APA STYLE SAMPLE REFERENCE LIST ENTRIES
Transcription
APA STYLE SAMPLE REFERENCE LIST ENTRIES
APA STYLE SAMPLE REFERENCE LIST ENTRIES GENERAL TIPS BOOKS: One Author Multiple Authors Edited Works No Author or Editor Article or Chapter in an Edited Book Revised, Second, Subsequent Editions Reprinted Articles Introduction, Preface, Forward, Afterwards Dictionary or Encyclopedia Government Publication Pamphlet or Brochure Translated Works Technical or Research Reports JOURNAL, MAGAZINE OR NEWSPAPER ARTICLES Periodical Articles - Journals or Magazines Newspaper Articles Review Editorial or Letter to the Editor PAGE 1 2 2 2 2 3 3 3-4 4 4 5 5 5 6 6 7 7 7 FULL-TEXT Aggregated Databases netLibrary InfoTrac/Gale SIRS Newsbank LexisNexis Academic 8-10 8 8-9 10 10 10 Journals, Magazines, Newletters Online Book, Part of Book, or Government Publication All Other Websites 11 12 12 INTERNET ELECTRONIC DISCUSSION SOURCES 13 AUDIOVISUAL MEDIA Television Program Music or Audio Recording Motion Picture, Videotape, or DVD 13 14 14 OTHER MATERIALS Classical Works Personal Communications (including interviews) Performances, Lectures, Speeches, Addresses, Radio Programs Music Videos 15 15 15 15 1 APA SYTLE SAMPLE REFERENCE LIST ENTRIES The information in this handout is available in the Publication manual of the American Psychological Association, 5th edition. General and specific information on citing sources is covered in Chapter 4. The numbers at the examples refer to the section of the Manual where more information can be found. You may also access the website at www.apastyle.org for updates and changes in style, policies and procedures, and www.apastyle.org/elecref.html for further assistance with electronic references. GENERAL TIPS 1. Capitalize only the first word in the title of a book or article unless the word is a proper name or is the first word after a colon (:). Use upper and lower case letters for periodical titles. 2. If there is no author given, list the title of the work or part of the work (ex. poem, short story, etc.) and then give the publication date in parentheses. The date always follows the first section of information, whether that information is the author’s name (and title, such as Ed., etc.), the title of the work, or the title of part of the work. 3. Use only one space after periods. 4. Article and chapter titles are typed as is, without quote marks before the first word or after the last word. 5. Book and periodical titles are italicized, not underlined. 6. Do not use the words Company, Inc., or Publishers in the publisher’s name. Do use the words Press or Books when they are part of the publisher’s name. (Right: Gale Research Greenhaven Press Chelsea House Wrong: Gale Research, Inc. Greenhaven Press, Inc. Chelsea House Publishers) 7. If the publisher is a university with the name of the state in its name, do not put the state in the publisher location. (Right: Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press Wrong: Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia Press.) 8. For the location of the publisher, use the first location listed or the location of the publisher’s home office. Always abbreviate the names of the U.S. states with the official U.S. Postal Service abbreviation. 9. When alphabetizing the entries, remember to go letter by letter and follow the rule “nothing precedes something.” (Ex., Thomas, T. J. comes before Thomason, C. L.) 10. Some material may be cited in the text of your paper, but cannot be listed in the Reference List. Examples of some of these types of materials are discussed on page 15 of this handout. 11. If you cannot find an exact example for your reference, find one that is most like your source. When in doubt, include more information rather than less. 2 BOOKS General information is found in sections 4.08 - 4.10 and 4.12 - 4.14. More specific information is found in sections 4.16.23 - 4.16.40. 1. One author: Last name, initial of first name. (date of publication). Title of book. Place of publication: Publisher. ex. Sparks, N. (2001). A bend in the road. NY: Warner Books. 2. Multiple authors: For two to six authors: Last name, initial of first name, & last name, initial of first name. (date of publication). Title of book. Place of publication: Publisher. ex. Hornsby, T., & Warkoczeski, L. (2000). New roles for leaders. Franklin, TN: Hillsboro Press. ex. Oberg, E., Jones, F. D., Horton, H.L., & Ryffell, H. H. (2000). Machinery’s handbook. (26th ed.). NY: Industrial Press. For more than six authors, list the first six as indicated above and then add a comma and the word et al. after the name of the sixth author and before the date of publication. 3. For an edited work, follow the above examples except add (Ed.). or (Eds.). after the editor(s) name(s) and before the publication date (4.16.25): ex. McQuillan, M. (Ed.). (2001). Deconstruction: A reader. NY: Routledge. 4. If there is no author or editor, begin your bibliographic citation with the name of the book, poem, essay, short story, article, etc., follow the examples above, and alphabetize the entry by the title (4.16.26): ex. The Hutchinson dictionary of world history. (1993). Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. ex. Merriam-Webster’s collegiate dictionary (10th ed.). (1997). Springfield: MA: MerriamWebster. 3 5. Article or chapter in an edited book (14.16.34 – 14.16.36): Last name of author, initial of first name of author. (date of publication). Name of article, chapter, poem, essay or short story. In initial of first name of editor last name of editor (Ed.), Name of anthology. {No period after the name of the anthology if there is a volume number or page numbers. If there is a volume number, then Name of anthology: Vol. number. If there are page numbers, then Name of anthology (page numbers).} (Edition number {if applicable}, pp. page numbers). Place of publication: Publisher. ex. Glancy, D. (1998). Polar Breath. In N. Baym (Ed.), The Norton anthology of American literature. (5th ed., pp. 2261-2264). NY: W. W. Norton. ex. Tensei, K. (1989). Triceratops. In D. G. Hartwell (Ed.), The world treasury of science fiction (pp. 92-103). Boston: Little, Brown. ex. Woodard, P. (1986). The library of Babel. In F. N. Magill (Ed.), Masterplots II: Short story series: Vol. 3. (pp. 1342-1344). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Salem Press. ex. McFarland, R. (1996). The ponder heart. In F. N. Magill (Ed.), Masterplots: Vol. 9. (Rev. 2nd ed., pp. 5236-5239).Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Salem Press. 6. Revised, second, or subsequent edition (4.16.27): Follow the appropriate example for author, editor, anthology, etc., and then identify the edition in parenthesis after the title. Use the abbreviations 2nd ed., 3rd ed., etc., or Rev. ed. for “Revised edition”. ex. Bogart, D. (Ed.). (2001). The Bowker annual: Library and book trade almanac (46th ed.). New Providence, NJ: R. R. Bowker. ex. Williams, T. I. (2000). A history of invention: from stone axes to silicon chips (Rev. ed.). New York: Checkmark Books. 7. Reprinted Articles: Reprinted articles have been previously published elsewhere. The most common examples are articles from the Gale Literary Criticism series and the Opposing Viewpoints, Current Controversies, and At Issues series. A reprint bibliographic citation includes the original publication information as well as the reprint publication information (4.16.39 – 4.16.40). Last name of author, initial of first name of author. (date of publication). Title of article or chapter. In initial of first name of editor last name of editor (Ed.), Name of the book where the source appears. {No period after the name of the book if there is a volume number or page numbers. If there is a volume number, then Name of book: Vol. number. If there are page numbers, then Name of book (page numbers).} (Edition number {if applicable}, pp. page numbers). Place of publication: Publisher. (Reprinted from name of original book source, pp. page numbers, by initial of first name last name, Ed. {if applicable}, place of publication: publisher) or (Reprinted from name of original journal source, volume number(issue number, if applicable), page numbers) {DO NOT put a period after the parenthesis when citing the reprint information.} 4 ex. Weinberg, H. (2001). J. D. Salinger’s Holden and Seymour and the siritual activist hero. In J. W. Hunter (Vol. Ed.), Contemporary literary criticism: Vol. 138. (pp. 202-209). Detroit: Gale Group. (Reprinted from J. D. Salinger, pp. 63-79, by H. Bloom, Ed., 1987, Chelsea House) ex. Marti, B. (1995). Seneca’s tragedies: A new interpretation. In L. J. Trudeau (Vol. Ed.), Drama criticism: Vol. 5. (pp. 287-297). Detroit: Gale Research. (Reprinted from Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, 76, 216-245) ex. Olivares, J. (2000). The streets of Gary Soto. In A. S. Nesbitt & S. Salas (Vol. Eds.), Poetry criticism: Vol. 28. (pp. 382-389). Detroit: Gale Group. (Reprinted from Latin American Literary Review, 18(35), 32-49) ex. Anderson, W. (1998). End child labor: Buy their products. In G. E. McCuen (Ed.), Modern slavery and the global economy (pp. 111-115). Hudson, WI: G. E. McCuen. (Reprinted from Kathie Lee’s children, The Free Market, pp. 1, 7, 1996 September) ex. Zuckerman, M. B. (1997). Television violence contributes to juvenile crime. In A. E. Sadler (Ed.), Juvenile crime: Opposing viewpoints (pp. 52-55). San Diego, CA: Greenhaven Press. (Reprinted from The victims of tv violence, U.S. News & World Report, 1993, August 2) ex. Litz, A. W. (1987). Ithaca. In H. Bloom (Ed.), James Joyce’s Ulysses (pp. 39-56). NY: Chelsea House. (Reprinted from James Joyce’s Ulysses: Critical essays, by C. Hart & D. Hayman, Eds., 1974, University of California Press) 8. For an introduction, preface, forward, or afterward (4.10): Suggested general format for citing this information, as there are no specific examples: Last name of writer, initial of first name of writer. (date of publication). Title of the part.{if given} [Part cited]. Title of the work (pp. page numbers of the part cited). Place of publication: Publisher. ex. Bruccoli, M. J. (Ed.). (1989). [Preface]. The short stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald (pp. xiii-xix). NY: Charles Scribner’s Sons. ex. Safire, W. (1980). The great permitter. [Introduction]. On language (pp. xi-xv). NY: Times Books. 9. An article in a dictionary or encyclopedia should be cited as follows (4.16.30 & 4.16.38): ex. Samurai. (2002). In The new encyclopaedia Britannica (Vol. 10, p. 383). Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica. ex. Izalco. (2000). In The encyclopedia Americana (Vol. 15, p. 634). Danbury, CT: Grolier. ex. Greenfield, S. M. (1996). Godparenthood. In D. Levinson & M. Ember (Eds.), The encyclopedia of cultural anthropology: Vol. 2. (pp.541-544). NY: Henry Holt. 5 10. Government Publication (4.16.24, 4.16.41, 4.16.44, 4.16.45): Name of Government Name of Agency. Or Last name of author, initial of first name of author. (date of publication). Title of part or article.{if any}. Title of publication {if there is a report number, etc., put the information in parenthesis immediately after the title) (pp. page numbers if applicable). Place of publication: Publisher. {If the author and the publisher are the same, put the word Author as the name of the publisher.} ex. United States Census Bureau. (2000). Earnings by highest degree earned: 1999. In Statistical abstract of the United States: 2000. (p. 158). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. ex. United States Department of Education. (1999). 1999-2000 Reauthorization training: Participant’s guide. Washington, DC: Author. ex. Harrington, H. (1999). The adventures of Julia and Robbie: The disaster twins. Washington, DC: Federal Emergency Management Agency. ex. National Institute of Mental Health. (1990). Clinical training in serious mental illness (DHHS Publication No. ADM 90-1679). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. 11. Cite a pamphlet or brochure (4.16.33): ex. National Institute on Aging. (1998, May). Ginko Bilboa. [Pamphlet]. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. 12. For a translated work (4.16.32 & 4.16.39): Last name of author, initial of first name of author. (date of publication). Title of book Initial of first name and last name of translator, Trans.). Place of publication: Publisher. (Original work published year of publication if available) {DO NOT put a period after the parenthesis when citing the original publication information.} ex. Camus, A. (1988). The Stranger (M. Ward, Trans.). New York: A. A. Knopf. (Original work published 1946) ex. Courtois, S. (1999). The Black Book of Communism: Crimes, Terror, Repression. (J. Murphy, Trans., & M. Kramer, Ed. & Trans.). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ex. Yevtushenko, Y. (1991). Unrequited Love. (M. Glenny, Trans.). In A. C. Todd (Ed.), The Collected Poems: 1952-1990 (pp. 300-302). New York: Henry Holt. 6 13. For technical and research reports (4.16.41 – 4.16.48) Last name of author, initial of first name of author. (date of publication). Title of report (If available, the Report, monograph or contract number assigned to the report by the issuing organization). Place of publication: Publisher. ex. Craig, J. W. (1970). Design of lossy filters (M.I.T. Rep. No. 19). Cambridge, MA: M.I.T. Press. (Original work published as Theory and design data for uniformly dissipative, doubly terminated bandpass and lowpass filters, by Lincoln Laboratory, 1966, Tech. Rep. No. 411) ex. Garland, P. H. (1985). Serving more than students: A critical need for college student personnel services. Washington, DC: ERIC Clearinghouse on Higher Education. JOURNAL, MAGAZINE OR NEWSPAPER ARTICLES General information is found in section 4.11. More specific information is found in sections 4.16.1 - 4.16.22. TIPS: Italicize the name of the journal and the volume number. If there is no volume number, use the month or season with the year. Capitalize all of the major words in the periodical title. Only include the issue number (in parentheses after the volume number), if each issue of the journal begins with page 1. Only with newspapers, use p. or pp. before the page number(s). Use (n.d.). if no publication date is available 1. Periodical articles – Journals or Magazines (4.16.1 – 4.16.8): Last name of author, initial of first name of author {if available}. (date of publication). Title of article. Name of Periodical, volume number(issue number if applicable), page numbers. ex. Leonard, J. A., Wayne, R. K., Wheeler, J. Valadez, R. Guillen, S., & Vila, C. (2002, November 22). Ancient DNA evidence for old world origin of new world dogs. Science, 298, 1613-1616. ex. Simons, R. L., Lin, K.H., Gordon, L. C., Brody, G. H., Murry, V., & Conger, R. D. (2002). Community differences in the association between parenting practices and child conduct problems. Journal of Marriage and Family, 64, 331-345. ex. Watson, E., & Martin, D. (2000). The miss America pageant: Pluralism, femininity, and Cinderella all in one. Journal of Popular Culture, 34(2), 105-126. ex. Piore, A. (2001, July 30). A nuke train gets ready to roll. Newsweek, 138, 26-28. ex. Young, G. (2001, July). Sackbuts and spectrograms. Electronic Musician, 17, 96-109. 7 2. Newspaper articles (4.16.9 – 4.16.11): Last name of author, initial of first name of author {if available}. (date of publication). Title of article. Name of newspaper, p. page number. ex. Davidson, P. (2000, October 23). More businesses turn to instant messaging. USA Today, p. 1B. 3. Review (4.16.63 – 4.16.64): Last name of reviewer, initial of first name of reviewer {if available}. (date of publication). Title of the review. [Review of the book Title of the work reviewed]. Name of periodical in which review appeared, volume number(issue number if applicable), page number(s){if given}. ex. Perry, L. (2002). [Review of the book The Universalist movement in America, 1770-1880]. William & Mary Quarterly, 59, 527-530. ex. Hitchens, C. (2002, June). A man of permanent contradictions. [Review of the book The long recessional: The imperial life of Rudyard Kipling]. Atlantic Monthly, 289, 96-103. 5. Editorial or Letter to the Editor (4.16.11): Last name of author, initial of first name of author {if available}. (date of publication). Title. [Editorial]. or [Letter to the editor]. Name of journal, magazine or newspaper in which review appeared, volume number(issue number if applicable), page number(s){if given}. ex. Goodbye, Dolly. (2002, May 21). [Editorial]. Christianity Today, 36-37. ex. Sage, W. M. (2002, June 12). Putting the Patient in Patient Safety: Linking Patient Complaints and Malpractice Risk. [Editorial]. JAMA, 287, 3003-3005. ex. Baumgartner, F. (2002, June 14). [Letter to the editor]. Science, 296, 1967-1968. ex. Feldbaum, C. B. (2002, June 14). [Reply to letter of F. Baumgartner]. Science, 296, 1968. 8 FULL-TEXT In full-text databases, the entire article can be printed from the computer. For more information on citing fulltext material, please refer to the Publication manual of the American Psychological Association, 5th edition, sections 4.15 and 4.16 I (4.16.71 - 4.16.95). If you cannot find some of the information, cite what is available. ONLINE DATABASES Aggregated databases (4.16.88 & 4.16.90): The following information pertains to examples from the on-line databases accessible through Northeast State. Last name of author, initial of first name of author {if available}. (date of publication). Title of article. Name of Periodical, volume number(issue number if applicable), page numbers. Retrieved month day, year, from name of database. {Optional: you may include an item, record, or accession number in parenthesis after the name of the database. This number, if given, is found at the top or bottom of the article.} No internet address is needed. or Last name, initial of first name. (date of publication). Title of book. Place of publication: Publisher. Retrieved month day, year, from name of database. {Optional: you may include an item or accession number in parenthesis after the name of the database. This number, if given, is found at the top or bottom of the article.} No internet address is needed. netLibrary: ex. Bench, J. (1999). The complete idiot’s guide to baseball. NY: Alpha Books. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from netLibrary. ex. Hyland, A. (1996). The medieval warhorse from Byzantium to the crusades. Conshohocken, PA: Combined Books. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from netLibrary. ex. Patel, N. V. (2003). Adaptive Evolutionary Information Systems. Hershey, PA: Idea Group Publishing. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from netLibrary. InfoTrac/Gale: ex. Gordon, B. B. (2001, April). Murder in outer space? Astronomy, 29, 6. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web InfoTrac OneFile. (A75106294). {⇐ This record number is optional.} ex. Harmon, R. J. (2001). Infant and toddler mental health. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 40(1), 7. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Expanded Academic ASAP. 9 ex. Kaplan, D. E. (2002, April 15). Many leads, many dead ends: FBI’s probe of Anthrax attacks. U.S. News & World Report, 24. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Expanded Academic ASAP. ex. Farrell, T. (2002, March). A ticket to ride: The rapid rise of snowboarding. USA Today Magazine, 48. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web General Reference Center Gold. ex. Mersmann, J. (1981). Allen Ginsberg. In American writers (pp. 307-333). Charles Scribner’s Sons. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Literature Resource Center. ex. Unrue, D. H. (n.d.). Systems and patterns. In Short story criticism: Vol. 31. (Reprinted from Truth and vision in Katherine Anne Porter’s fiction, pp. 60-105, 1985, University of Georgia Press) Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Literature Resource Center. ex. Levy, L. B. (1975). The problem of faith in Young Goodman Brown. JEGP: Journal of English and Germanic Philology, 74(3), 357-387. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Literature Resource Center. ex. Dawn song. (1995). In Merriam-Webster’s encyclopedia of literature. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Literature Resource Center. ex. Gabriel Garcia Marquez. (n.d.). Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Contemporary Literary Criticism—Select. Gale Group Databases. ex. Wood, D. S. (1986). Female heroism in the ice age: Jean Auel’s earth children. Extrapolation, 27(1), 33-38. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Contemporary Literary Criticism— Select. ex. Smith, G. (2002, September 9). The design fad that won’t go away. Electronic Engineering Times, 54. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Computer Database. ex. Rea, P. J., McLaughlin, V. L., & Walther-Thomas, C. (2002). Outcomes for students with learning disabilities in inclusive and pullout programs. Exceptional Children, 68, 203. Retrieved July 18, 2002, from InfoTrac Web Professional Collection. ex. Anderson, J. B. (2001). Rabies. In D. Olendorf, C. Jeryan, & K. Boyden (Eds.), The Gale encyclopedia of medicine. Farmington Hills, MI: Gale Research. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Health &Wellness Resource Center. ex. Safran, S. P. (2001). Asperger syndrome: The emerging challenge to special education. Exceptional Children, 67, 151. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Health & Wellness Resource Center. ex. Crandall, C. (2002, August). Osteoporosis in men: Where do we stand with screening and treatment? Consultant, 42. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web Health Reference Center Academic. ex. Truett, R. (2002, September 16). Electrovan dodged the crusher. Automotive News, 34. Retrieved July 18, 2003, from InfoTrac Web General Business File International. 10 SIRS: ex. Miller, R. (2002, June 7). Archaeologists unearth 2,000 year-old canal system in Florida. Sun-Sentinel [Ft. Lauderdale, FL]. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from SIRS Knowledge Source SIRS Researcher. ex. Bright, C. (2001, November/December). Chocolate could bring the forest back. World Watch, 17-28. Retrieved July 15, 2003 from SIRS Knowledge Source SIRS Researcher. ex. McCammon, S. L. (2002, May). Ensuring safe food. Economic Perspectives, 9-11. United States Department of State. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from SIRS Knowledge Source SIRS Government Reporter. ex. Johnson, V. (2002, April/May). Symmetry in the garden. Old-House Interiors, 72-75. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from SIRS Knowledge Source SIRS Renaissance. NewsBank: ex. Cheek, D. (2003, April 13). Bill aims to prevent escalating road rage. The Tennessean [Nashville, TN], p. 1A. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from NewsBank NewsFile. ex. Harwood, W. (2003, June 11). NASA launches first of two Mars rovers. The Washington Post, p. A14. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from NewsBank NewsFile. ex. Epstein, A. (1985, September 15). New computer network to watch citizens’ money. The Miami Herald. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from NewsBank Retrospective. ex. Kilpatrick, C. (1974, September 10). Nixon pardon stirs outcry against Ford. The Washington Post. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from NewsBank Retrospective. LexisNexis Academic: ex. Lafee, S. (2001, August 22). AI’s missing link may be in the gut. San Diego Union-Tribune, p. F3. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from LexisNexis Academic News. ex. Stasio, F. (Host). (2003, May 16). Budget shortfalls in many states in the nation. [Transcript of radio episode]. In Talk of the Nation. National Public Radio. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from LexisNexis Academic News. ex. Defenders of Wildlife v. Dalton. (2000). 97 F. Supp. 2d. 1197. No. 00-02-00060. United States Court of International Trade. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from LexisNexis Academic Legal Research. ex. Americans With Disabilities Act of 1990, 42 U.S.C.S. § 12102. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from LexisNexis Academic Legal Research. ex. Tennessee. (1998). World Almanac of the U.S.A. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from LexisNexis Academic Reference. ex. Marfan syndrome: Cure sought for tall people’s disease. (2002, May 24). Genomics & Genetics Weekly, 16. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from LexisNexis Academic Medical. 11 INTERNET Use (n.d.). if no publication date is available. If no page numbers are given, do not assign any page numbers or use the abbreviation n.p. Do not put a period after, or underline, the Internet address. If you view an article on the Internet that has a printed version, add [Electronic version]. after the article title. If you have to break a URL that goes on another line, break the address after a slash or before a period. Do not insert a hyphen at the break. 1. Journals, Magazines, or Newsletters (4.16.71 – 4.16,74 & 4.16.89): Last name of author, initial of first name of author {if available}. (date of publication if available; otherwise, put n.d.). Title of article. Name of Periodical, volume number(issue number if applicable), page numbers{if available}. Retrieved month day, year, from internet address ex. Newspaper Article Babinek, M. (2003, July 15). Hurricane Claudette nears Texas coast. The Washington Post Online. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/ A57777-2003Jul15.html?nav=hptoc_n ex. Magazine Article Easterbrook, G. (2000, November). Hybrid vigor: A funny thing happened on the way to the demise of the plug-in car. [Electronic version]. Atlantic. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2000/11/easterbrook.htm ex. Scholarly Journal Korgen, K., Odell, P., & Schumaker, P. (2001). Internet use among college students: Are there differences by race/ethnicity? Electronic Journal of Sociology, 5(3). Retrieved July 15, 2003, from http://www.sociology.org/content/vol005.003/korgen.html 12 2. Online Book, Part of a Book, or Government Publication (14.16.75 -14.16.77, 14.16.80, & 14.16.91): Last name of author, initial of first name of author {if available}. (date of publication if available; otherwise, put n.d.). Title of the part {if applicable}. Name of work. Retrieved month day, year, from internet address ex. Online Book Khayyam, O. (n.d.). The Rubaiyat. (Fitzgerald, Trans.), (5th ed.). Retrieved July 15, 2003, from http://www.arabiannigts.org/rubaiyat/index2.html Hardy, T. (1878). Return of the native. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from http://elf.chaoscafe.com/ hardy/native ex. Part of an Online Book Poe, E.A. (n.d.). A tale of the ragged mountains. In Selected works of Poe. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from http://elf.chaoscafe.com/poe/works ex. Government Publication United States Sentencing Commission. (n.d.). 2001 annual report. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from http://www.ussc.gov/annrpt/2001/ar01toc.htm 3. All other Websites including Scholarly Projects, Professional or Personal Sites (4.16.75 – 4.16.84): Last name of author, initial of first name of author {if available}. (date of publication if available; otherwise, put n.d.). Title of the part. Name of work {if applicable and available}. Retrieved month day, year, from internet address ex. Underground railroad. (n.d.). Retrieved July 15, 2003, from http://historychannel.com/ ex. Panel: Smallpox vaccine not for everyone. (2002, June 20). Retrieved July 15, 2003, from http://www.cnn.com/2002/HEALTH/conditions/06/20/smallpox.vaccine/index.html ex. Jumping Mouse. (n.d.). Retrieved July 15, 2003, from www.encyclopedia.com/html/j1/ jumpingm.asp ex. Potter, N. (2002, June 19). Icebound: Russian scientists stranded on ship in Antarctic ice. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from http://abcnews.go.com/sections/wnt/DailyNews/ antarctic_rescue020619.html ex. Keyes, B. (1996, April 15). Nostradamus. Retrieved July 15, 2003, from www.activemind.com/ Mysterious/Topics/Nostradamus/ 13 ELECTRONIC DISCUSSION SOURCES If the source is not accessible over time (archived), does not have scholarly value, or is not peer reviewed, it cannot be listed in the Reference List. Most electronic discussion sources are not suitable for inclusion in the Reference List; however, if the information is retrievable and scholarly, follow the example below: Newsgroups, Online Forums, Discussion Groups, Mailing Lists (4.16.85 – 4.16.87) Last name of author, initial of first name of author. (date of posting). Subject line of the message. Message posted to internet address ex. Rinehart, R. (2002, May 6). Archiving the Avant Garde: Documenting and preserving variable media art. Message posted to http://lists.village.virginia.edu/lists_archive/Humanist/ v16/0000.html AUDIOVISUAL MEDIA (4.16.65 – 4.16.70) 1. Television Program (4.16.66 – 4.16.68): For a single episode from a series: Last name, initial of the first name of the writer (Writer), & last name, initial of the first name of the director or producer or both (Director or Producer). (year of broadcast). Title of episode or segment [Television series episode]. In first initial of first name last name (Producer), Title of series. City of the network: Name of the network. For a broadcast or series: Last name, initial of the first name of the writer or director or both (Writer or Director). (broadcast date or year of series). Title of series or broadcast [Television series or broadcast]. City of the network: Name of the network. ex. Rye, R. (Director). (2002, June 10). Oliver twist [Television series episode]. In C. Sarson, J. Wilson, & R. Eaton (Producers), ExxonMobil masterpiece theatre. Alexandria, VA: PBS. ex. Pratt, C. (Executive Producer). (2003, May 4). Face the nation [Television broadcast]. Washington, DC: CBS Broadcasting, Inc. ex. Johnston, K. (Producer). (2003). Law & order [Television series]. New York: Wolf Films. 14 2. Music or Audio Recording (4.16.69 – 4.16.70): For a music recording: Last name, first initial of writer. (copyright date). Title of song [Recorded by first initial of artist last name of artist if different from the writer]. On Title of album [Medium – CD, record, cassette, etc.]. Location: Name of label. (Recording date if different from the copyright date) ex. Conneff, K. (Arranger). (2000). Jack of all trades [Recorded by The Chieftains]. On Water from the well [CD]. NY: RCA Victor/BMG Classics. ex. Keys, A. (2001). Piano & I. On Songs in A minor [CD]. NY: J Records, LLC. ex. Lamar, H. & Bentley, S. (2000). These are the days [Recorded by J. D. Messina]. On Burn [CD]. Nashville, TN: Curb Records. For an audio recording: Last name, first initial of originator or contributor. (Function of originator or contributor). (copyright date). Title of recording [Medium – CD, cassette, etc.]. Location: Name of distributor. ex. Hesse, H. (Author). (1986). Siddartha [Read by D. Jacobi]. [Cassette recording]. Auburn, CA: Audio Partners. ex. Dubois, W.E. B. (Author/Speaker). (1992). The souls of black folk [Cassette recording]. Portsmouth, RI: JimCin Recordings. ex. Brown, S. (Author). (2002). A kiss remembered [Read by K. Ziemba]. [CD]. NY: Audioworks. 3. Motion Picture, Videotape or DVD (4.16.65): Last name, initial of the first name of the producer or director or both (Producer or Director). (year of release). Title of the work [Motion picture, Videorecording, DVD]. Country of origin{where it was primarily made and released}: Name of the studio. ex. Liman, D. (Producer & Director). (2002). The Bourne Identity [Motion picture]. United States: Universal Pictures. ex. Shadyac, T. (Director). (1999). Patch Adams [Videorecording]. United States: Universal Studios. ex. Rigas, E. & Miller, R. (Producers), & Greenwald, M. (Writer/Director). (2000). Songcatcher [DVD]. United States: Songcatcher Films, LLC. 15 OTHER MATERIALS The APA Publication Manual’s purpose is to provide uniform information for preparing, presenting and publishing scientific research and technical reports. Because some sources may not be considered as providing scholarly, recoverable data, they cannot be included in the Reference List. The following types of sources do not have specific guidelines for citation. Suggestions for proper citation are included where possible, but they are only suggestions based on the Manual’s guidelines and are not an indication that the source should be included in the Reference List. Some sources are specifically identified as unacceptable for inclusion in the Reference List. Use your best judgment as to the scholarly nature of the item before including it. When in doubt, please discuss the source with your instructor. Although they cannot be included in the Reference List, the sources may be cited in the text of the paper. Classical Works (3.100 – 3.101): Major classical works, including ancient Greek and Roman works and the Bible, are not included in the Reference List. Include the version used in the first citation in your paper and use the numbers of the books, chapters, verses, lines, etc., instead of page numbers when referring to a specific part of the work. Do not use page numbers even with a direct quote. ex. Mark 9:4 (King James Version) ex. (Euripides, Helen, trans. 1994, line 58) Personal Communications (including interviews) (3.102): Personal communications include e-mail, nonarchived electronic discussion groups or bulletin boards, personal interviews, telephone conversations, letters, memos, etc. These sources are considered unrecoverable and/or not scholarly. They may be cited in the body of the paper only. ex. (J. G. Smith, personal communication, April 16, 2003) Performances (concerts, plays, operas, ballets); Lectures, Speeches, Addresses; Radio Programs: There are no specific guidelines for these sources. They could be considered unrecoverable since each event is unique every time. Although the source should not be included in the Reference List, it can be cited in the body of the paper. If the source is commonly available because it is recorded (on videotape, audiocassette, CD, or DVD), or there is a transcript, then it may be included in the Reference List. Please refer to citation guidelines for the appropriate way to cite the source. When in doubt, consult your instructor. Music Videos: There are no specific guidelines for citing music videos. They can be cited in the body of the paper. They may be included in the Reference List following the example of a television program episode or the videorecording or DVD examples. Please consult with your instructor before including a music video in the Reference List. Last updated 18 July 2003