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An EasyGuide to APA Style Beth M. Schwartz

An EasyGuide to APA Style par Beth M. Schwartz

An EasyGuide to APA Style Beth M. Schwartz


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Résumé

The latest edition of this hands-on guide to following APA style guidelines.

An EasyGuide to APA Style Résumé

An EasyGuide to APA Style Beth M. Schwartz

Written by experienced psychology instructors who are active and respected members of the American Psychological Association (APA) Society for the Teaching of Psychology, the updated Third Edition provides a reader-friendly guide for mastering APA style and covers all sections of an APA-style paper.

Clear, conversational, and humorous, the book presents easy-to-understand explanations of how to write research papers, term papers, and lab reports, and cite references following APA style and format. The authors focus on the most essential elements of APA style and format, offering useful advice, tips, and visual representations.

À propos de Beth M. Schwartz

Beth M. Schwartz is the Provost and Professor of Psychology at Endicott College. Previously she served as Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost and Professor of Psychology at Heidelberg University, in Tiffin, Ohio. Dr. Schwartz started her career on the faculty at Randolph College (founded as Randolph-Macon Woman's College) in Lynchburg, VA, where she served for 24 years. At Randolph she was the William E. and Catherine Ehrman Thoresen '23 Professor of Psychology and Assistant Dean of the College. She received a BA at Colby College (Maine) and a PhD in cognitive psychology at the State University of New York at Buffalo. Her scholarship focuses on the scholarship of teaching and learning/pedagogical research, in particular the issues surrounding academic integrity and honor systems. In addition to numerous professional presentations at conferences, she has published many book chapters and articles in a variety of scholarly journals, including the Journal of Higher Education, Ethics and Behavior, Law and Human Behavior, and Applied Developmental Science. She has also edited and coauthored books, including Child Abuse: A Global View(Schwartz, McCauley, & Epstein, 2001), Optimizing Teaching and Learning (Gurung & Schwartz, 2012), and Evidence-Based Teaching for Higher Education (Schwartz & Gurung, 2012). She is a member of the American Psychological Association (APA) and the American Psychological Society and is a Fellow of Division 2 of APA (Society for the Teaching of Psychology). She was an award-winning teacher at Randolph College, where she taught Introduction to Psychology, Research Methods, Cognitive Psychology, and the capstone course. She received the Award for Outstanding Teaching and Mentoring from the American Psych-Law Society, the Gillie A. Larew Award for Distinguished Teaching at Randolph College, the Katherine Graves Davidson Excellence in Scholarship Award from Randolph College, and the Distinguished Faculty Achievement Certificate from the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia. R. Eric Landrum is a Professor and Chair in the Department of Psychological Science at Boise State University, receiving his PhD in cognitive psychology from Southern Illinois University-Carbondale. He is a research generalist, broadly addressing the improvement of teaching and learning, including the long-term retention of introductory psychology content, skills assessment, improving help-seeking behavior, advising innovations, understanding student career paths, the psychology workforce, successful graduate school applications, and more. Eric has 425+ presentations, 23 books/textbooks, and published 85 peer-reviewed journal articles. He has collaborated with 300+ research assistants and taught 18,000+ students in 28 years at Boise State. During Summer 2008, he led an American Psychological Association (APA) working group at the National Conference for Undergraduate Education in Psychology studying the desired results of an undergraduate psychology education, and at the 2014 APA Educational Leadership Conference, Eric was presented with a Presidential Citation for outstanding contributions to the teaching of psychology. With the 2015 launch of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Psychology journal, he served as inaugural co-editor. He is a member of APA, a fellow of Division Two (Society for the Teaching of Psychology/STP), a fellow of Division One (General Psychology), and served as STP President (2014). He is a charter member of the Association for Psychological Science (named fellow in 2018). During 2016-2017, Eric was President of the Rocky Mountain Psychological Association and was President of Psi Chi, the International Honor Society in Psychology in 2017-2018. In August 2019, he received the American Psychological Foundation's Charles L. Brewer Distinguished Teaching of Psychology Award, the highest award given to teachers of psychology in America. will serve as the 2015-2016 president of the Rocky Mountain Psychological Association. REGAN A. R. GURUNG is Professor of Psychology and the Associate Vice Provost and Executive Director of the Center for Teaching and Learning at Oregon State University. Born and raised in Bombay, India, Dr. Gurung received a Bachelor of Arts in psychology at Carleton College (Minnesota) and Master of Science (MS) and doctoral (PhD) degrees in social and personality psychology at the University of Washington (Washington State). He followed with 3 years at the University of California, Los Angeles, as a National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) research fellow. His early work focused on social support and close relationships; he studied how perceptions of support from close others influence relationship satisfaction. His later work investigated cultural differences in coping with stressors such as HIV infection, pregnancy, and smoking cessation. He continues to explore cultural differences in health and is heavily involved in pedagogical research directed toward improving teaching and student learning. He has received numerous local, state, and national grants for his research in health psychology and social psychology regarding cultural differences in stress, social support, smoking cessation, body image, and impression formation. He has published articles in a variety of scholarly journals, including the American Psychologist, Psychological Review, and Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, and is a frequent presenter at national and international conferences. He is the author, coauthor, or editor of fifteen other books including Study Like a Champ (with John Dunlosky), the Handbook of Health Psychology (2019, with Tracey Revenson), a two-volume Multicultural Approaches to Health and Wellness in America (2014), Easyguide to APA [American Psychological Association] Style (2017, with Eric Landrum and Beth Schwartz), and Everyday Applications of Psychological Science (with Eric Landrum, Dana Dunn, Maureen McCarthy, and Susan Nolan). Dr. Gurung is also a dedicated teacher and has interests in enhancing faculty development and student understanding. In 2017 he won the American Psychological Foundation's prestigious Charles L. Brewer Award for Distinguished Teaching in Psychology. He also has won the Carnegie Association's Wisconsin Professor of the Year (2010), the UW System Regent's Teaching Award (2011), the UW-Green Bay Founder's Award for Excellence in Teaching Excellence in Scholarship, and the UW Teaching at Its Best, Creative Teaching, and Featured Faculty awards. He has organized statewide and national teaching conferences and is an active member and past president of the Society for the Teaching of Psychology (American Psychological Association [APA]-Division 2). He is an elected fellow of the American Psychological Association and Association for Psychological Science and past president of the Psi Chi International Honor Society in Psychology. When not reading, writing, or helping people stay calm, Regan enjoys culinary explorations, travel, and immersing himself in his son's and daughter's latest pursuits.

Sommaire

Section I: Overview Chapter 1: Style Versus Format: Why It Matters to Your Audience and Why It Should Matter to You What Is the Difference Between APA Style and APA Format? Why APA Style Anyway? Wasn't MLA Good Enough? In the Long Run, Attention to Detail Matters (Including APA Style and Format) Write for Your Specific Audience: Term Papers Versus Formal Research Papers Chapter 2: Your Visual Table of Contents QuickFinder The Sample Paper With Content and Page Numbers Section II. Writing With (APA) Style: Big-Picture Items Chapter 3: General Writing Tips Specific to APA Style: Bare-Bones Fundamentals Clear and Succinct Writing: Using Your Scholarly Voice Commonly Confused Words in Psychology and Beyond Subject-Verb Agreement Active Voice Versus Passive Voice in APA Style Some (But Not Too Much) First-Person Usage Avoiding Anthropomorphism Chapter 4: A Quick Grammar Summary for APA-Style Writing Parts of a Sentence Parts of Speech Common Grammar Mistakes to Avoid Chapter 5: Plagiarism and How to Avoid It: Thou Shalt Not Steal (or Be Lazy) But I Didn't Know... It Sounds Like a Bad Word Quoting: More Than Just a Copy and Paste Paraphrasing: In Your Own Words An Author's License (Yours): Modifying Source Material But I Can Freely Use My Own Work, Right? How About This for a Plagiarism Awareness Exercise? Chapter 6: Avoiding Biased Language The Fundamental Lesson: View People as Individuals First Specific Recommendations for Reducing Bias: Nonsexist Language and Other Areas Sexual Orientation Racial and Ethnic Identity Disabilities Occupations Gender and Pronouns: With an Indefinite Recommendation Section III. Writing With (APA) Style: Getting Down to Business Chapter 7: Writing Your Introduction: Tying the Story all Together What to Include in Your Introduction Formatting Your Introduction Getting Your Introduction Started Using an Outline: Organizing Your Literature Review Common Mistakes to Avoid in your Introduction Outline for the Sample Introduction Section Included Sample Paper Chapter 8: Writing Your Discussion: It's a Wrap Formatting Your Discussion Section What to Include in Your Discussion Section Getting Your Discussion Section Started Organizing Your Discussion Section Common Mistakes to Avoid in your Discussion Section Outline for the Sample Discussion Section Included Sample Paper Chapter 9: Citing Sources in Text: Whodunit (or Said It)? A Good Rule of Thumb Ready, Cite, GO In-Text Citation Basics Some Curveballs Chapter 10: A Step-by-Step Playbook of Your Method: How, What, When, Who, and Where? Where in the Flow of Pages Do You Place the Method Section? Where in the Method Section Does This Information Go? Subjects/Participants Materials and Apparatus Procedure Formatting Your Method Section Chapter 11: Writing About Statistics and Associated Fun: How Did It All Turn Out? Let Us Talk Statistics Basics and Beyond Formatting Your Results Paragraph Including Effect Size and Power Chapter 12: Everybody Needs References A Helpful Note Creating Your References Section Using Abbreviations The Basics Basic References Section Formatting Rules Some Not-So-Basic Rules You Might Need Section IV. Presenting Your Work in APA Format Chapter 13: The Numbers Game: How to Write Numbers (and When the Rules Change) When You Use Numerals When You Use Words Using Both Numerals and Words How to Use Decimal Points Additional Rules for Including Numbers in Your Paper Metrication When Do You Use Abbreviations? Chapter 14: Formatting: Organizing, Headings, and Making Your Work Look Good to Print What Goes Where? What Your Paper Should Look Like Headings Spelling Matters: Spelling and Capitalization Rules Final Touches Chapter 15: Table That Motion: The Special Challenges of Tables and Figures What Is What Getting the Look Down A Note on Notes Figuring It Out Get Legendary (and Use Captions) Where to Place Tables and Figures But I Am Doing a Literature Review: Could I Use a Table or Figure? Do Not Forget Chapter 16: Make Microsoft Word 2013 Work for You: APA Formatting Word 2013 Tabs and Drop-Down Menus Setting the Margins Line Spacing and Spacing Between Paragraphs Page Headers (First Page and Subsequent Pages) and Page Numbering Tabs, Centering, and the Ruler References and the Hanging Indent Preparing a Table (Rows, Columns, Lines, Centering) Fonts and Font Variations (Italics, Bold, Superscript) Page Breaks, Orphans, and Widows Spell-Checker and Grammar Checker Developing Good Habits: Autosaving, File Naming, File Storage, Frequent Backups Section V. Some Nitty-Gritty Details Chapter 17: Making a List, No Apps Required: Enumeration and Seriation Why Bother? Keeping Order at the Section Level Order Within Paragraphs or Sentences On a Related Note Chapter 18: Abbreviations, Signs, Symbols, and Punctuation: The Devil Is in the Details OMG: To Abbreviate or Not? Blinding You With Science and Latin Punctuation Section VI. In Closing: Important Considerations Chapter 19: Using Rubrics: Knowing What It Means to Write a Good Paper Follow Rubrics When Provided Example Rubric Chapter 20: Proofreading the Entire Paper: Get It Right! Sample Student Paper for Practicing Proofreading Chapter 21: Complete Sample of an Experimental (Research) Paper: Samples, Anyone? Sample Paper Additional Resources on Writing Chapter 22: How to Avoid the Most Common Mistakes: All Together Now APA Style and Format Checklist Be Aware of Professors' Pet Peeves

Informations supplémentaires

GOR009609657
9781483383231
1483383237
An EasyGuide to APA Style Beth M. Schwartz
Occasion - Très bon état
Relié
SAGE Publications Inc
20160421
328
N/A
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