APA Style Citation Guide
APA Style Citation Guide
This document serves as a simple guide to APA citations. This is not comprehensive but rather a good
start to understanding APA. It should be sufficient for your success in this course; however, there are
other detailed resources available.
APA citation style refers to the rules and conventions established by the American Psychological
Association for documenting sources used in a research paper. APA style is used in the social sciences,
education, engineering, and business. APA style requires two elements for citing outside sources:
Reference Citations in Text and a Reference List. Together these elements identify and credit the sources
consulted in the paper and allow others to access or retrieve this material.
The examples of APA styles and formats listed here include a few of the most common types of sources.
For additional examples and more detailed information about APA citation style, refer to the
www.apastyle.org. A more detailed resource on APA citations is the following website maintained by
Purdue University. They continuously update their website to reflect changes in APA styling. Also, refer
to their sample paper to see how to structure a reference page and in-text citations:
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/01/.
Reference Citations in Text
Citations to sources are placed in the text of the paper in order to briefly identify sources for readers and
enable them to locate the source of the cited information in the Reference List. These parenthetical (in
text) references include the authors last name and the year of publication enclosed in parentheses.
Citations are used when using direct quotes and paraphrasing information. This ensures that appropriate
credit is given. When the citation occurs at the end of a sentence, the period goes after the parentheses.
Example:
In a recent study of reaction times (Walker, 2000)
Walker (2000) compared reaction times
Researchers discovered negative impacts of alcohol on driving reaction times (Walker, 2000).
Direct Quotes
When using a direct quote from a source, you must include the page number of the quote within the in
text citation. This easily allows readers the opportunity to find the initial source.
Example:
According to researchers, 87% of drunk drivers experienced slowed reaction times when compared to
sober drivers (Walker, 2000, p. 181).
Reference List
References cited in the text of a research paper must appear in a reference list. This list provides the
information necessary to identify and retrieve each source. Each entry usually contains the following
elements (in this order): author, year of publication, title and publishing data. The reference page is
headed with the word References centered at the top of the page. All references are then included in
alphabetical order without enumeration, in other words, do not number the references. So, an article
published by Smith would be placed lower on the reference page than an article published by Martinez.
Also, notice the hanging indent - the first line of each reference is at the left margin and subsequent lines
are indented with one tab (5 spaces). Reference lists should be double spaced (just like the body of the
paper). A general rule of thumb is that every reference in the Reference list should also be accompanied
by at least one in text citation.
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Common Examples
Book (single author)
Reference:
Sheril, R. D. (1956). The terrifying future: Contemplating color television. San Diego, CA: Halstead.
In text citation:
(Sheril, 1956)
Online Newspaper article (two authors)
Reference:
Lichtblau, E., & Shane, S. (2010, February 19). Report faults 2 authors of Bush terror memos. The New
York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com
In text citation:
(Lichtblau & Shane, 2010)
Journal article with DOI (3-5 authors):
Reference:
Judge, T. A., Hurst, C., & Simon, L. S. (2009). Does it pay to be smart, attractive, or confident (or all
three)? Relationships among general mental ability, physical attractiveness, core self-evaluations,
and income. Journal of Applied Psychology, 94(3), 742-755. doi: 10.1037/a0015497
In text citation:
First citation: (Judge, Hurst & Simon, 2009)
Subsequent citations: (Judge et al., 2009)
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In text citation:
(American Cancer Society, n.d.)
*See the next page for a sample Reference List using all references cited in this document*
Updated 06/20/2013
References
American Cancer Society. (n.d.). Overview of bladder cancer. Retrieved from
http://www.cancer.org/docroot/CRI/CRI_2_1x.asp?dt=44
Cuzick, J., Beverley, E., Ho, L., Terry, G., Sapper, H., Mielzynska, I., Soutter, P. (1999). HPV testing
in primary screening of older women. British Journal of Cancer, 81(3), 554-559. Retrieved from
http://www.nature.com/bjc/index.html
David, L. (Producer) & Guggenheim, D. (Director). (2006). An inconvenient truth [Motion picture].
United States: Lawrence Bender Productions.
Dunne, E. F., Unger, E. R., Sternberg, M., McQuillan, G., Swan, D. C., Patel, S. S., & Markowitz, L. E.
(2007). Prevalence of HPV infection among females in the United States. Journal of the American
Medical Association, 297(8), 813-819. Retrieved from http://jama.ama-assn.org/.
Judge, T. A., Hurst, C., & Simon, L. S. (2009). Does it pay to be smart, attractive, or confident (or all
three)? Relationships among general mental ability, physical attractiveness, core self-evaluations,
and income. Journal of Applied Psychology, 94(3), 742-755. doi: 10.1037/a0015497
Lichtblau, E., & Shane, S. (2010, February 19). Report faults 2 authors of Bush terror memos. The New
York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com
Palfreman, J. (Producer and Director) & Reid, T.R. (Co-Writer). (2008). Sick around the world.
[Television series episode]. In Mangini, T. (Director) Frontline. Arlington, VA: PBS. Available
from http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/sickaroundtheworld/view/
Sheril, R. D. (1956). The terrifying future: Contemplating color television. San Diego, CA: Halstead.
Updated 06/20/2013