Simply put, APA Style is designed for writing and understanding scientific literature about people. Here are some of the ways the needs of the behavioral science community of scholars show in the style:
Journal article reporting standards
APA Style provides specific directions on what information to include in certain kinds of papers. Specifically, if you are conducting and reporting the results of experiments, you should follow APA’s journal article reporting standards, or APA Style JARS. JARS ensure that all researchers consistently report the same kinds of information, which allows readers to evaluate the work as well as to make comparisons between works, such as in a meta-analysis.
If you are a student writing a simpler APA Style paper, for example, a reaction or response paper, annotated bibliography, or literature review, we recommend first focusing on fulfilling the assignment requirements set by your instructor.
To learn how JARS can be relevant to you, check out this blog post about APA Style JARS for high school students.
Bias-free and inclusive language
APA provides detailed, science-backed guidelines on how to describe people with dignity and respect in the form of the bias-free language guidelines and the Inclusive Language Guide (2nd ed.). The guidelines cover topics including age, disability, gender, race and ethnicity, sexual orientation, and socioeconomic status.
If you’re new to this topic, start with the Brief Guide to Bias-Free and Inclusive Language (PDF, 316KB).
Emphasis on paraphrasing rather than quotation
When writing in APA Style, paraphrase rather than quote in most cases. Whereas in literature it is often important to respond to the exact wording an author used, in science you should primarily respond to the ideas, which means restating them in your own words.
For help on learning to paraphrase, including how to cite a long paraphrase, check out our page on paraphrasing.
Page numbers not in every in-text citation
In-text citations of paraphrased material in APA Style consist of the author and year, whereas in MLA style they consist of the author and page number. Page numbers (or other location information for works without page numbers) are required in APA Style citations only for direct quotations.
If you are paraphrasing in APA Style, it is optional to include a page number (although read your assignment guidelines, because your instructor may request page numbers regardless).
In-text citations include the year
APA Style in-text citations include the year, whereas MLA citations do not. Each style suits its discipline. Whereas literature is evergreen, science progresses. Older science may be out of date and thus not of use to readers, so having a year in the citation allows readers to quickly understand how old the source is.
Although APA Style does not have formal requirements for how old (or rather, young) your sources have to be, instructors may require you use only sources published within the last 5–10 years or similar, so check your assignment guidelines carefully. And regardless of any requirements, try to use the most current information possible because this is best for advancing the scholarship in your field.
References contain similar information, presented differently
References in APA and MLA styles usually include information about the author, date, title, and source of a work, which allows readers to identify and locate the work. However, the information is presented in a different order and with different capitalization and punctuation depending on the style.
For a step-by-step guide to the different formats for common sources such as journal articles, books, edited book chapters, and webpages, check out the APA Style and MLA Style Reference Comparison Guide (PDF, 104KB).
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