APA Style
APA Style
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In-text references must be included following the use of a quote or paraphrase taken
from another piece of work.
In-text citations are citations within the main body of the text and refer to a direct quote
or paraphrase. They correspond to a reference in the main reference list. These
citations include the surname of the author and date of publication only. Using an
example author James Mitchell, this takes the form:
Direct Quote: The citation must follow the quote directly and contain a page number
after the date, for example (Mitchell, 2017, p.104). This rule holds for all of the variations
listed.
Parenthetical: The page number is not needed.
Two Authors:
The surname of both authors is stated with either ‘and’ or an ampersand between. For
example:
Mitchell, Smith, and Thomson (2017) state… Or …(Mitchell, Smith, & Thomson, 2017).
Further cites can be shorted to the first author’s name followed by et al:
Only the first author’s surname should be stated followed by et al, see the above
example.
No Authors:
If the author is unknown, the first few words of the reference should be used. This is
usually the title of the source.
If this is the title of a book, periodical, brochure or report, is should be italicised. For
example:
If this is the title of an article, chapter or web page, it should be in quotation marks. For
example:
Works should be cited with a, b, c etc following the date. These letters are assigned
within the reference list, which is sorted alphabetically by the surname of the first author.
For example:
If these works are by the same author, the surname is stated once followed by the dates
in order chronologically. For instance:
If these works are by multiple authors then the references are ordered alphabetically by
the first author separated by a semicolon as follows:
In this situation the original author and date should be stated first followed by ‘as cited
in’ followed by the author and date of the secondary source. For example:
Lorde (1980) as cited in Mitchell (2017) Or (Lorde, 1980, as cited in Mitchell, 2017)
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In-text citation doesn’t vary depending on source type, unless the author is unknown.
Reference list citations are highly variable depending on the source.
Book referencing is the most basic style; it matches the template above, minus the URL
section. So the basic format of a book reference is as follows:
Mitchell, J.A., Thomson, M., & Coyne, R.P. (2017). A guide to citation. London,
England: My Publisher
Jones, A.F & Wang, L. (2011). Spectacular creatures: The Amazon rainforest (2nd ed.).
San Jose, Costa Rica: My Publisher
Williams, S.T. (Ed.). (2015). Referencing: A guide to citation rules (3rd ed.). New York,
NY: My Publisher
In the following example, B.N. Troy is the author of the chapter and S.T. Williams is the
editor.
Troy, B.N. (2015). APA citation rules. In S.T, Williams (Ed.). A guide to citation
rules (2nd ed., pp. 50-95). New York, NY: Publishers.
An E-Book reference is the same as a book reference expect the publisher is swapped
for a URL. The basic structure is as follows:
*optional.
E-Book example:
Mitchell, J.A., Thomson, M., & Coyne, R.P. (2017). A guide to citation. Retrieved from
https://www.mendeley.com/reference-management/reference-manager
This follows the same structure as an edited book chapter reference except the
publisher is exchanged for a URL. The structure is as follows:
Last name of the chapter author, initial(s). (Year). Chapter title. In editor initial(s),
surname (Ed.). Title (ed., pp.chapter page range). Retrieved from URL
Troy, B.N. (2015). APA citation rules. In S.T, Williams (Ed.). A guide to citation
rules (2nd ed., pp. 50-95). Retrieved from https://www.mendeley.com/reference-
management/reference-manager
Articles differ from book citations in that the publisher and publisher location are not
included. For journal articles, these are replaced with the journal title, volume number,
issue number and page number. The basic structure is:
Mitchell, J.A. (2017). Changes to citation formats shake the research world. The
Mendeley Telegraph, Research News, pp.9. Retrieved from
https://www.mendeley.com/reference-management/reference-manager
Author surname, initial(s). (Year, month day). Title. Title of the Magazine, pp.
Mitchell, J.A. (2017). How citation changed the research world. The Mendeley, pp. 26-
28
Image Example:
Film Example:
Writer surname, initial(s) (Writer), & Director surname, initial(s) (Director). (Year of
Release). Episode title [Television series episode]. In Executive producer surname,
initial(s) (Executive Producer), TV series name. City, State of original channel: Network,
Studio or Distributor
TV Programme Example:
Catlin, M., and Walley-Beckett, Moire (Writers), & Johnson, R (Director). (2010). Fly
[Television series episode]. In Schnauz, T. (Executive Producer). Breaking bad. Culver
City, CA: Sony Pictures Television
Song Example:
Beyonce, Diplo, MNEK, Koenig, E., Haynie, E., Tillman, J., and Rhoden, S.M. (2016)
Hold up [Recorded by Beyonce]. On Lemonade [visual album]. New York, NY:
Parkwood Records (August 16)
Website example:
To learn more about citing a web page and entire websites in APA, MLA or Harvard
check out How to Cite a Website post.
For a summary of all the references for each source type along with examples take a
look at our Ultimate Citation Cheat Sheet. It also contains examples for MLA
8 and Harvard formats.