Do Not Use Owl/Purdue For APA Resource
Do Not Use Owl/Purdue For APA Resource
www.apastyle.org
Do not use Owl/Purdue for APA resource
Using APA style formatting for written assignments in the nursing field is the accepted
method of formatting for the behavioral sciences. It is important that you learn the principles of
APA to further your professional growth as a healthcare professional. Belmont nursing faculty
work together to support our students in their use of APA for written assignments.
Please use your APA manual and the www.apastyle.org website to support your choices for
citing references and professional writing style. Bring your APA manual with you when meeting
with your nursing faculty. Always be prepared to reference your citation decisions, within your
manual, when working with your nursing faculty.
According to APA guidelines, faculty may modify/change APA requirements for any written
assignment. For example: Faculty may not request a title page or reference page for a written
assignment. Talk to your nursing faculty prior to assignment completion to receive any specific
instructions.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=BFo KBQtv9o
Whole Document is Double Spaced:
Under Home tab, go to Paragraph. Choose Double Spacing and check box “Don’t add space
between paragraphs of same style. Apply to whole document. This will delete extra spacing
When citing an author of a journal article in the body of the paper, use the author’s last name and
year (plus page # if a direct quote).
Vietz and Grinnell (2004) note that students have difficulty synthesizing concepts in
pathophysiology. This is a paraphrase using the authors’ names in the sentence. Note the use
Studies have shown that students have difficulty synthesizing pathophysiology concepts (Vietz
& Grinnell, 2004). This is a paraphrase putting the authors’ names in parentheses. Note the use
of “&”.
“Pathophysiological concepts are difficult for students to synthesize and articulate” (Vietz &
Grinnell, 2004, p. 93). This is a direct quote (verbatim). This must use “ ”and include a page #.
On the reference page, this reference would be listed as:
Vietz, K., & Grinnell, S. (2004). Does pathophysiology have to be boring? Nurse Educator,
29 (3), 93-94.
Please pay close attention to capitalization, italics, punctuation and indentation inthis
example.
Direct quotes require you to cite the page number on which you found the quoted
material. Paraphrased citations do not require a page number.
If individual chapters of a book are written by different authors (contributors), make sure you
cite the chapter author. For example, your Patho book is edited by Carol Porth but many of the
chapters were written by contributing authors. If you look on pgs xxiii through xxix, you will
find who wrote the individual chapters. When you cite from a chapter in an edited book, such as
your Patho book, do the following:
This is an example of a direct quote. “The cell is the smallest functional unit that an organism
can be divided into and retain the characteristics necessary for life” (Carroll, 2007, p.1).
This is an example of a paraphrase of the same material. The smallest unit of an organism that
If you use content from a chapter in the Patho book that doesn’t have another author listed,
assume that Porth wrote it. On your reference page cite the chapter as follows:
Publication Style for Research Reports in Psychology.” This is a sample paper that includes
helpful reminders about writing style and use of headings within a written assignment.
http://www.belmont.edu/nursing/studentinfo/APA%20Citation%20Guides.html