An EasyGuide to APA Style
- Nyhet
Häftad, Engelska, 2026
639 kr
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2026-02-14
- Mått152 x 228 x undefined mm
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- SerieEasyGuide Series
- Antal sidor272
- Upplaga5
- FörlagSAGE Publications
- ISBN9798348811594
Tillhör följande kategorier
R. Eric Landrum is a professor and chair in the Department of Psychological Science at Boise State University. He received 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, improvement of help-seeking behavior, innovations in advising, understanding of student career paths, the psychology workforce, successful graduate school applications, and more. Eric has made more than 425 presentations, written 23 books, and published 85 peer-reviewed journal articles. He has collaborated with more than 300 research assistants and taught more than 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. 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 coeditor. He is a member of APA, a fellow of Division 2 (Society for the Teaching of Psychology), and a fellow of Division 1 (General Psychology), and he served as STP president (2014). He served as the 2015–2016 president of the Rocky Mountain Psychological Association. 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 he 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. In April 2024, Eric was named a Distinguished Professor at Boise State, the highest award for tenured faculty at the university. In January 2025, he was named a Psi Chi Distinguished Member, the highest honor bestowed by the international honor society in psychology. Regan A. R. Gurung is professor of psychological sciences at Oregon State University. He was on the faculty at the University of Wisconsin–Green Bay (UWGB) for 20 years, where he was the Ben J. and Joyce Rosenberg Professor of Human Development and Psychology. He received a BA at Carleton College (Minnesota) and a PhD at the University of Washington. He then spent three years at the University of California, Los Angeles. He has published articles in a variety of scholarly journals, including Psychological Review and Teaching of Psychology. His textbook, Health Psychology: A Cultural Approach (SAGE, 2023) is in its fifth edition, and he has coauthored/edited 15 other books, including Study Like a Champ (APA, 2023) and Transforming Introductory Psychology (APA, 2023). He is a fellow of the American Psychological Association, the American Psychological Society, and the Midwestern Psychological Association. He has won the Founder’s Award for Excellence in Teaching as well as of the Founder’s Award for Scholarship at UWGB, and he was also the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching’s Wisconsin Professor of the Year (2009) and the UW System Regents’ Teaching Excellence Award winner. In August 2017, 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, and he is the 2024 Oregon State University Margaret and Thomas Meehan Honors College Eminent Mentor. He is past president of the Society for the Teaching of Psychology and past president of Psi Chi, the international honor society in psychology. He is founding coeditor of the APA journal, Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Psychology. In January 2025, he was named a Psi Chi Distinguished Member, the highest honor bestowed by the international honor society in psychology.
- PrefaceAbout the AuthorsSection I • OverviewChapter 1 • APA Style Versus Format: Why It Matters to Your Audience and Why It Should Matter to YouWhat 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 PapersChapter 2 • Your Visual Table of Contents QuickFinderThe Sample Paper With Content and Chapter NumbersSection II • Writing With (APA) Style: BIG-PICTURE ITEMSChapter 3 • General Writing Tips Specific to APA Style: General Bare-Bones FundamentalsClear and Succinct Writing: Using Your Scholarly VoiceCommonly Confused Words in Psychology and BeyondSubject–Verb AgreementActive Voice Versus Passive Voice in APA styleSome (But Not Too Much) First-Person UsageAvoiding Anthropomorphism/the Pathetic Fallacy ErrorChapter 4 • A Quick Grammar Summary for APA-Style WritingParts of a SentenceParts of SpeechCommon Grammar Mistakes to AvoidChapter 5 • Plagiarism and How to Avoid It: Thou Shalt Not Steal (or Be Lazy)But I Didn’t Know.?.?.?.It Sounds Like a Bad WordQuoting: More Than Just a Copy and PasteParaphrasing: In Your Own WordsThat’s Really Sic [and Not a Typo]An Author’s License (Yours): Modifying Source MaterialBut I Can Freely Use My Own Work, Right?How About This for a Plagiarism Awareness Exercise?Chapter 6 • Avoiding Biased LanguageSection III • Writing With (APA) Style: GETTING DOWN TO BUSINESSThe Fundamental Lesson: View People as Individuals FirstSpecific Recommendations for Reducing Bias: Nonsexist Language and Other AreasSexual OrientationRacial and Ethnic IdentityDisabilitiesOccupationsGender and Pronouns: With an Indefinite RecommendationChapter 7 • Writing Your Introduction: Tying the Story All TogetherWhat to Include in Your IntroductionFormatting Your IntroductionGetting Your Introduction StartedUsing an Outline: Organizing Your Literature ReviewCommon Mistakes to Avoid in Your IntroductionChapter 8 • Citing Sources in Text: Whodunit (or Said It)?A Good Rule of ThumbReady, Cite, GOIn-Text Citation BasicsSome ExceptionsChapter 9 • 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/ParticipantsMaterials and ApparatusProcedureFormatting Your Method SectionChapter 10 • Writing About Statistics and Associated Fun: How Did It All Turn Out?Let Us Talk StatisticsBasics and BeyondFormatting Your Results ParagraphIncluding Effect Size and PowerChapter 11 • Writing Your Discussion: It’s a WrapFormatting Your Discussion SectionWhat to Include in Your Discussion SectionGetting Your Discussion Section StartedOrganizing Your Discussion SectionCommon Mistakes to Avoid in Your Discussion SectionSample PaperChapter 12 • Everybody Needs ReferencesA Helpful NoteCreating Your References SectionUsing AbbreviationsThe BasicsBasic References Section Formatting RulesSome Not-So-Basic Rules You Might NeedSection IV • Presenting Your Work in APA FormatChapter 13 • The Numbers Game: How to Write Numbers (and When the Rules Change)When You Use NumeralsWhen You Use WordsUsing Both Numerals and WordsHow to Use Decimal PointsAdditional Rules for Including Numbers in Your PaperMetricationWhen Do You Use Abbreviations?Chapter 14 • Formatting: Organizing, Headings, and Making Your Work Look Good to PrintWhat Goes Where?What Your Paper Should Look LikeHeadingsSpelling Matters: Spelling and Capitalization RulesFinal TouchesChapter 15 • Table That Motion: The Special Challenges of Tables and FiguresWhat Is WhatGetting the Details Just RightA Note on “Notes”Figuring It OutGet Legendary (and Use Captions)Where to Place Tables and FiguresBut I Am Doing a Literature Review: Could I Use a Table or Figure?Do Not ForgetChapter 16 • Make Microsoft Word Work for You: APA FormattingWord Tabs and Drop-Down MenusSetting the MarginsLine Spacing and Spacing Between ParagraphsPage NumberingTabs, Centering, and the RulerReferences and the Hanging IndentPreparing a Table (Rows, Columns, Lines, Centering)Fonts and Font Variations (Italics, Bold, Superscript)Page Breaks, Orphans, and WidowsSpellchecker and Grammar CheckerDeveloping Good Habits: Autosaving, File Naming, File Storage, Frequent BackupsSection V • Some Nitty-Gritty DetailsChapter 17 • Making a List, No Apps Required: Enumeration and SeriationWhy Bother?Keeping Order at the Section LevelOrder Within Paragraphs or SentencesOn a Related NoteChapter 18 • Abbreviations, Signs, Symbols, and Punctuation: The Details Can Matter: Emoji This!OMG: To Abbreviate or Not?Blinding You With Science and LatinPunctuationSection VI • In Closing: IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONSChapter 19 • Using Rubrics: Knowing What It Means to Write a Good PaperFollow Rubrics When ProvidedExample RubricsChapter 20 • Proofreading the Entire Paper: Get It Right!Sample Pages of APA Text for Practicing ProofreadingChapter 21 • How to Avoid the Most Common Mistakes: All Together NowAPA Style and Format QuizAPA Style and Format Quiz: AnswersBe Aware of Professors’ Pet PeevesAppendix A: APA Style and Format ChecklistReferencesIndex
A highly engaging, carefully presented overview of APA. Applicable to experts as much as beginners.