enables good and proper communication in scholarly matters.

General Principles of Formatting

  • Set 1″ (2.54 cm) margins on all sides. (applies in APA, MLA, and Havard Style Guide)
  • Use Arial 12 pt. font (unless your instructions say otherwise).
  • All words except articles and prepositions should be capitalized in book/article/periodical titles.
  • At the end of a paper written in compliance with the Chicago NB style, a full list of the sources cited in the paper appears in a separate section titled “Bibliography.”
  • Bibliographical entries are single-spaced and separated by an additional line space.

Title Page

The title is placed in the center of the page and written in UPPERCASE. Use a colon to separate the main title from the subtitle. The subtitle should be written below the title line.

The student’s name, tutor’s name, other class information, date, and year are located in the lower part of the page, written in sentence case. There should be no page numbers on the title page or page with the table of contents/outline.

Cover page for Chicago Style Guide-Notes-Bibliography

Headings and Subheadings

Level 1: Centered, Bold, Each Word is Capitalized

Level 2: Centered, Non-Emphasized Font, Capitalized

Level 3: Flush Left, Bold, Capitalized

Level 4: Flush left, regular font, sentence case

Level 5: Placed at the beginning of the paragraph. It can be italicized or bold, sentence case. A period is used to separate the subheading and the rest of the text in the paragraph.

Footnotes

1. A footnote should be created every time you use a source.

2. Footnotes appear at the bottom (footer) part of a page.

3. A footnote should be indented (left margin).

4. All succeeding lines of this footnote should be formatted flush left.

5. Footnotes are single-spaced and separated by an additional line space.

6. The first footnote for one source should present all the information related to this source

(including the author’s full name, title of the source, and other relevant facts).

Heading Levels and Footnotes in Chicago Style Guide-Notes-Bibliography.

7. If the source is cited more than once, subsequent footnotes should only include the last name of the author, a short title (if the original title consists of more than four words), and the number(s) of the cited page(s).

8. Note that the page number is required in all short-form citations, even if it is the same as the previous entry.

Example:

1. Firstname, Lastname, Title of Book (Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication), page number.

2. Last name, Shortened Title of Book, page number.

9. The use of ibid. Is now discouraged in favor of shortened citations as per the 17th edition of

CMOS (section 14.34). In footnotes citing the same source as the one preceding, use a

shortened form of the citation, as in note 1 below. The title of the work may also be omitted if the

previous note includes the title, as in note 2 below.

Example:

1. Harvey, “Modernity and Modernism,” 12.

2. Harvey, 13.

10. Aside from ibid., Chicago style offers cross-referencing for multiple notes with repeated content

(especially for longer, discursive notes). Remember: a note number should never appear out of

order.

Example:

1. Michel Foucault, “The Means of Correct Training” in The Foucault Reader, ed. Paul Rabinow (New York: Pantheon, 1984), 188.

Bibliography remark

If citing sacred texts, such as the Jewish or Christian scriptures, remember that they are usually mentioned in parenthetical citations or notes rather than in bibliographies. Such citations include book (in roman and usually abbreviated), chapter, and verse. A colon is used between chapter and verse. The traditional abbreviations use periods, but the shorter forms do not.

Examples:

Traditional abbreviations:

4. 1 Thess. 4:11, 5:2–5, 5:14.

5. Heb. 13:8, 13:12.

6. Gen. 25:19–36:43.

Shorter abbreviations:

7. 2 Sm 11:1–17, 11:26–27; 1 Chr 10:13–14.

8. Jo 5:9–12; Mt 26:2–5.

Bibliography

A reference page in a Chicago Notes-Bibliography style guide is known as a bibliography Page. Within each entry, bibliography entries are entered in single spacing; however, an extra space should be left between bibliographic entries. As a general rule, any item that you reference in the text of your paper must be on the bibliography page. Any item in your footnotes must have a corresponding reference entry on your bibliography page. Note differences in punctuation and word order in Bibliography entries and footnotes.

General book format

Lastname, Firstname. Title of Book. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication.

Footnote citation:

1. Firstname Lastname, Title of Book (Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication), page

number.

Single author

Fetherston, Trevor. Becoming an Effective Teacher. Victoria: Thomson Learning, 2007.

Footnote citation:

1. Trevor Fetherston, Becoming an Effective Teacher (Victoria: Thomson Learning, 2007), 33.

Note:

  • If the city of publication may be unknown to readers or may be confused with another city of the

same name, the abbreviation of the state, province, or (sometimes) country is usually added.

Washington is traditionally followed by DC, but other major cities, such as Los Angeles and

Baltimore needs no state abbreviation. (For countries not easily abbreviated, spell out the name.)

When the publisher’s name includes the state name, the abbreviation is not needed.

  • In notes and bibliography, the initial is omitted from a publisher’s name, as are abbreviations such as Inc., Ltd., or S.A. following a name. Co., & Co., Publishing Co., and the like are also omitted. Books are usually retained (Basic Books, Riverhead Books). The word Press can sometimes be omitted (for example, Pergamon Press and Ecco Press can be abbreviated to Pergamon and Ecco, but Free Press and New Press—whose names might be confusing without Press—must be given in full). The press should not be omitted from the name of a university press because the university itself may issue publications independent of its press. The word University may be abbreviated to Univ. if done consistently.

Examples:

Houghton Mifflin, not Houghton Mifflin Co.

Little, Brown, not Little, Brown & Co.

Macmillan, not Macmillan Publishing Co.

Two or three authors

Bohm, Andrew, and Dean Chaudri. Securing Australia’s Future: An Analysis of the International Education Markets in India. Sydney: IDP Education Australia, 2000.

Footnote citation:

1. Andrew Bohm and Dean Chaudri, Securing Australia’s Future: An Analysis of the International

Education Markets in India (Sydney: IDP Education Australia, 2000), 33–55.

Four or more authors

Bell, Michael, David Bush, Peter Nicholson, Dan O’Brien, and Thomas Tran. Universities Online: A Survey of Online Education and Services in Australia. Canberra: Department of Education, Science and Training, 2002.

Footnote citation:

1. Michael Bell et al., Universities Online: A Survey of Online Education and Services in Australia (Canberra: Department of Education, Science and Training, 2002), 33–55.

No author

If there are no authors or editors in the source, then cite the source by title. In footnotes and corresponding bibliographical entries, citations should begin with the title, omitting the element with the first name and last name. The citation looks like this:

Mythology: Myths, Legends and Fantasies. Sydney: Hodder Headline Australia, 2003.

Footnote citation:

1. Mythology: Myths, Legends and Fantasies (Sydney: Hodder Headline Australia, 2003), 24.

Multiple works by the same author

Using multiple works by the same author poses no challenge as all are to be cited in footnotes at the bottom of the page.

Fromm, Erich. The Fear of Freedom. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1942.

—. The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1987.

Footnote citation:

1. Erich Fromm, The Fear of Freedom (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1942), 33.

2. Erich Fromm, The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness (Harmondsworth: Penguin Books,

1987), 42.

Different editions

Kremer, John, and Aidan Moran. Pure Sport: Practical Sports Psychology. 2nd ed. Hove, East Sussex: Routledge, 2013.

Footnote citation:

1. John Kremer and Aidan Moran, Pure Sport: Practical Sport Psychology, 2nd ed. (Hove, East Sussex: Routledge, 2013), 104.

Note:

  • It may be required to further specify the place of publication. In this example, it is Hove, East Sussex. In most cases, it would be sufficient to simply list the city.

Editor or translator instead of author

Smith, Jane, ed. The Stanford Handbook of Business and the American Press. New York: Oxford University Press, 2012.

Footnote citation:

1. Jane Smith, ed., The Stanford Handbook of Business and the American Press (New York:

Oxford University Press, 2012), 202.

Note:

  • In a case with a translator, use trans. Instead of ed.

Authors plus editors or translators

Churchill, Winston. The Literary Works of Winston Churchill. Edited by Samuel Jackson. London: The Limited Editions Club, Inc., 1963.

Footnote citation:

1. Winston Churchill, The Literary Works of Winston Churchill, ed. Samuel Jackson (London: The Limited Editions Club, Inc., 1963), 12.

Note:

  • Use phrases like edited by (ed.), compiled by (comp.), or translated by (trans.) when it is

necessary.

Corporate Author

UNESCO. Worldwide Child Development Program 2000-2006. Zurich: UNESCO, 2000.

Footnote citation:

1. UNESCO, Worldwide Child Development Program 2000-2006 (Zurich: UNESCO, 2000), 2.

Encyclopedia or dictionary

The New Encyclopedia Britannica. 15th ed. s.v. “Tradition.”

If there is a need to cite the encyclopedia multiple times on the same page, use s.vv. Instead of s.v., and cite all the words after (sub verbo, “under the word”; pl. s.vv.).

The New Encyclopedia Britannica. 15th ed. s.vv. “Astronomy,” “Chemistry,” “Tradition,” “Philosophy.”

Footnote citation:

1. The New Encyclopedia Britannica, 15th ed., s.v. “Tradition.”

2. The New Encyclopedia Britannica, 15th ed., s.vv. “Astronomy,” “Chemistry,” “Tradition,”

“Philosophy.”

Note:

  • Since all words in a dictionary or encyclopedia are typically placed in alphabetical order, no page

numbers are necessary. However, the words must also be arranged in alphabetical order.

Chapter in an edited book

Higgs, Malcolm. “Change and Its Leadership: The Role of Positive Emotions.” In The Oxford Handbook of Positive Psychology and Work, edited by P. Alex Linley, Susan Harrington, and Nicola Garcea, 67–94. New York: Oxford University Press, 2013.

Footnote citation:

1. Malcolm Higgs, “Change and Its Leadership: The Role of Positive Emotions,” in The Oxford Handbook of Positive Psychology and Work, ed. P. Alex Linley, Susan Harrington, and Nicola Garcea (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013), 67–72.

Chapter in a single-author book

Phibbs, Brendan. “Herrlisheim: Diary of a Battle.” In The Other Side of Time: A Combat Surgeon in World War II, 117–63. Boston: Little, Brown, 1987.

Samples, John. “The Origins of Modern Campaign Finance Law.” Chap. 7 in The Fallacy of Campaign Finance Reform. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006.

Footnote citations:

1. Brendan Phibbs, “Herrlisheim: Diary of a Battle,” in The Other Side of Time: A Combat Surgeon in World War II (Boston: Little, Brown, 1987), 117–63.

2. John Samples, “The Origins of Modern Campaign Finance Law,” chap. 7 in The Fallacy of Campaign Finance Reform (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006).

E-book

Austen, Jane. Pride and Prejudice. New York: Penguin Classics, 2007. Kindle.

Borel, Brooke. The Chicago Guide to Fact-Checking. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016. ProQuest Ebrary.

Chan, Mimi. All the King’s Women. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2000. PDF e-book.

Melville, Herman. Moby-Dick or The Whale. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1851. http://mel.hofstra.edu/moby-dick-the-whale-proofs.html.

Footnote citations:

1. Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice (New York: Penguin Classics, 2007), chap. 3, Kindle.

2. Mimi Chan, All the King’s Women (Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2000), PDF e[1]book, chap. 4.

3. Brooke Borel, The Chicago Guide to Fact-Checking (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,

2016), 92, ProQuest Ebrary.

4. Herman Melville, Moby-Dick; or, The Whale (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1851), 627,

http://mel.hofstra.edu/moby-dick-the-whale-proofs.html.

Note:

  • Including the format of the document is important, so it must be specified. The most common formats are PDF, Kindle, Microsoft Reader, Dejavu, etc. Pages in electronic versions of a book may differ from the original printed version. You can use chapters or sections of the book as locators.

Book consulted online

Antokoletz, Elliot. Musical Symbolism in the Operas of Debussy and Bartók. New York: Oxford University Press, 2008. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195365825.001.0001.

Footnote citation:

1. Elliot Antokoletz, Musical Symbolism in the Operas of Debussy and Bartók (New York: Oxford

University Press, 2008), doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195365825.001.0001.

Note:

  • Alternatively, the URL may be included instead of a doi.

Preface, foreword, afterword, or introduction

Reamer, Frederic G. Foreword to Social Justice and Social Work, edited by Michael J. Austin, xiii–xv. Los Angeles: Sage, 2014.

Footnote citation:

1. Frederic G. Reamer, foreword to Social Justice and Social Work, ed. Michael J. Austin (Los  Angeles: Sage, 2014), xiv.

Note:

  • Should the book have multiple publishers, it is not necessary to cite all of them. Include only the first one in both footnotes and bibliography.

Co-publishers

Doe, John, and Daniel K. F. Beaverfang. The Dead Sky Chronicles, Study Edition. 2 vols. New York: Brill; San-Francisco: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2005.

Footnote citation:

1. John Doe and Daniel K. F. Beaverfang, The Dead Sky Chronicles, Study Edition (New York:

Brill; San-Francisco: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2005), 2:35.

Citing Articles in Periodicals

Journal article

Davies, David. “From the Further Education Margins to the Higher Education Centre? Innovation in Continuing Education.” Education Training 39, no. 1 (1997): 4–13.

Footnote citation:

1. David Davies, “From the Further Education Margins to the Higher Education Centre?

Innovation in Continuing Education,” Education Training 39, no. 1 (1997): 10.

Note:

  • When a journal uses issue numbers only, without volume numbers, a comma follows the journal-title.

Example:

Beattie, J. M. “The Pattern of Crime in England, 1660–1800.” Past and Present, no. 62 (1974): 47–95.

  • When a month/season stands for volume and/or issue number, it becomes an indispensable element and should be, therefore, enclosed in reference; a comma follows the journal title and the date.

Example:

Saberhagen, Kelvin. “Lake Superior Beluga?” Sturgeon Review, Winter 1928, 21–45.

  • When page numbers immediately follow a volume number, separated only by a colon, no space follows the colon. However, when parenthetical information intervenes, a space follows the colon.

Examples:

Social Networks 14:213–29

Critical Inquiry 19 (Autumn): 164–85

  • When the page number follows an issue number, a comma—not a colon—should be used.

Example:

Diogenes, no. 25, 84–117.

Journal articles with more than four authors

Journal articles often list many authors, especially in the sciences. If there are four or more authors, list up to ten in the bibliography; in a note, list only the first, followed by et al. (“and others”). For more than ten authors (not shown here), list the first seven in the bibliography, followed by et al.

Bay, Rachael A., Noah Rose, Rowan Barrett, Louis Bernatchez, Cameron K. Ghalambor, Jesse R. Lasky, Rachel B. Brem, Stephen R. Palumbi, and Peter Ralph. “Predicting Responses to Contemporary Environmental Change Using Evolutionary Response Architectures,” American Naturalist 189, no. 5 (May 2017): 463–73. https://doi.org/10.1086/691233 .

Footnote citation:

1. Rachel A. Bay et al., “Predicting Responses to Contemporary Environmental Change Using Evolutionary Response Architectures.” American Naturalist 189, no. 5 (May 2017): 465, https://doi.org/10.1086/691233.

Note:

  • You may indicate the month/season of publication in addition to the year, if available.

Journal article (no author)

“Effects Teacher Certification and Teacher Commitment on Teacher Performance.” International Journal of Scientific Research and Management 4, no. 11 (2017): 33–45.

Footnote citation:

1. “Effects Teacher Certification and Teacher Commitment on Teacher Performance,” International Journal of Scientific Research and Management 4, no. 11 (2017): 36, 38, 39.

Newspaper article

Page numbers, if any, can be cited in a note but are omitted from a bibliography entry.

Higgins, Marguerite. “Obesity Policy Will Benefit Trial Lawyers; Enables Fast-Food Lawsuits.” The Washington Times, December 22, 2010.

Footnote citation:

1. Marguerite Higgins, “Obesity Policy Will Benefit Trial Lawyers; Enables Fast-Food Lawsuits,” The Washington Times, December 22, 2010, 3.

Newspaper article (no author)

“Obesity Epidemic Expected to Cut Life Expectancy, Experts Say.” Chicago Tribune, June 5, 2012.

Footnote citation:

1. “Obesity Epidemic Expected to Cut Life Expectancy, Experts Say,” Chicago Tribune, June 5, 2012, 6.

Journal article consulted online

Cliff, Amy Fish. “’ What Are We Doing Here’: Eastern Cherokee Civil Authorities and Sovereign Territorial Rights.” American Indian Quarterly 36, no. 2 (2013): 234–269. doi: /1d11d977-389e.

Footnote citation:

1. Amy Fish Cliff, “’ What Are We Doing Here’: Eastern Cherokee Civil Authorities and Sovereign Territorial Rights,” American Indian Quarterly 36, no. 2 (2013): 234–269, doi: /1d11d977-389e.

Note:

  • If there is no DOI, it is acceptable to use the URL in order to link the article to your work. If you possess both URL and DOI, always use the latter.

Full text from a database (no author)

“Higher Education in the Hi-Tech Age: Higher Education Leadership Forum.” The Chronicle of Higher Education 52, no. 16 (2005): 105–107. doi: /1001oi567.

Footnote citation:

1. “Higher Education in the Hi-Tech Age: Higher Education Leadership Forum,” The Chronicle of Higher Education 52, no. 16 (2005): 105–107, doi: /1001oi567.

Full text from the newspaper, newswire (no author)

“Trump is Going to Ruin America.” BBC, January 17, 2017. http://www.bbc.com/news/video_and_audio/headlines/389742289.

Footnote citation:

1. “Trump is Going to Ruin America,” BBC, January17, 2017, http://www.bbc.com/news/video_and_audio/headlines/389742289.

Online newspaper article

If you consulted the article online, include a URL (or DOI, if available) or the name of the database.

Glier, Ray. “Missed Plays Burn Atlanta; Falcons Have No Regrets after Rising from ‘Ground Zero’.” The Washington Post, February 1, 1999. http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-574623.html?refid=easy_hf

Pegoraro, Rob. “Apple’s iPhone Is Sleek, Smart and Simple.” Washington Post, July 5, 2007. LexisNexis Academic.

Footnote citation:

1. Ray Glier, “Missed Plays Burn Atlanta; Falcons Have No Regrets after Rising from ‘Ground Zero’,” The Washington Post, February 1, 1999, http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-574623.html?refid=easy_hf

2. Rob Pegoraro, “Apple’s iPhone Is Sleek, Smart and Simple,” Washington Post, July 5, 2007, LexisNexis Academic.

Thesis or dissertation

Rutz, Cynthia Lillian. “King Lear and Its Folktale Analogues.” PhD diss., University of Chicago, 2013.

Footnote citation:

1. Cynthia Lillian Rutz, “King Lear and Its Folktale Analogues” (PhD diss., University of Chicago,

2013), 99–100.

Course materials

Jackson, Sean. “The Basics of Cloud Computing.” Lecture, the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, October 10, 2015.

Footnote citation:

1. Sean Jackson, “The Basics of Cloud Computing” (lecture, the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, October 10, 2015).

Website

“Educational Products.” Educational Resources. Last modified November 3, 2011. http://www.edresources.com/products.

Footnote citation:

1. “Educational Products,” Educational Resources, last modified November 3, 2011, http://www.edresources.com/.

Note:

  • For web sources, include the date of access or the date of last modification.

Web page (no date)

Carpenter, John. “Alternative Cancer Treatments for Stage I, II and III Cancer Patients.” Cancer Tutor. Accessed January 25, 2017. https://www.cancertutor.com/ruleofthumb/.

Footnote citation:

1. John Carpenter, “Alternative Cancer Treatments for Stage I, II and III Cancer Patients,” Cancer Tutor, accessed January 25, 2017, https://www.cancertutor.com/ruleofthumb/.

Image

Tesla Autopilot Function. Digital image. Wired. Accessed January 25, 2017. https://assets.wired.com/photos/w_860/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Telsa_Autopilot_TA.jpg .

Footnote citation:

1. Tesla Autopilot Function, digital image, Wired, accessed January 25, 2017, https://assets.wired.com/photos/w_860/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Telsa_Autopilot_TA.jpg.

Blog

Middleton, Jane. “The Southeast States Trivia Treasure Hunt.” Deceptively Educational (blog), March 13, 2015. http://deceptivelyeducational.blogspot.com/2015/03/southeast-states-trivia-treasure-hunt.html.

Footnote citation:

1. Jane Middleton, “Southeast States Trivia Treasure Hunt,” Deceptively Educational (blog), March 13, 2015, http://deceptivelyeducational.blogspot.com/2015/03/southeast-states-trivia-treasure-hunt.html.

Films and video recordings

Titanic. Directed by James Cameron. Performed by Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet. Los Angeles: Paramount Pictures, 1997. DVD.

Footnote citation:

1. Titanic, dir. James Cameron, perf. Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet (Los Angeles:Paramount Pictures, 1997), DVD.

YouTube video

“U.S. System of Education—English Language Notes.” YouTube video, 3:14. Posted by JenniferESL. July 19, 2013. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ciiaPwhF0I .

Footnote citation:

1. “U.S. System of Education—English Language Notes,” YouTube video, 3:14, posted by JenniferESL, July 19, 2013, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ciiaPwhF0I

Government report

Canada. British Columbia. Ministry of Education. Learning Assessment Branch. The 1982 B.C Science Assessment. Edited by Hugh Taylor. [Victoria, B.C.]: Queen’s Printer, 1982.

Plant, P. Geoffrey. Access and Excellence: The Campus 2020 Plan for British Columbia’s Post-Secondary Education System. [Victoria, B.C.]: Ministry of Advanced Education, 2007.

Footnote citation:

1. Canada, British Columbia, Ministry of Education. Learning Assessment Branch, The 1982 B.C Science Assessment, edited by Hugh Taylor. [Victoria, B.C.]: Queen’s Printer, 1982.

2. Geoffrey P. Plant, Access and Excellence: The Campus 2020 Plan for British Columbia’s Post-Secondary Education System, [Victoria, B.C.]: Ministry of Advanced Education, 2007.

Secondary Sources

Personal communication

Footnote citation:

1. Jared Jones, e-mail message, July 4, 2015.

Note:

  • Personal communications, including email and text messages and direct messages sent through social media, are usually cited in the text or in a note only; they are rarely included in a bibliography.

Books

No bibliographical citation is necessary.

Footnote citation:

1. Jim Bean, A Book about Nothing, (New York: Elsevier, 2001), 37, quoted in Alexander Schultz, Modern Nihilism (London: Routledge, 2007), 5.

Note:

The 17th edition of the Chicago Manual of Style discourages the use of secondary sources in academic research. It is to be avoided at all times. Should the original source not be available in any possible way, it is recommended to use the “quoted in” format for the footnote

How do I format notes and bibliography in Chicago citation style?

Notes should be placed at the bottom of the page, and endnotes should be placed before the bibliography at the end of the paper. Note that numbers should be regular in size and followed by a period.

How do I format citations in the bibliography and footnotes?

Bibliographic citations must be formatted with double spacing and include a hanging indent, where the first line aligns with the margin, and subsequent lines are indented. For footnotes, however, the first line should have an indent, but all following lines should remain flush with the left margin without any indentation.

What sources are not included in the bibliography?

Personal communication, such as emails, text messages, and personal letters, are typically excluded from the bibliography and are not listed as formal references.

QUICK QUOTE

Approximately 250 words

Categories
Citations Education

MLA Format and Citation Style Guide 9th Edition Made Easy

The MLA Format and Citation Style Guide 9th Edition is an authoritative resource provided by the Modern Language Association for writers and researchers. This guide offers comprehensive instructions on formatting academic papers and properly citing sources according to MLA standards. The 9th edition, updated to reflect current practices and technologies, includes guidelines for in-text citations, the works cited list, and overall document formatting. It is widely used in the humanities, especially literature, languages, and cultural studies, ensuring uniformity and professionalism in scholarly writing.

MLA General Principles of Formatting

  • Use Times New Roman 12 pt. font (unless the instructions require a different font), double-spaced.
  • Set 1-inch (2.54 cm) margins (all sides). This format applies to APA, Chicago, Harvard, Vancouver, OSCOLA, and AMA.
  • Page numbers have to be located in the upper-right corner.
  • The last name should be in the upper-right header preceding the page number.
  • MLA does not require a title page (but one may be included if required).
  • In bibliographical entries, lines other than the first one are indented.
  • On the first page, it is necessary to provide the MLA header in the top left corner (for papers without a title page):

Title Page

The title page of MLA format contains student information and the paper’s title, as shown below.

MLA student information and title guide.

Headings

Headings in the paper must be formatted the following way:

Heading Level 1: bold, flush left

Heading Level 2: italics, flush left

Works Cited List

All sources used in papers written following MLA style should be mentioned under the “Works Cited” heading on a separate page. Each entry is written separately, and it consists of core elements that are included in a specific order. Some optional elements may also be added, depending on the situation.

Works Cited List in MLA format
The Core Elements

Below is the list of the core elements in the order they should appear on a reference page.

1. Author

2. Title of source

3. Title of container

4. Other contributors

5. Version

6. Number

7. Publisher

8. Publication date

Author

The author’s last name is followed by a comma, and all other full names as they are mentioned in the work. The element ends with a period in the reference list, such as Jameson or Carl. The in-text variant is (Jameson 44).

Title of Source

Title is the next element after the author, and it is in italics (e.g., book or journal titles) or in quotation marks, not italicized (e.g., article titles). Every word in this entry and Title of Container is capitalized apart from articles and prepositions.

Title of Container

This constituent indicates if the work was a part of a larger volume or journal.

Other Contributors

This element states other contributors. Such descriptions precede their names:

adapted by

directed by

edited by

illustrated by

introduction by

narrated by

performance by

translated by

Version

Version is commonly referred to as an edition and may appear in the reference list entry as 8th ed.

Number

This element shows the volume used (vol. 2) or issue number of a journal (vol. 4, no. 3).

Publisher

This information can be found on the source’s copyright page, which shows the publisher’s name followed by a comma. When an organization is both author and publisher of a work, the organization’s name is given only once, usually as the publisher. No author is stated.

Publication Date

This element indicates when the publication was produced (South-Western Cengage Learning, 2010). These aspects are the most common elements used in MLA citation style, but their format depends on the type of publication and citation (in-text or reference list).

Works Cited

General book format

Structure:

Author’s Last Name, First Name. Title of Book. Publisher, Publication Date.

Explanation on how to cite a book in MLA 9th Edition.

One author

Example:

Sepetys, Ruta. Salt to the Sea. Philomel Books, 2016.

Two authors

The second author should appear as they are mentioned in the book.

Example:

Grey, Ann, and Erin Bell. History on Television. Routledge, 2013.

Three or more authors

If there are three or more authors, the first author must be followed by “et al.”

Example:

White, Karen, et al. The Forgotten Room. Berkley, 2016.

Corporate/organization author

The corporation’s name should start the line and appear in the text instead of the author.

Example:

World Trade Organization. From GATT to the WTO: The Multilateral Trading System in the New

Millennium. Kluwer Law International, 2000.

Unknown author

Example:

Encyclopedia of Climate and Weather. Oxford UP, 2011.

Note:

• “University” and “Press” in the names of academic presses are abbreviated to “U” and “P”.

Two or more works by the same author

Three (3) hyphens and a period at the beginning of the following line represent the same author’s name.

Example:

Borroff, Marie. Language and the Poet: Verbal Artistry in Frost, Stevens, and Moore. U of Chicago P,

1979.

—. Pearl: A New Verse Translation. W. W. Norton, 1977.

Two or more works by the same author in the same year

Example:

Jones, Cal. Assessing Hypotheses. U of Western Sydney, 1999.

—. Forming Hypotheses. U of Western Sydney, 1999.

Author with an editor

The editors’ names should appear as it is presented in the book.

Example:

Howells, William Dean. Their Wedding Journey. Edited by John K. Reeves, Indiana UP, 1968.

Author with a translator

Example:

Eco, Umberto. The Prague Cemetery. Translated by Richard Dixon, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 2010.

Editor with no author

Example:

Baker, Russell, editor. The Norton Book of Light Verse. W. W. Norton, 1986.

Work in an anthology (chapter in a book)

Example:

Arnold, Matthew. “Sweetness and Light.” Cultural Theory: An Anthology, edited by Imre Szeman and

Timothy Kaposy, Wiley-Blackwell, 2011, pp. 12–17.

Edition other than the first

Example:

Tortora, Gerald J., and Bryan H. Derrickson. Principles of Anatomy and Physiology. 14th ed., Wiley

Global Education, 2013.

Multivolume work

Some book series may consist of several volumes. When citing such, it is necessary to state the volume of the book where the information was taken from. However, if the volume has its own name, it is formatted as a book.

Example:

Priestley, Joseph. Experiments and Observations on Different Types of Air. Vol. 2, Johnson, 1775.

Encyclopedia/dictionary

This entry should not include information about the publisher or page number.

Example:

“Activist Media.” A Dictionary of Journalism. 2nd ed., 2016.

Foreword, introduction, preface, or afterword

Example:

Priestley, Joseph. Preface. Experiments and Observations on Different Types of Air, by Priestley, vol. 2, Johnson, 1775, pp. v–xxviii.

Online book

The basic book format is used here, followed by the name of the electronic library (italicized) and the URL.

Example:

Gikandi, Simon. Ngugi wa Thiong’o. Cambridge UP, 2000. ACLS Humanities E-book, hdl.handle.net/2027/heb.07588.0001.001

NB!

  • Omit https:// or https:// from URLs unless you want to hyperlink them or it’s a DOI link.
  • If a URL runs more than three full lines, truncate to the host.

For example, hdl.handle.net/2027/heb.07588.0001.001 may become hdl.handle.net

Citing Articles in Periodicals

This section focuses on articles in journals, magazines, and newspapers. The month has to be

abbreviated if used (Jan., Feb., or Mar., except June, July, and Sept.). In general, the citation will look like this:

Author’s Last Name, First Name. “Title of an Article.” Title of Periodical, vol. #, no. #, YYYY, pp. #-#.

Scholarly journal article

Example:

Zhang, Qun. “Lean Six Sigma: A Literature Review.” Interdisciplinary Journal of Contemporary Research in Business, vol. 3, no. 10, 2012, pp. 599–605.

Note:

• Use “p.” if the article is located on one page.

Scholarly journal article (no author)

Example:

“Understanding Benefits and Limitations of Six Sigma.” International Journal of Scientific and Research Publications, vol. 2, no. 1, 2012, pp. 1–9.

Magazine article

Example:

Park, Alice. “The Story about a Viral Photo of Opioid Overdose.” Time, 24 Jan. 2017, p. 45.

Baker, Aryn. “A Climate Solution Lies Deep Under the Ocean—But Accessing It Could Have Huge Environmental Costs.” Time, 13 Sept. 2021, time.com/6094560/deep-sea-miningenvironmental-costs-benefits.

Newspaper article

Example:

Mathews, David. “From Draft Town to Gray Skies.” The Chicago Defender, 28 Apr. 2015, pp. 2–6.

Timsit, Annabelle, et al. “Los Angeles school board to vote on vaccine mandate for students.” The Washington Post, 09 Sept. 2021, www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/09/08/covid-delta variant-live-updates

Editorial in newspaper

An editorial is cited like any article in a periodical, but it is necessary to state that it is an “Editorial” after the work’s title.

Example:

“Who’s Afraid of Betsy DeVos.” Editorial. The Wall Street Journal, 17 Jan. 2017, p. 10.

Letter to the editor

Example:

“Rebellion against the Weird.” Letter. The Guardian, 27 Jan. 2017, p. 12.

It uses principles similar to those of an editorial in a newspaper and states the type of publication—A letter.

Book or film review

To cite a review, include the title of the review (if available), then the phrase “Review of,” and provide the title of the work (in italics for books, plays, and films; in quotation marks for articles, poems, and short stories). Finally, provide performance and/or publication information.

Examples:

Review Author. “Title of Review (if there is one).” Review of Performance Title by Author/Director/Artist/Editor. Title of Periodical, Day Month Year, page.

Seitz, Matt Zoller. “Life in the Sprawling Suburbs, If You Can Really Call It Living.” Review of Radiant City, directed by Gary Burns and Jim Brown. New York Times, 30 May 2007, p. E1.

Weiller, K. H. Review of Sport, Rhetoric, and Gender: Historical Perspectives and Media Representations, edited by Linda K. Fuller. Choice, Apr. 2007, p. 1377.

Article in an online journal

Example:

Dufresne, Christopher, et al. “Broad-Scale Genetic Diversity of Cannabis for Forensic Applications.” PLoS ONE, vol. 12, no. 1, 2017, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0170522.

If the article can also be found in print, it is necessary to mention page numbers.

Example:

Dufresne, Christopher, et al. “Broad-Scale Genetic Diversity of Cannabis for Forensic Applications.” PLoS ONE, vol. 12, no. 1, 2017, pp. 458–471, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0170522.

Article from an online database (or other electronic subscription service)

Cite online databases (e.g., LexisNexis, ProQuest, JSTOR, ScienceDirect) and other subscription services as containers. Thus, provide the database title italicized before the DOI or URL. If a DOI is not provided, use the URL instead. Provide the date of access if you wish.

Examples:

Chan, Evans. “Postmodernism and Hong Kong Cinema.” Postmodern Culture, vol. 10, no. 3, May 2000. Project Muse, https://doi.org/10.1353/pmc.2000.0021

Langhamer, Claire. “Love and Courtship in Mid-Twentieth-Century England.” Historical Journal, vol. 50, no. 1, 2007, pp. 173–96. ProQuest, https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X06005966.

Article in an online magazine/newspaper

Example:

Kwakkel, Erik. “The Beauty of the Injured Book.” Medieval Fragments, 02 May 2014, medievalfragments.com/2014/05/02/the-beauty-of-the-injured-book.

PDF of an online journal article

Example:

Jamali, Hamid R. and Majid Nabavi. “Open access and sources of full-text articles in Google Scholar in different subject fields.” Scientometrics, vol. 105, no. 3, 2015, pp.1635-1651. ResearchGate, www.researchgate.net/publication/280303439_Open_access_and_sources_of_fulltext_articles_in_Google_Scholar_in_different_subject_fields. PDF download.

General format

Editor, author, or compiler name (if available). Name of Site. Version number, Name of institution/organization affiliated with the site (sponsor or publisher), date of resource creation (if available), URL, DOI, or permalink. Date of access (mentioned only if there is no publication date!).

Entire website

When citing an entire website, it is necessary to provide the full URL (without https://) and the date when the source was accessed.

Example:

Starbucks: Coffee and Espresso. Starbucks Coffee Company, 2016, www.starbucks.com/.

Felluga, Dino. Guide to Literary and Critical Theory. Purdue U, 28 Nov. 2003, www.cla.purdue.edu/english/theory/.

Page from the website (no publication date)

Example:

Pereira, Rachel. “How to Make an Interesting Art Piece Using Tree Branches.” eHow, www.ehow.com/how_2227693_art-piece-using-tree-branches.html. Accessed 24 Jan. 2017.

In this case, only the date of access is known.

Page from the website with an unknown author

Example:

“Antibiotic Resistant STDs: FAQs.” WebMD, 12 Jan. 2017, www.webmd.com/sexual-conditions/antibioticresistant-std-faq.

Image from website

This format can be used when citing famous paintings, sculptures, and artworks that are available online. Provide the artist’s name, the work of art italicized, the date of creation, and the institution and city where the work is housed. Follow this initial entry with the name of the website in italics and the date of access.

Example:

Van Gogh, Vincent. Starry Night. 1889. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. MoMA Learning, www.moma.org/learn/moma_learning/vincent-van-gogh-the-starry-night-1889.

If the work is cited on the web only, provide the artist’s name and the title in quotation marks, and follow the website citation format. If the work is posted via a username, use that username for the author.

Example:

Burtinsky, Edward. “Silver Lake Operations #16. Lake Lefroy, Western Australia.” Picture Stories, National Geographic, 11 Jan. 2017, www.nationalgeographic.com/photography/proof/2017/01/edward-burtynsky-earth-humanlandscapes/.

Entire blog

The date can usually be found at the bottom of the web window, along with the copyright information.

Example:

Daniels, Clair. Easy Recipes. 2016, www.easyrecipes.com.

Single blog entry

Example:

Daniels, Clair. “Pumpkin Pie.” Easy Recipes, 25 Apr. 2016, www.easyrecipes.com/04/25/2016/pumpkinpie.

Video or film

If there is a general discussion of a film, the film title should be followed by the names of creators and performers. The name of the distributor is also required.

Example:

Die Hard. Directed by John McTiernan, Twentieth Century Fox, 1988.

Television Episode

Examples:

“The Iron Throne.” Game of Thrones, season 8, episode 6, HBO, 19 May 2019.

“Tradition.” Grey’s Anatomy, created by Shonda Rhimes et al., season 17, episode 15, ABC, 20 May 2021.

Podcast/YouTube

The video’s name is followed by the hosting website’s name (italicized). The uploader’s name or username should be mentioned along with the download date.

Example:

“Planet Earth II Continues: Official Trailer.” YouTube, uploaded by BBC Earth, 25 Nov. 2016, www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8yo_Sp-rGY.

Social Media

Structure:

Author [@author’s handle]. “Title.” Social Media Platform, DD Mon. Year, link.

Examples:

APA Style [@APAStyle]. “A new way to master APA Style is here!” Facebook, 01 Sept. 2021, www.facebook.com/APAStyle/posts/6734360253256004.

APA Style [@APAStyle]. “The Mastering APA Style Student Workbook engages users online with interactive questions to learn and apply principles of #7thEdition #APAStyle and scholarly writing.” Twitter, 01 Sept. 2021, twitter.com/APA_Style/status/1433128273068838920.

If the title is too long, you can shorten it, but ensure that the identification of the work is unambiguous.

Dissertation

The main elements of a dissertation citation are the same as those of a book. Conclude with an indication of the document type (e.g., “PhD dissertation”). The degree-granting institution may be included before the document type (though this is not required). If the dissertation was accessed through an online repository, include it as the second container after all the other elements.

Example:

Bishop, Karen Lynn. Documenting Institutional Identity: Strategic Writing in the IUPUI Comprehensive Campaign. 2002. Purdue U, PhD dissertation.

Dissertation available online

Mitchell, Mark. The Impact of Product Quality Reducing Events on the Value of Brand-Name Capital: Evidence from Airline Crashes and the 1982 Tylenol Poisonings. 1987. PhD dissertation. ProQuest Dissertations and Theses.

Citing Learning Environment

Lecture

The city must be mentioned if a lecture or other live performance is cited. However, this should be left out if it is already in the name of the event. The name of the organization should follow the name of the meeting. The speech title is enclosed in quotation marks. A lecture or other address heard in person may be indicated as such at the end of the entry.

Example:

Atwood, Margaret. “Silencing the Scream.” Boundaries of the Imagination Forum. MLA Annual Convention, 29 Dec. 1993, Royal York Hotel, Toronto. Lecture.

Government publication

If the author is unknown, mention the government and the department. The name of the publishing office must follow the title of the document.

Example:

Great Britain, Ministry of Transport. Increasing Security in London Airports: Strategies for Future. Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, 2003.

In-Text Citations

The main scheme for an in-text citation is the first name that appears in the source listing (usually an author’s name) followed by a page number, which is always put in parentheses.

A source without page numbers or any other form of explicit, fixed part numbering must be cited as a whole: include in the text or in parentheses enough information for the reader to find the corresponding entry in the works-cited list—usually the author’s last name.

An author named in a signal phrase

Mention the author in the sentence, and end the sentence with a page number for paraphrased information:

Example: According to Barton, teenagers are influenced by marketing campaigns in social media (68).

The author is not named in a signal phrase.

Note that there is no comma between the author’s name and the page number. Example: Teenagers are influenced by social media marketing campaigns (Barton 68).

Unknown author

If the author is unknown, the title that appears first in the source entry should be used with the same formatting and punctuation. If it is too long, reduce to the first several words in parentheses:

Example: Many young people attended Woodstock in the 1970s (Readings on the Past Century 89).

Example: Readings on the Past Century: Music and Protest mentions that many young people attended Woodstock in the 1970s (89).

Unknown page number

If there is no page number and the source is not divided by chapters, paragraphs, or other sections, do not include it in the in-text citation. Do not count unnumbered paragraphs or other parts.

Example: Young parents tend to have higher levels of stress for their children than experienced couples (Ford).

More than one work by the same author

When you are referring to more than one work by an author, it is necessary to state a shortened version of the title. The examples show how to represent an article (title is in quotation marks):

Example: (Kotler, “Kotler on Marketing” 65), (Kotler, “Marketing Management” 76).

However, when the author’s last name is used in the sentence, the in-text reference will be formatted this way:

Example: (“Kotler on Marketing” 65), (“Marketing Management” 76).

Titles are provided in italics for books.

Two authors

When making a reference to two co-authors, it is necessary to use “and” to connect their last names.

Example: (Grey and Bell 45).

Three or more authors

If the Works Cited entry shows that a work has three or more than three authors, “et al.” is used starting from the first quote or reference.

Example: (White et al. 456).

Corporate Author

If the author is an organization or corporate entity, include its full name in the in-text citation. If you refer to the organization often, mention the title in full at least once and use an abbreviation in the subsequent in-text citations.

Example: (World Trade Organization 56).

Authors with the same last name

To differentiate between authors with the same last name in in-text citations, use their initials.

Example: (R. Smith 45), (J. Smith 56).

Encyclopedia

When citing an encyclopedia or a part of it, it is necessary to put the article in quotation marks as it is stated in the reference list entry.

Example: (“Activist Media” 5).

Multivolume work

When citing information from different volumes, it is necessary to indicate a volume number. However, this is not necessary if only one volume is used.

Example: (Priestley 1: 45).

Two or more works in the same parentheses

It is necessary to use a semicolon to divide references and list them in alphabetical order.

Example: (Clark 45; Roberts 65).

Indirect sources

Provide the author of the original source in a signal phrase and include a citation of the secondary source in parentheses. Note that only the secondary source has to be included in the Works Cited.

Example: Smith argues that “personalistic systems provide the most accurate representation of a patient’s identity” (. Jones 82).

An entire work/website

When citing an entire website, book, or any other long source, the title will be shortened and presented in

italics (if the author is unknown).

Example: (Starbucks).

Work in anthology

A work in an anthology is cited using the principles of general MLA format. In this case, the information in parentheses will reflect the last name of the author of the short work, along with the page number.

Example: (Arnold 12).

Government publication

Governmental publications are cited as corporate authors. In this case, the in-text citation must include the full name of the department and the page or paragraph number.

Example: (United States Department of Labor 5).

Dissertation

If the author is known, use common citation rules.

Example: (Jameson 65).

Lecture

In most cases, the information about the lecturer is known.

Example: (Green 1).

Multimedia sources

Sometimes, it will be necessary to reference various multimedia sources such as a video, film, podcast, YouTube video, or image. For sources that have a particular length, it may be necessary to state particular minutes that the quotation or text refers to, such as (00:01:23-00:01:56). However, this is not a requirement.

Video or film

General rules for MLA referencing are applied when citing a video or a film. In the first example below, the title of the film is italicized as in the Works Cited (refer to example 1 in Works Cited). In the second example, the last name of the director is provided (refer to example 2 in Works Cited).

Example: (Die Hard) or (McTiernan).

Podcast/YouTube

Citing this type of source also depends on how it appears on the Works Cited page. In this case, it is reasonable to state the author (user name) if known or provide the title of the work in quotation marks.

Example: (Andersen 00:01:23-00:01:56).

Image from website

In the case of a picture or photograph, if the author is known, it is reasonable to state the author, such as (Gogh) or (Burtinsky). With an unknown author, present it the same way as it is stated in Works Cited.

What is the latest edition of the MLA Handbook?

The latest edition is the 9th edition, published in 2021.

How do I format block quotes in MLA?

Indent block quotes one inch from the left margin. Do not use quotation marks, and double-space the text.

Can I use footnotes in MLA format?

Yes, but it is not necessary. MLA allows the use of footnotes or endnotes for supplementary information. However, in-text citations are the primary method for citing sources.

How do I cite a source with no author in MLA?

Use a shortened title of the work in place of the author’s name. For example, (“Impact of Global Warming” 45).

What if multiple works by the same author are cited?

Include a shortened title of the work along with the author’s last name and page number. For example, (Smith, Art of Writing 123).

How should I format the works cited page?

Center the title “Works Cited” at the top of the page, and use a hanging indent for each entry. Alphabetize entries by the author’s last name.

QUICK QUOTE

Approximately 250 words

Categories
Citations Education

APA 7 Format and Referencing Style Guide Made Simple

The APA Citation Style Guide (7th ed.) is a comprehensive manual for writers and researchers to follow when formatting and citing sources in their work according to the standards set by the American Psychological Association (APA). The 7th edition of the guide, developed in 2019, provides detailed instructions on various aspects of writing and citation, ensuring consistency and clarity in scholarly communication. It covers topics such as in-text citations, reference list entries, paper formatting, and the proper use of language and punctuation. The guide is essential for anyone writing academic papers, particularly in the social sciences, to help maintain academic integrity and avoid plagiarism.

APA 7 General Principles of Formatting

  • Double-spacing
  • APA Margins are 1″ (2.54 cm), and the paper size should be 8.5″ x 11.” The 1-inch margin applies to other formats, including MLA, Chicago, Harvard, Vancouver, OSCOLA, and AMA.
  • APA recommends using one of the following fonts: 11-point Calibri, 11-point Arial, 10-point Lucida Sans Unicode, 12-point Times New Roman, 11-point Georgia, or 10-point Computer Modern.

Papers written in APA 7 style are divided into the following sections:

  • Title Page
  • Table of Contents (if required)
  • Abstract (if required)
  • Body
  • References
  • Appendix (if required)

APA Title Page

There are two types of APA 7 title pages, namely:

In this guide, we are going to focus on the student APA title page.

Header:

Include only the page number flush right, starting with the title page.

Title:

  • Your title should be inserted in the upper half of the first page.
  • You should not use more than 12 words for your title.
  • Use upper and lower case (avoid abbreviations and redundant words).
  • The title page should be double-spaced and written in bold.
  • Insert the author’s name below the title.
  • Insert the educational institution below the author’s name, course name, professor’s name, and date.
APA 7 cover page layout

APA Abstract

  • The abstract is written on a new page; this page should contain a page header (see above).
  • The word “Abstract” is centered on the new page and written in bold. Do not use quotation marks, italics, or any other formatting.
  • The text on the abstract page is NOT indented.
  • The abstract in APA should contain only the most relevant information, such as research topic/thesis statement, research question(s), sample size/participants, research design/method, data analysis, results, and conclusions.
  • The abstract consists of a single paragraph (about 130-150 words) of double-spaced text.
  • If keywords are required, they are indented and written beneath the abstract paragraph. Do not forget to

use italics for the word “Keywords.”

Level 1 Bold, Uppercase, and Lowercase

Level 2 Left-aligned, Bold, Uppercase, and Lowercase

Level 3 Bold, Italicized Heading

Level 4 Indented, Bold Heading with a Period. Begin your text after the period.

Heading Levels in APA 7

The reference list is inserted at the end of your paper; any source that you use needs to be included in the reference page and cited in the text. Indent all lines after the first line in the entry (hanging indent); the lines should be indented one-half inch (1.27 cm) from the left margin of your paper.

  • Do not forget to invert authors’ names, such as last name and initials. Example: Cage, D. C.
  • The reference list in APA is always alphabetized by the first word in the reference entry (from A to Z).
  • When alphabetizing titles or group names as authors, go by the first significant word (disregard a, an, the, etc.)
  • Do not include the abbreviation for the group author. Instead, spell out the full name of the group.
Example of APA 7 reference list

APA 7 Reference Guide

One author

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Book title: Subtitle. Publisher.

Example:

Drewett, P. N. (2012). Field archaeology: An introduction. UCL Press.

Note:

  • Provide the name of the publisher, excluding Co. and Inc., which are not necessary to identify the publisher. However, do not omit the words Books and Press.

Two authors

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial., & Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Book title: Subtitle. Publisher.

Example:

Greene, J., & Scott, D. (2004). Finding Sand Creek. University of Oklahoma Press.

Three to twenty authors

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, First initial. Middle initial., & Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Book title: Subtitle. Publisher.

Example:

McNeil, A. J., Frey, R., & Embrechts, P. (2015). Quantitative risk management: Concepts, techniques, and tools. Princeton University Press.

Multiple authors (more than twenty authors)

Provide last names and initials for the first 19 authors of the work. Insert three ellipsis points after the name of the 19th author, followed by the last author’s name. After the first 19 authors’ names, use an ellipsis in place of the remaining author names. Then, end with the final author’s name (do not place an ampersand before it).

There should be no more than twenty names in the citation in total.

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, First initial. Middle initial., Last name, … Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Book title: Subtitle. Publisher.

Example:

Mahajan, A., Go, M. J., Zhang, W., Below, J. E., Gaulton, K. J., Ferreira, T., Horikoshi, M., Johnson, A. D., Ng, M. C. Y., Prokopenko, I., Saleheen, D., Wang, X., Zeggini, E., Abecasis, G. R., Adair, L. S., Almgren, P., Atalay, M., Aung, T., Baldassarre, D., … Morris, A. P. (2014). Genome-wide trans-ancestry meta-analysis provides insight into the genetic architecture of type 2 diabetes susceptibility. Nature Genetics, 46, 234–244.

Corporate/organization author

Structure:

Organization Name. (Year). Book title: Subtitle. Publisher.

Example:

Ministry of Health. (2008). Future directions for eating disorders services in New Zealand: New perspectives. Key Press.

Entries in reference works (e.g., dictionaries, thesauruses, and encyclopedias) without credited authors are also considered works with group authors.

Structure:

Organization Name. (Year). Book title: Subtitle. Publisher.

Example:

Merriam-Webster. (2012). Royalty. In Merriam-Webster’s Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary. Merriam-Webster.

When the author and the publisher are the same, use the word “Author” instead of the publisher’s name.

Structure:

Organization Name. (Year). Book title: Subtitle. Publisher.

Example:

Canadian Ministry of Health. (2020). Obesity statistics. Author.

Unknown author

When the work does not have an author, move the title of the work to the beginning of the references and follow with the date of publication. Only use “Anonymous” if the author of the work is signed “Anonymous.”

Structure:

Book title: Subtitle. (Year). Publisher.

Example:

Alluvial archaeology in Europe. (2009). Routledge.

Two or more works by the same author

Works by the same author are arranged chronologically by year of publication. The earliest year comes first.

List references with no dates before references with dates.

Malhotra, Y. (n.d.). Project management: Key processes. Elsevier.

Malhotra, Y. (2012). Knowledge management and virtual organizations. SAGE.

Malhotra, Y. (2014). Managing organizations: An introduction to theory and practice. Pearson.

When an author appears both as a sole author and, in another citation, as the first author of a group, list the one-author entries first.

Agnew, C. R. (Ed.) (2014). Social influences on romantic relationships: Beyond the dyad. Cambridge University Press.

Agnew, C. R., & South, S. C. (Eds.) (2014). Interpersonal relationships and health: Social and clinical psychological mechanisms. Oxford University Press.

Two or more works by the same author, same year

Works by the same author and with the same publication date are listed alphabetically by the title (disregarding articles). Add a, b, c … to the publication year to distinguish citations.

Gabarro, J. (2011a). Criminal justice organizations: Administration and management. Routledge.

Gabarro, J. (2011b). Managing and organizations: An introduction to theory and practice. Jossey-Bass.

Edited book, no author

In an APA reference to an edited book with no author, move the editor name to the author position and follow it

with the parenthetical abbreviation (Ed.) for one editor or (Eds.) for multiple editors.

Structure:

Editor’s last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Ed.). (Year). Book title: Subtitle. Publisher.

Editor’s last name, First initial. Middle initial., & Editor’s last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Eds.). (Year). Book

Title: Subtitle. Publisher.

Example:

Palenchar, M. & Greenwald, H. (Eds.). (2009). The management of organizations: Responsibility for performance. Russell Sage Foundation.

Edited book with an author/authors

Place the editor’s initials and last name in brackets immediately after the book’s title, followed by a comma and the abbreviation Ed. for one editor or Eds. for multiple editors.

Structure:

Author’s last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Book title: Subtitle. (Editor’s first initial. Middle initial. Last name, Ed.). Publisher.

Example:

Calfee, M. (2011). Strategic issues management: A systems and human resources approach. (K. V. Emory, Ed.). Jossey-Bass.

Author with a translator

In a reference to a translated book, place the name(s) of the translator(s) immediately after the book’s title, add the abbreviation Trans., and enclose it in parentheses.

Structure:

Author’s last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Book title: Subtitle. (Translator’s first initial. Middle initial. Last name, Trans.). Publisher.

Author’s last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Book title: Subtitle. (Translator’s first initial. Middle initial. Last name & Translator’s first initial. Middle initial. Last name, Trans.). Publisher.

Example:

Leary, P. (2009). Metaphors in the history of psychology. (A. W. Burt & F. L. Kernberg, Trans.). University of

Chicago Press. (Original work published 1921).

Note:

  • APA in-text citation of a republished source also includes both publishing dates. Example: Leary  (1921/2009).

Different editions

Include information about the edition in parentheses immediately after the title.

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial., & Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Book title: Subtitle(1st/2nd/3rd/#th ed.). Publisher.

Example:

Shotton, M. L., & Schiraldi, G. (2016). The need for revision (2nd ed.). Dover.

Chapter in an edited book

When citing a chapter in an edited book, do not invert the editors’ names and do not place them in the author’s position. The editors’ names are preceded by the word In and followed by the parenthetical abbreviation (Ed.) for one editor or (Eds.) for several editors.

Note: if an editorial board consists of more than 3 members, include the name of the lead editor and follow it by et al.

Structure:

Author’s last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Chapter title: Subtitle. In Editor’s first initial. Middle initial. Last name (Ed.), Book title: Subtitle (pp. #–#). Publisher.

Author’s last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Chapter title: Subtitle. In Editor’s first initial. Middle initial. Last name et al. (Eds.), Book title: Subtitle (pp. #–#). Publisher.

Example:

Wiener, P. (2013). Gender issues across the globe. In A. A. Krugman & F. D. Kempe (Eds.), Gender identity and gender politics (pp. 134–146). Springer.

Note: List any edition number in the same set of parentheses as the page numbers, separated by a comma (# ed., pp. 33-45).

Johnson, E. T. (2014). Diabetes mellitus. In M. A. Thompson & R. W. Gullie (Eds.), Public health (3rd ed, pp. 122-144). Elsevier.

Multivolume work

Enclose information about volume number(s) in parentheses immediately after the book’s title.

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Book title: Subtitle (Vol(s). #–#). Publisher.

Example:

Haybron, D. M. (2011). Perspectives on Piaget’s theory (Vols. 1–4). McGraw-Hill.

Encyclopedia/dictionary

Follow the citation rules for corporate/organization authors. Depending on the publication details available, there is no author if an edited book or book has no author or chapter.

Foreword, introduction, preface, or afterword

Cite the publishing information about a book as usual, but cite the Introduction, Preface, Foreword, or Afterword (whatever title is applicable) as the chapter of the book.

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Foreword (or Introduction, Preface, Afterword). Book title: Subtitle (pp. #–#). Publisher.

Example:

Zhen, X. (2018). Introduction. In C. Choi (Ed.), Human resource management in multinational organizations (pp.1-15). Springer.

Electronic or Kindle-Books

It is not necessary to note that you have used an eBook or audiobook when the content is the same as a physical book. However, you should distinguish between the eBook or audiobook and the print version if the content is different or abridged or if you would like to cite the narrator of an audiobook.

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Book title: Subtitle. Publisher. URL (if applicable)

Examples:

Reddington, F. M. (2012). Fields of Sorrow (E. Kings, Narr.) [Audiobook]. Elsevier.

Cook, J. F. (2017). Practical guidelines for managers [eBook edition]. SAGE.

Online encyclopedia/dictionary with a group author

Structure:

Institution or organization name. (Year). Title of entry. In Title of reference work. URL

Example:

Longman. (n.d.). Cause. In Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English. Retrieved February 20, 2020, from https://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/cause

Note: An online dictionary, thesaurus, or encyclopedia may be continuously updated and, therefore, not include a publication date (like in the example below). If that’s the case, use “n.d.” for the date and include the retrieval

date in the citation.

Online encyclopedia/dictionary with an individual author

Structure:

Lastname, F. M. (Year). Title of entry. In F. M. Lastname (Ed.), Title of reference work (edition). Publisher. URL or DOI

Example:

Long, R. (n.d.). Egalitarianism. In J. Fieser & B. Dowden (Eds.), Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved February 20, 2020, from https://www.iep.utm.edu/egalitar/

APA 7 Referencing of Articles in Periodicals

Scholarly journal article

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Title of the article. Journal Title, volume(number), pages–pages. https://doi.org/xx.xxx/yyyy

Example:

Caligor, E., & Levy, K. N. (2015). Narcissistic personality disorder: Diagnostic and clinical challenges. The American Journal of Psychiatry, 172(5), 415–422. https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2014.14060723  

APA 7 advises writers to include a DOI (if available), even when using the print source.

Magazine article

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year, Month). Title of the article. Magazine Title, volume(number), pages–pages.

Example:

Kreaker, H. J. (2018, June). The situation in Iraq: Updates and statistics. Forbes Magazine, 23, 2.

Newspaper article

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year, Month). Title of the article. Newspaper Title, pages-pages.

Example:

Shirley, A. (2017, January). School reform and its implications. Washington Post, 2-3.

Review article

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Title of the article [Review of the book Book title: Subtitle, by Author’s initial Last name]. Journal Title, volume(number), pages–pages.

Example:

Lerry, O. P. (2016). Making it happen: Project management without problems [Review of the book Effective Project Management: Traditional, agile, extreme, hybrid, by R. K. Wysocki]. Journal of Management Studies, 139(8), 236-239.

Abstract

APA 7th edition does not guide how to cite abstracts. However, if you only use information from the abstract but the full text of the article is also available, we advise you to add “[Abstract]” after the article or source name. If the full text is unavailable, you may use an abstract available through an abstract database as a secondary source.

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Title of the article [Abstract]. Journal Title, volume(number), pages–pages.

Example:

Bray, G. A., Fruhbeck, G., & Ryan, D. H. (2016). Management of obesity [Abstract]. The Lancet, 387(10031), 1947–1956.

Article in an online journal (DOI)

According to the 7th edition of the APA Style Guide, it is advisable to provide a DOI of an article (digital object identifier, usually stated in the article information section) if available. There are two formats of doi that you can choose from:

1. doi:0000000/000000000000

2. http://dx.doi.org/10.0000/0000

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Title of the article. Journal Title, volume(number), pages–pages. doi:0000000/000000000000

Example:

Langel, S. N., Wang, Q., Vlasova, A. N., & Saif, L. J. (2020). Host factors affecting the generation of immunity against porcine epidemic diarrhea virus in pregnant and lactating swine and passive protection of neonates. Pathogens, 9(2), 130. https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens9020130  

Article in an online journal (without DOI)

If an online scholarly journal article has no DOI and is published on a website, include the URL. If an online scholarly article has no DOI and is published on a database, do not include a URL or any database information. The only exception is for databases that publish articles that are in limited circulation (like ERIC) or that are only available on that particular database (like UpToDate). You should also include the date that you accessed the article.

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Title of the article. Journal Title, volume(number), pages–pages. Retrieved Month Date, Year, from http://xxxxx

Example:

Round, J. (2015). Apocatastasis: Redefining tropes of the apocalypse in Neil Gaiman and Dave Mckean’s Signal to Noise. International Online Journal of Comic Art, 15. Retrieved February 23, 2020, from http://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/26013/

Online newspaper/magazine article

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year, Month, Date). Title of the article. Newspaper/Magazine Title. URL.

Example:

Tuchman, P. (2017, January 27). How do you sell a work of art built into the earth? The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/27/arts/design/robert-smithson-earthwork-art.html?smid=pl-share&_r=0

Citing Dissertations and Theses in APA

Dissertation/thesis, published

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Title of dissertation or thesis (Publication No. XXX) [Doctoral dissertation/Master’s thesis, Name of Institution Awarding the Degree]. Database or Archive name.

Example:

Fowler, S. M. (2015). Measuring the correlation between risk knowledge and comfort utilizing online medical data (Publication No. 1597628) [Master’s thesis, Purdue University]. ProQuest Dissertations Publishing.

Dissertation/thesis, unpublished

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Title of dissertation/thesis [Unpublished doctoral dissertation/master’s thesis]. Name of Institution Awarding the Degree.

Example:

Lewis, H. S. (2019). Relationships between beliefs about medications and use of prescribed chronic medications [Unpublished doctoral dissertation]. New York State University.

Conference Proceedings

The 7th edition of the APA manual does not guide on citing conference proceedings. Therefore, this citation models that of an edited collection, which is similar in format.

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial, & Lastname, First initial. Middle initial. (Eds.). (Year). Title of proceedings. Publisher. URL. (if applicable)

Example:

Peterson, H. I., & James, F. D. (Eds.). (2019). Proceedings of the 12th annual International Conference on Teaching Methods. TAB Digital Library.

Citing Online Lectures and Presentation Slides

When citing online lecture notes, be sure to provide the file format in brackets after the lecture title (e.g. PowerPoint slides, Word document).

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year, Month, Date). Document title [Lecture notes, PowerPoint slides, etc]. URL

Example:

Arnold, D. (2010). Functional analysis [PDF document]. Retrieved from http://wwwusers.math.umn.edu/~arnold/502.s97/functional.pdf

Pomije, B. (2011, December 6). Online shopping [PowerPoint slides]. https://www.slideshare.net/pobr0702/online-shopping-presentation-10492184

APA 7 Referencing of Online Sources

Page from website

If the page names an individual author, cite their name first:

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year, Month, Date). Website page title. Site Name. URL.

Example:

Janous, B. (2020, February 13). A love that cancer can’t kill. Human Parts. https://humanparts.medium.com/a-love-that-cancer-cant-kill-5f1398b13a1a

If the resource was written by a group or organization, use the name of the group/organization as the author. Additionally, if the author and site name are the same, omit the site name from the citation.

Structure:

Group name. (Year, Month, Date). Website page title. Site Name. URL.

Example:

American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. (2020, February 21). Celebrate national dog biscuit day with your favourite furry friends! https://www.aspca.org/news/celebrate-national-dog-biscuit-day-your-favorite-furry-friends 

Page from the website with an unknown author

If the page’s author is not listed, start with the title instead. Additionally, include a retrieval date when the page’s content is likely to change over time (like, for instance, if you’re citing a wiki that is publicly edited).

Structure:

Website page title. (Year, Month, Date). Site Name. Retrieved Month Date, Year, from URL.

Example:

Puppies for adoption: How and where to adopt a puppy. (n.d.). Retrieved February 23, 2020, from https://www.petfinder.com/pet-adoption/dog-adoption/puppies-for-adoption/

Data sets

Structure:

Lastname, First initial. Middle initial. or Name of Group. (Year). Title of dataset (Version No.) [Data set]. Publisher. DOI or URL

Example:

DataHub. (n.d.). CO2 PPM – Trends in atmospheric carbon dioxide [Data set]. https://datahub.io/core/co2-ppm

Graphic data (e.g., interactive maps, infographics, and other graphic representations of data)

Structure:

Give the organization’s or individual’s name, followed by the date and title. If there is no title in brackets, you should provide a brief explanation of what type of data is there and in what form it appears. Include the URL and the retrieval date if there is no publication date.

Example:

Visually. (n.d.). 6 ways to use psychology to boost app engagement [Infographic]. Retrieved February 23, 2020, from https://visual.ly/community/infographic/computers/6-ways-use-psychology-boost-app-engagement

Qualitative data and online interviews

Structure:

If an interview is not retrievable in audio or print form, cite the interview only in the text (not in the reference list) and provide the month, day, and year in the text. If the interview transcript is published in an online periodical, like a magazine, cite the interview the same way you would cite the medium where it is published, as shown below:

Example:

Winfrey, O. (2018, November 12). Michelle Obama gets candid with Oprah about her new memoir, Becoming. The Oprah Magazine. https://www.oprahmag.com/entertainment/a24691478/oprah-michelle-obama-becoming-interview/

If it is an audio file or transcript published in a database, credit the interviewee as the author and use the following model:

Example:

Berkow, I. (1997, June 27). Interview with Ira Berkow [Interview]. Studs Terkel Radio Archive; The Chicago History Museum. https://studsterkel.wfmt.com/programs/interview-ira-berkow-0

Computer software/downloaded software

Do not cite standard office software (e.g., Word, Excel) or programming languages. Provide references only for specialized software.

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. or Name of Group. (Year). Title of software (Version No.). Publisher. URL.

Example:

Systweak. (n.d.). Advanced driver updater for Windows (Version 2.1.1086.15131). Softsonic. https://advanced-driver-updater.en.softonic.com/

Email

E-mails are not included in the list of references, though you should parenthetically cite them in your main text:

(J. Datsun, personal communication, March 3, 2020).

Online forum or discussion posting

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. or Name of Group [username]. (Year, Month Date). Title of post [Online forum post]. Publisher. URL.

Example:

Elaine [ElaineNY]. (2020, February 23). A stranger got my kidney on January 20, 2020 [Online forum post]. Reddit. https://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/f8efmz/a_stranger_got_my_kidney_on_january_20_2020/

Tweet

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. Or Name of Group [@username]. (Year, Month Date). Content of the post up to the first 20 words [Tweet]. Site Name. URL

Example:

Van Dyke, S. [@3WSSheri]. (2020, February 23). Watched Supe on Saturdays back in Mansfield. introduced me to some classic horror flicks [Tweet]. Twitter. https://twitter.com/3WSSheri/status/1231653764219711492

Note: If the tweet includes images, videos, or links to other sources, indicate that information in brackets after the content description. Also, attempt to replicate emojis if possible.

Twitter profile

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. or Name of Group [@username]. (n.d.). Profile name [Twitter profile]. Retrieved Month Date, Year, from URL.

Example:

Chavira, P. [@apchavira]. (n.d.). Paulina Chavira [Twitter profile]. Retrieved February 24, 2020, from https://twitter.com/apchavira

Facebook post

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. Or Name of Group. (Year, Month, Date). Content of the post up to the first 20 words [Type of post]. Site Name. URL

Example:

Nicola, C. (2020, February 22). Chris, Jay, and Elvira are continuing to have fun in Bahia, Salvador, and BRAZIL, celebrating CARNAVAL [Images attached] [Status update]. Facebook. https://www.facebook.com/chris.nicola/posts/10218605512262988

Note: If the Facebook post includes images, videos, or links to other sources, indicate that information in

brackets after the content description. Also, attempt to replicate emojis if possible.

Facebook page

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. Or Name of Group. (n.d.). Home [Facebook page]. Site Name. Retrieved Month Date, Year, from URL

Example:

Jasper, S. (n.d.). Home [Facebook page]. Facebook. Retrieved February 24, 2020, from https://www.facebook.com/stefanie.jasper.1

Instagram photo or video

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. Or Name of Group [@username]. (Year, Month, Date). Content of the post up to the first 20 words [Type of post]. Site Name. URL

Example:

Winslet, K. [@kate. Winslet. Official]. (2020, February 21). Love always wins! [Photograph]. Instagram. https://www.instagram.com/p/B8yx4bZDLgK/

Ted talk

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year, Month, Date). Title of talk [Video]. TED. URL

Example:

Love, R. (2018, November). How nurses can help drive healthcare innovation [Video]. TED. https://www.ted.com/talks/rebecca_love_how_nurses_can_help_drive_healthcare_innovation

Blog post

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year, Month, Date). Blogpost title. Publisher. URL.

Example:

Cush, A. (2016, August 17). You’ll never guess who’s angry about CNN “deceptively” editing a video of Sylville Smith’s sister. Gawker. http://gawker.com/youll-never-guess-whos-angry-about-cnn-deceptively-ed1785416442

Video or film

Structure:

Director’s Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Video/Film title [Film]. Production company.

Example:

Tornatore, G. (2013). The best offer [Film]. Warner Bros.

Video or film in another language

Structure:

Director’s Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Video/Film title in original language [Translated title] [Film]. Production company.

Example:

Jacopetti, G. (1962). Mondo cane [Doggish world] [Film]. Cineriz

TV series

Structure:

Executive producer’s Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Executive Producer/s). (Date range of release). TV series title [TV series]. Production company(ies).

Example:

Crane, D., & Kauffman, M. (Executive Producers). (1994-2004). Friends [TV series]. Warner Bros. Studios.

TV series episode

Structure:

Writer’s Last name, First initial. Middle initial (Writer), & Director’s Last Name, First initial. Middle initial. (Director). (Original air date: Year, Month Date). Episode title (Season number, Episode number) [IV series episode]. In executive producer’s First initial. Middle initial. Last name (Executive Producer), Series title. Production company(ies).

Example:

Borkow, D. K. (Writer), & Schwimmer, D. (Director). (2001, October 4). The one with the red sweater (Season 8, episode 2) [TV series episode]. In D. Crane & M. Kauffman (Executive Producers), Friends. Warner Bros. Studios.

YouTube video

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year, Month, Date). Video title [Video]. Website host. URL.

Example:

EssayPro. (2019, August 14). APA format essay (example, citation) [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=19jEyVZWiFM

Music album

Structure:

Recording artist (Year of release). Title of album [Album]. Record label.

Example:

Adele. (2015). 25 [Album]. XL; Columbia.

Note: if you are referencing a re-recorded version of a classical work, list that album title in brackets

following the name of the album.

Single song or track

Structure:

Recording artist (Year of release). Title of song [Song]. On Title of album [Album]. Record label.

Example:

Adele. (2015). Hello [Song]. On 25 [Album]. XL; Columbia.

Note: if the song is a piece of classical music, you can list the composer instead of the recording artist.

Note: if the song does not have an associated album, simply omit the section with the album.

Citing Podcast

Structure:

Executive Producer’s Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Executive Producer). (Range of publication). Title of podcast [Audio podcast]. Production company. URL.

Example:

Catt, G. (Executive Producer). (2019-present). The missing cryptoqueen [Audio podcast]. BBC. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p07nkd84/episodes/player

Note: in place of the executive producer, you can also list the host of the podcast.

Note: if you did not access the podcast via an online source (e.g., if you used a podcast app), omit the URL.

Single podcast episode

Structure:

Executive Producer’s Last name, First initial., Middle initial. (Executive Producer). (Date of publication). Title of podcast episode (Episode number) [Audio podcast episode]. In Title of podcast. Production company. URL.

Example:

Catt, G. (Executive Producer). (2019). The Technology and the Dream (No. 8) [Audio podcast episode]. In The missing crypto queen. BBC. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p07sz990

Note: in place of the executive producer, you can also list the host of the podcast.

Note: if you did not access the podcast via an online source (e.g. if you used a podcast app), omit the URL.

Artwork in a museum or on a museum website

Structure:

Artist’s Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year of release). Title of artwork [medium]. Name of museum, City, State, Country. URL of the museum.

Example:

Van Gogh, V. (1889). Starry night [painting]. MoMA, New York, NY, United States. https://www.moma.org/collection/works/79802

Note: if the artwork is available via a museum website, cite that website at the end of the citation. If there is no

associated website, simply omit the URL.

Note: if the artwork does not have a title, briefly describe the work and put that description in square brackets.

Photograph (not associated with a museum)

Structure:

Photographer’s Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year of publication). Title of photograph [Photograph]. Source. URL.

Example:

Bao, Y. (2019). The moment [Photograph]. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2019/oct/16/wildlife-photographer-of-the-year-2019-winners-in-pictures

Note: if the photograph does not have a title, describe the photograph and put that description in square brackets.

Citing Personal Communication

Personal communication is not included in the reference list. Instead, when citing information from an email, cite the source of information in parentheses.

(K. Dawson, personal communication, April 24, 2010).

Citing Government Documents in APA

Federal or state statute

Structure:

Name of Act, Public Law No. (Year). URL.

Example:

Americans with Disabilities Act, Publ. L. No. 101-336, 104 Stat. 327 (1990). https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/STATUTE-104/pdf/STATUTE-104-Pg327.pdf

Report by a government agency or other organization

Structure:

Organization Name. (Year). Title of report. URL.

Example:

United States Government Accountability Office. (2020). Science & tech spotlight: Deepfakes. https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-20-379sp.pdf

Report by individual authors at a government agency or other organization

Structure:

Last name, First initial. Middle initial., & Last name, First initial. Middle initial. (Year). Title of report. Organization

Name. URL.

Example:

Usher, L., Friedhoff, S., Cochran, S., & Pandya, A. (2016). Preparing for the unimaginable: How chiefs can safeguard officer mental health before and after mass casualty events. National Alliance on Mental Illness. https://www.nami.org/About-NAMI/Publications-Reports/Public-Policy-Reports/Preparing-for-theUnimaginable/Preparing-For-The-Unimaginable.pdf

APA 7 In-text citations

In accordance with APA style rules, you only need to include the author’s name and year of publication when you refer to information from another scholarly work without quoting it directly. Remember that each source you cite in the body of the paper must have a corresponding entry on the list of references at the end of the paper.

Author named in a signal phrase

APA format requires the use of the word and instead of the ampersand before the last author’s name when citing a work by multiple authors in the text.

Example: Greene and Kernis (2012) argued that every individual involved in the process of creation of software

is responsible for its quality.

Author not named in a signal phrase

Example: The framework based on the categorization of racial attributes does not take into account numerous

individual differences between ethnic groups (Holland, 2010).

A work by two authors

Example: The use of sterilization accounts for 3.2 percent of birth control methods in Christian communities

(Purnell & Paulanka, 2016).

A work by three or more authors

Regardless of the medium of the source, all sources with three authors or more are now attributed using the name of the first author followed by “et al.” List only the first author’s name followed by “et al.” in every citation, even the first.

The only exception to this occurs when doing so would create ambiguity (e.g., if two papers have first-listed authors with the same name). In these cases, list as many names as needed to differentiate the papers, followed by “et al.”

Example: Judith, Leon, Potter, and Grief (2020) and Judith, Leon, Carrol, and Smith (2020) can be cited as (Judith, Leon, Potter, et al., 2020) and (Judith, Leon, Carrol, et al., 2020), respectively.

Unknown author

When the source does not identify an author, cite it by the first few words of its title. The titles of books and periodicals have to be italicized, whereas titles of book chapters and articles must be placed inside quotation marks. APA style calls for capitalizing important words in titles when they are written in the text (but not when they are written in reference lists).

Example: Naturalism and the improvement of healthcare outcomes are the main principles of the provision of biomedicine in the U.S. (Biomedicine and Health Care, 2015).

Example: The health-care services in Australia are based on the long-standing culture of nursing as well as national models of health and illness (“Health care approaches,” 2011).

Corporate Author

If the name of the group first appears in parentheses (as in the second example below), put the abbreviation in brackets after it, followed by a comma and the year for the citation:

Example: The American Psychological Association (APA, 2011) suggested that parents talk to their children about family finances in age-appropriate ways.

Example: Children should learn about family finances in age-appropriate ways (American Psychological Association [APA], 2011).

In the reference list entry, do not include the abbreviation for the group author. Instead, spell out the full name of the group.

Authors with the same last name

Include first initials followed by the last names in order to distinguish between authors with the same last name.

For example, The religious and spiritual beliefs of Arab American Muslims significantly influence their healthcare practices and health-seeking behaviors (M. Berndt, 2016; L. Berndt, 2016).

More than one work by the same author in the same year

Distinguish between works by the same author in the same year by including lowercase letters next to the year of publication in both in-text citations and reference list entries.

Example: Terminally ill patients find a source of strength in performing daily prayers and adhering to other religious duties described in their sacred texts such as the Bible and Quran (Robbins, 2011a).

Indirect sources

Provide the author of the original source in a signal phrase and include a citation of the secondary source in parentheses. Note that only the secondary source has to be included in the APA reference list.

Example: Smith argues that “personalistic systems provide the most accurate representation of a patient’s identity” (as cited in Wescot, 2014, p. 213).

Sources without page numbers

Use the heading or section name, an abbreviated heading or section name, a paragraph number (para. 1), or a combination of these. When an electronic document has numbered paragraphs, use the abbreviation “para.” followed by the paragraph number (Hall, 2001, para. 5). If the paragraphs are not numbered and the document includes headings, provide the appropriate heading and specify the paragraph under that heading.

Example: Pinker and Smith (2013) went so far as to argue “that Chinese cultures condone the use of invasive health care procedures” (para. 11).

Example: According to Smith (1997), … (Mind Over Matter section, 2018, para. 6).

DOIs and URLs

  • Digital object identifiers (DOIs) and URLs are now both presented as hyperlinks for electronic sources.
  • The label “DOI:” is no longer used for entries that include a DOI.
  • The words “Retrieved from” (preceding the URL or DOI) are now only used when a retrieval date is also provided in the citation.

Tables and Figures in APA 7

Though the formatting for tables and figures has not dramatically changed from the sixth edition, a few relevant changes are as follows:

Tables and figures are now formatted in parallel—in other words, they use consistent rules for titles, notes, and numbering.

Tables and figures may now be presented either in the document’s text or after the reference list on separate pages.

When you want to enhance your paper by providing visual data, you need to ensure that you format your tables and figures in accordance with APA guidelines:

  • Data that would require only one or two columns to present should be in written form, and thus, all tables should have three or more columns.
  • Figures that have one column should be between 2 and 3.25 inches in width; two-column figures should be between 4.25 and 6.875 inches.
  • Refer to figures in the text of the paper and include the figure after the end of the paragraph or in the appendix.
  • Tables and figures should be numbered in the same sequence in which they are presented in the text (e.g., Figure 1, Figure 2, etc.).
  • If tables or figures are in the appendix, use capital letters and Arabic numbers to distinguish between them.
  • Label all of your figures and tables appropriately.
  • For tables, you must write the table number and title, capitalizing the keywords (Table 1. Title of the Table).
  • If the table is adopted, include a regular APA in-text citation with a page number in brackets below the table.
  • For figures, write the figure number and title in sentence case beneath the figure. Example: Figure 1. Title of the figure (Author, year, page).
What is the main purpose of the APA 7 format?

The main purpose of the APA 7 format is to provide a standardized method for writing and citing sources in academic and research papers, particularly in the social sciences, ensuring clarity, consistency, and credibility.

How do you format a title page in APA 7?

A title page in APA 7 includes the title of the paper, the author’s name, institutional affiliation, course number and name, instructor’s name, and due date. The title should be bolded and centered, and all text should be double-spaced.

What are the key differences between APA 6 and APA 7?

Key differences include the addition of guidelines for citing social media and online content, simplified in-text citation rules, and changes in the formatting of references for sources with multiple authors.

How do you cite a book in APA 7?

To cite a book in APA 7, include the author’s name, publication year, book title in italics, edition (if applicable), and the publisher. Example: Noel, J. A. (2020). Title of the book (2nd ed.). Publisher.

How do you cite a website in APA 7?

To cite a website in APA 7, include the author’s name, publication date, title of the web page in italics, website name, and URL. Example: Doe, J. (2021, January 15). Title of the web page. Website Name. https://www.example.com

What is the correct format for in-text citations in APA 7?

In-text citations in APA 7 include the author’s last name and the year of publication. For direct quotes, the page number is also included. Example: (Smith, 2020, p. 23).

QUICK QUOTE

Approximately 250 words

Categories
Citations Education

APA 6 Format and Citation Guide Made Easy

The APA 6 guide was developed in line with the American Psychological Association in 2013. Publication manual of the American Psychological Association (6th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.

General Principles of APA 6 Formatting

  • Double-spacing throughout the paper.
  • Margins – 1″ (2.54 cm), while paper size should be 8.5″ x 11″
  • Times New Roman or Arial 12 pt. font (unless the instructions require a different font)

APA 6 papers contain running head(s) at the top of every page and page number. Page numbers are inserted flush right, while the paper’s title, written in UPPER CASE, is inserted flush left. Your title in the header should contain no more than 50 characters (including spaces and punctuation).

Papers written in APA  6 are divided into four sections:

  • Title Page
  • Abstract
  • Body
  • Reference List

Title Page

Running head: THE TITLE (with words’ Running head’ only on the title page)

All the following pages have a different header from the first page: THE TITLE

Title:

Your title should be inserted in the upper half of the first page.

You should not use more than 12 words for your title.

Use upper and lower case (avoid abbreviations and redundant words).

The title page should be double-spaced.

Insert the author’s name below the title.

Insert the educational institution below the author’s name.

The image elaborates the APA 6 cover page layout.

Abstract

  • The abstract is written on a new page; this page should contain a page header (see above).
  • The word “Abstract” is centered on the new page. Do not use quotation marks, bold, italics, or any other formatting.
  • The text on the abstract page is NOT indented.
  • The abstract should contain only the most relevant information, such as research topic/thesis statement, research question(s), sample size/participants, research design/method, data analysis, results, and conclusions.
  • The abstract consists of a single paragraph (about 130-150 words) of double-spaced text.
  • If keywords are required, they are indented and written beneath the abstract paragraph. Do not forget to use italics for the word “Keywords.”

Headings

  • Level 1 heading should be Bold, Uppercase, and Lowercase
  • Level 2 should be Left-aligned, Bold, Uppercase, and Lowercase
  • Level 3 should be indented, with a bold lowercase heading with a period. Begin your text after the period.
  • Level 4 should be indented, bold, italicized, and lowercase heading with a period. Begin your text after the period.
  • Level 5 indented, italicized, lowercase heading with a period. When writing, begin your text after the period.
The image highlights the heading levels layout in APA 6 format.

Reference List

The reference list is inserted at the end of your paper; any source you use must be included in the reference page and cited in the text.

Indent all lines after the first line in the entry (hanging indent); the lines should be indented one-half inch (1.27 cm) from the left margin of your paper.

  • Do not forget to invert authors’ names, such as last name and initials. Example: Cage, D. C.
  • If you have to cite more than seven authors, only the first six authors are listed, then an ellipsis is placed, and the last author’s name is listed after the ellipsis.
  • The reference list is always alphabetized by the first word in the reference entry (from A to Z).
  • When alphabetizing titles or group names as authors, go by the first significant word (disregard a, an, the, etc.)
  • If your reference has a group author, the name of the group can sometimes be abbreviated in the text—for example, the American Psychological Association can be abbreviated to APA. As with other abbreviations, spell out the name of the group upon first mention in the text and then provide the abbreviation.

If the name of the group first appears in parentheses in an in-text citation, put the abbreviation in brackets after it, followed by a comma and the year for the citation:

Example: The American Psychological Association (APA, 2011) suggested that parents talk to their children about family finances in age-appropriate ways.

Children should learn about family finances in age-appropriate ways (American Psychological Association [APA], 2011).

In the reference list entry, do not include the abbreviation for the group author. Instead, spell out the full name of the group.

Correct reference entry:

American Psychological Association. (2011). Dollars and sense: Talking to your children about the economy. Retrieved from http://www.apa.org/helpcenter/children-economy.aspx

Incorrect reference entry:

American Psychological Association (APA). (2011). Dollars and sense: Talking to your children about the economy. Retrieved from http://www.apa.org/helpcenter/children-economy.aspx

  • Journal titles are always presented in full and capitalized:

Example: Archives of General Psychiatry

  • Do not alter the journal’s name:

Example: JAMA Psychiatry (NOT Jama Psychiatry)

APA 6 Reference Guide

Books Citation

One author

Drewett, P. (2012). Field archaeology: An introduction. London, England: UCL Press.

Note:

  • Locations in the U.S.: City, 2-letter State Abbreviation.
  • Locations outside the U.S.: City, Country.
  • Provide the name of the publisher after a colon, excluding Co. and Inc., which are not necessary for the

identification of the publisher. However, do not omit the words Books and Press.

Two authors

Greene, J., & Scott, D. (2004). Finding Sand Creek. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press.

Three to five authors

McNeil, A. J., Frey, R., & Embrechts, P. (2015). Quantitative risk management: Concepts, techniques, and tools.

Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Six or seven authors

Bixby, C., Nigel, E., Smith, K., Rodgers, G. A., Williams, H., & Robinson, J. (2005). Referencing and

Plagiarism: A complete guide. London, England: Sage Publications.

More than seven authors

Provide last names and initials for the first six authors of the work. Insert three ellipsis points after the sixth author’s name, followed by the last author’s name.

Mehrer, M., Flatman, J., Flemming, N., Baxter, J., Orser, C., Wescot, K., … Wescott, K. (2006). GIS and archaeological site location modeling. Boca Raton, FL: Taylor & Francis.

Corporate/organization author

When the author and the publisher are the same, use the word “Author” instead of the publisher’s name.

Ministry of Health. (2008). Future directions for eating disorders services in New Zealand. Wellington, New Zealand: Author

Unknown author

Alluvial archaeology in Europe. (2009). New York, NY: Routledge.

Two or more works by the same author

Works by the same author are arranged chronologically by year of publication. The earliest years come first.

Malhotra, Y. (2012). Knowledge management and virtual organizations. Naperville, IL: SAGE.

Malhotra, Y. (2014). Managing organizations: An introduction to theory and practice. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson.

Two or more works by the same author, same year

Works by the same author and with the same publication date are listed alphabetically by the title (disregarding articles). Add a, b,  to the publication year to distinguish citations.

Gabarro, J. (2011a). Criminal justice organizations: Administration and management. Reston, VA: Routledge.

Gabarro, J. (2011b). Managing and organizations: An introduction to theory and practice. Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

Edited book, no author

In a reference to an edited book with no author, move the editor’s name to the author position and follow it with the parenthetical abbreviation (Ed.) for one editor or (Eds.) for multiple editors.

Palenchar, M., & Greenwald, H. (Eds.). (2009). The management of organizations: Responsibility for performance. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.

Edited book with an author/authors

When citing an edited source, place the editor’s initials and last name immediately after the book’s title, followed by the parenthetical abbreviation (Ed.) for one editor or (Eds.) for multiple editors.

Example:

Calfee, M. (2011). Strategic issues management: A systems and human resources approach. K. V. Emory (Ed.). Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

Author with a translator

In a reference to a translated book, place the name(s) of the translator(s) immediately after the book’s title, add the abbreviation Trans., and enclose it in parentheses.

If the book is republished, provide both publishing dates.

Leary, P. (2009). Metaphors in the history of psychology. (A. W. Burt & F. L. Kernberg, Trans.). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. (Original work published 1921).

Note:

  • In-text referencing of a republished source also includes both publishing dates. Example: Leary (1921/2009).

Different Editions

Include information about the edition in parentheses immediately after the title.

Example:

Shotton, M. L., & Schiraldi, G. (2016). The need for revision (2nd ed.). Chicago, IL: Dover.

Chapter in an edited book

When citing a chapter in an edited book, do not invert the editors’ names and do not place them in the author’s position. The editors’ names are preceded by the word In and followed by the parenthetical abbreviation (Ed.) for one editor or (Eds.) for several editors.

Note: if an editorial board consists of more than three members, include the name of the lead editor and follow it by et al.

Example:

Wiener, P. (2013). Gender issues across the globe. In A. A. Krugman & F. D. Kempe (Eds.), Gender identity and gender politics (pp. 134–146). Frankfurt, Germany: Springer.

Multivolume work

Enclose information about volume number(s) in parentheses immediately after the book’s title.

Example:

Haybron, D. M. (2011). Perspectives on Piaget’s theory (Vols. 1–4). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.

Encyclopedia/dictionary

Graham, T. (Ed.). (2009). Encyclopedia of psychology: The great discoveries (Vols. 1–3). Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO.

Foreword, introduction, preface, or afterword

Provide the names of the authors of the book and follow the date of the book’s publishing with the word Foreword (or Introduction, Preface, or Afterword). Add the page numbers after the book’s title.

Example:

Brooks, G. (2013). Introduction. Consequences of government spending (pp. 3–11). Frankfurt, Germany: Peter Lang.

Online Books

Provide the version of your e-book.

Example:

Taubman, M. (2015). The psychoanalytic vision: The experiencing subject, transcendence and the therapeutic process [EBSCO NetLibrary version]. Retrieved from http://www.ebscohost.com

Electronic book

When citing an electronic book, keep in mind that it may be retrieved from a personal website, a self-publishing website, or provided in an audio form. If it must be purchased, write “Available from.”

Examples:

Kopf, R. (2013). Low blood pressure—Hypotension treated with homoeopathy and Schuessler salts (Homeopathic cell salts). Available from https://www.bookrix.com/_ebook-robert-kopf-low-blood-pressure-hypotension-treated-with-homeopathy-and-schuessler-salts-homeopathic/

Haggard, H. (2014). The brethren. Retrieved from https://www.bookrix.com/_ebook-h-rider-haggard-thebrethren-20/

Chapter in an online book or web document

Example:

National Research Center. (1997). How teachers teach: Specific methods. In Science, teaching reconsidered: A handbook (Chapter 2). Retrieved from https://www.nap.edu/read/5287/chapter/3

Online encyclopedia/dictionary

Example:

Kashmiri Shaiva philosophy. (n.d.). In Internet encyclopedia of philosophy. Retrieved from http://www.iep.utm.edu/kashmiri/

Citing Articles in Periodicals

Scholarly journal article

Example

Williams, P. (2014). Emotions and consumer behavior. Journal of Consumer Research, 40(5), 8–11.

Magazine article

Example:

Columbus, L. (2016, March 16). A roundup of cloud computing forecasts and market estimates. Forbes Magazine, 215, 1–3.

Newspaper article

Example:

Gellman, B., & Nakashima, E. (2013, July 25). U.S. spy agencies mounted 231 offensive cyber operations in 2011, documents show. Washington Post, pp. C3–C4.

Letter to the editor of a magazine

Example:

Jenkins, J. (2017, January). It’s time for the president to take responsibility for his words and actions [Letter to the editor]. The Washington Post, 233, 17.

Review article

Example:

Raab, J. (2014). Extending our knowledge on network governance [Review of the book Uniting Diverse Organizations: Managing goal-oriented advocacy networks, by A. Saz-Carranza]. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 24(2), 1–4.

Abstract

Example:

Schürch, R., Ratnieks, F. L., Samuelson, E. E., & Couvillon, M. J. (2016). Dancing to her own beat: Honey bee foragers communicate via individually calibrated waggle dances [abstract]. Journal of Experimental Biology, 219(9), 1287–1289.

Article in an online journal (DOI)

According to the 6th edition of the APA Style Guide, it is advisable to provide an article’s DOI if it is available. There are two formats of doi that you can choose from:

1. doi:0000000/000000000000

2. http://dx.doi.org/10.0000/0000

Example:

Baldwin, D. S., Anderson, I. M., & Nutt, D. J. (2014). Evidence-based pharmacological treatment of anxiety disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder: A revision of the 2005 guidelines from the British Association for Psychopharmacology. Journal of Psychopharmacology, 28(5), 403–439. doi:10.1177/0269881114525674

Article in an online journal (without DOI)

Example:

Round, J. (2015). Apocatastasis: Redefining tropes of the Apocalypse in Neil Gaiman and Dave Mckean’s  Signal to Noise. International Online Journal of Comic Art, 15. Retrieved from http://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/26013/

Online newspaper/magazine article

Example:

Tuchman, P. (2017, January 27). How do you sell a work of art built into the earth? The New York Times. Retrieved from https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/27/arts/design/robert-smithson-earthwork-art.html?smid=pl-share&_r=0

Online book review

Example:

Ascher, M. (2011). But I thought the earth belonged to the living [Review of the book Dead Hands: A Social History of Wills, trusts, and Inheritance Law, by L. M. Friedman]. Texas Law Review, 89(2), 1149–1177. Retrieved from http://www.texaslrev.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/Ascher-89-TLR-1149.pdf

Note:

  • Alternatively, provide a DOI instead of a link.

Citing Dissertations and Theses

Dissertation/thesis

Published dissertation/thesis available from a database service:

Examples:

Author, A. A. (Year). Title of dissertation or thesis (Doctoral dissertation or Master’s thesis). Retrieved from the name of the database. (Accession or Order No.)

Patel, B. (2016). A computational pipeline to uncover genomic regulatory regions that modulate the WNT signaling pathway (Undergraduate Thesis). Retrieved from Stanford Digital Dissertations. (PTN 3495214)

Citing published dissertation/thesis available from an institutional repository:

Examples:

Author, A. A. (Year). Title of dissertation or thesis (Doctoral or Master’s thesis, University, city, country/state). Retrieved from http://xxxxx

Patel, B. (2016). A computational pipeline to uncover genomic regulatory regions that modulate the WNT signaling pathway (Undergraduate Thesis, Stanford University, Stanford, CA). Retrieved from https://searchworks.stanford.edu/view/jz288sd3151

Citing Unpublished dissertation/thesis:

Author, A. A. (Year). Title of doctoral dissertation or Master’s thesis (Unpublished doctoral dissertation or Master’s thesis). Name of Institution, Location.

Citing Learning Environment

Citing Online lecture notes/presentation slides

Examples:

Arnold, D. (2010). Functional analysis [PDF document]. Retrieved from http://wwwusers.math.umn.edu/~arnold/502.s97/functional.pdf

Pomije, B. (2011). Online shopping [PowerPoint slides]. Retrieved from http://www.slideshare.net/pobr0702/online-shopping-presentation-10492184

Citing Web Sources

Page from website

If a document has more than one page, provide a URL that will be linked to the entry page of this document.

Example:

Preston, J. (2017). John Preston on the Thorpe affair. Retrieved from https://www.penguin.co.uk/articles/onwriting/why-i-write/2016/john-preston-on-the-thorpe-affair/

Page from a website with an unknown author

Example:

How sibling rivalry made Anne the ‘neglected’ Brontë. (2017). Retrieved from https://www.penguin.co.uk/articles/on-writing/times-and-life/2017/jan/how-sibling-rivalry-made-anne-theother-bronte/

Citing Blog Post

Example:

Cush, A. (2016, August 17). You’ll never guess who’s angry about CNN “deceptively” editing a video of Sylville Smith’s sister [Blog post]. Retrieved from http://gawker.com/youll-never-guess-whos-angry-about-cnndeceptively-ed-1785416442

Citing Video or film

You may include a Producer, Director, Sponsor, etc.

Example:

Glass, T. (Director). (2010). A Todd Glass Halloween: Animashups [Video file]. Retrieved from http://videopodcastnetwork.com/a-todd-glass-halloween/

Podcast/YouTube

Example:

Alcock, P. (2012, June 29). Electromagnetic levitation quadcopter [Video file]. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCON4zfMzjU

Personal communication

Personal communication is not included in the reference list. Instead, when citing information from an email, cite the source of information in parentheses.

Example:

(K. Dawson, personal communication, April 24, 2010).

Citing Governmental Sources

Government publication

Example:

United States Congress House Committee on Energy and Commerce. (2017). DOE for the 21st century: Science, environment, and national security missions (E&C Publication No. 114–119). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Publishing Office.

APA 6 In-text citations

When citing references in a text using the APA format, focus on the author-date approach. This means that the author’s surname (without suffixes such as Dr. or Jr.) appears in the text, followed by the year of publication.

Direct quotations require the inclusion of the page number in addition to the authors’ names and years.

Example: (Leary, 2009, p. 137).

An author named in a signal phrase

APA format requires the use of the word and instead of the ampersand before the last author’s name when citing a work by multiple authors in the text.

Example: Greene and Kernis (2012) argued that every individual involved in the process of creation of software is responsible for its quality.

The author is not named in a signal phrase.

Example: The framework based on categorizing racial attributes does not consider numerous individual differences between ethnic groups (Holland, 2010).

A work by two authors

Example: The use of sterilization accounts for 3.2 percent of birth control methods in Christian communities (Purnell & Paulanka, 2016).

A work by three to five authors

List all authors the first time a work is cited in the text. However, in subsequent citations, only the first author’s name, followed by et al., along with the year of publication, should be placed.

Example: The limitations of the classification system preclude its use for the determination of specific health needs of ethnic minorities (Flatman, Flemming, & Drewett, 2009).

Example: Belonging to a racial group requires a differentiation between racial needs and those of the society at large (Flatman et al., 2009).

Six or more authors

Include only the name of the first author, followed by et al., along with the year of publication.

Example: Baxter et al. (2014) argued that statewide statistics do not reflect the real experiences of Muslims in the U.S.

Unknown author

When the source does not identify an author, cite it by the first few words of its title. The titles of books and periodicals have to be italicized, whereas titles of book chapters and articles must be placed inside quotation marks.

Example: Naturalism and the improvement of healthcare outcomes are the main principles of the provision of biomedicine in the U.S. (Biomedicine and Health Care, 2015).

Example: The healthcare services in Australia are based on the long-standing culture of nursing as well as national models of health and illness (“Health care approaches,” 2011).

Corporate Author

If the name of the group first appears in parentheses (as in the second example below), put the abbreviation in brackets after it, followed by a comma and the year for the citation:

Example: The American Psychological Association (APA, 2011) suggested that parents talk to their children about family finances in age-appropriate ways.

Example: Children should learn about family finances in age-appropriate ways (American Psychological Association [APA], 2011).

In the reference list entry, do not include the group author’s abbreviation. Instead, spell out the group’s full name.

Authors with the same last name

Include first initials followed by the last names in order to distinguish between authors with the same last name.

For example, The religious and spiritual beliefs of Arab American Muslims significantly influence their healthcare practices and health-seeking behaviors (M. Berndt, 2016; L. Berndt, 2016).

More than one work by the same author in the same year

Distinguish between works by the same author in the same year by including lowercase letters next to the year of publication in both in-text citations and reference list entries.

Example: Terminally ill patients find a source of strength in performing daily prayers and adhering to other religious duties described in their sacred texts such as the Bible and Quran (Robbins, 2011a).

Indirect sources

Provide the author of the source in a signal phrase and include a citation of the secondary source in parentheses. Note that only the secondary source has to be included in the reference list.

Example: Smith argues that “personalistic systems provide the most accurate representation of a patient’s identity” (as cited in Wescot, 2014, p. 213).

Citing sources without page numbers

When an electronic document has numbered paragraphs, use the abbreviation “para.” followed by the paragraph number (Hall, 2001, para. 5). If the paragraphs are not numbered and the document includes

headings, provide the appropriate heading, and specify the paragraph under that heading.

Example: Pinker and Smith (2013) went so far as to argue “that Chinese cultures condone the use of invasive health care procedures” (para. 11).

Example: According to Smith (1997) (Mind Over Matter section, 2018, para. 6)

FAQs

What’s the difference between APA 6th and 7th editions?

The 7th edition, released in 2019, introduced several changes, including simplified author guidelines (listing up to 20 authors in the reference list), updated guidelines for digital sources, increased flexibility in font choices, and a new format for student papers.
However, many institutions still use the 6th edition, so always check which version is required.

How do I cite a source with no author?

When a source has no author, use the title of the work in place of the author’s name:
In-text citation: (“Article Title”, 2020)
Reference list: Article title. (Year). Publication Name. URL

Can I use first-person pronouns in APA style?

APA 6th Edition allows the use of first-person pronouns (I, we) in appropriate contexts, such as describing your research process or stating your position. However, use them sparingly and maintain a professional tone.

How do I cite multiple works by the same author in the same year?

When citing multiple works by the same author published in the same year, use lowercase letters (a, b, c) after the year to differentiate:
In-text: (Smith, 2020a; Smith, 2020b)
Reference list: Smith, A. (2020a). First article title… Smith, A. (2020b). Second article title…

How do I format an appendix in APA 6th Edition?

To format an appendix:
1) Start each appendix on a new page after your references
2) Label it “Appendix” (for a single appendix) or “Appendix A,” “Appendix B,” etc. (for multiple appendices)
3) Center the label at the top of the page
4) On the next line, provide a descriptive title (centered, bold)
5) Include the appendix content below the title

QUICK QUOTE

Approximately 250 words

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