Wednesday, November 27, 2019
APA Referencing â⬠How to Cite a Journal Article (Proofread My Paper)
APA Referencing ââ¬â How to Cite a Journal Article   APA Referencing ââ¬â How to Cite a Journal Article  The American Psychological Association (APA) style guide is favored by hundreds of journals, textbook publishers and academic institutions.  APA referencing is therefore one of the most widely-used citations formats, especially in the sciences, medicine and education. In this post, we cover the basics of citing a journal article using the APA referencing style.  Author-Date Citations  The basic format for all in-text citations in APA involves providing the author surname and year of publication for the cited source in parentheses:  Development of golf tourism requires significant planning (Priestly, 2006).  If the author is already named in the text, you only need to cite the year:  According to Priestly (2006), planning golf tourism demands extensive infrastructure.  If the article has three or more authors, provide all names in the first citation:  A study by LeClerc, Che, Swaddle and Cristol (2005) shows that golf courses are viable nesting sites for bluebirds.  After this, you only have to use the first authorââ¬â¢s surname and ââ¬Å"et al.â⬠:  Nest boxes on golf courses provide an excellent habitat for young bluebirds (LeClerc et al., 2005).  Quoting Sources  When quoting a source, APA citations should appear after the quoted text and include page numbers:  As well as golf courses, golf tourism requires ââ¬Å"hotels and other forms of property developmentâ⬠ (Priestly, 2006, p. 170).  If the author is named in the text, the year of publication should be given after the name, but the page numbers still appear after the quoted text:  Priestly (2006) states that ââ¬Å"essential to plan golf tourism regions carefully in order to make economic and social objectives compatibleâ⬠ (p. 170).  Reference List  APA requires all cited sources to be added to a reference list at the end of your document. Entries should include all relevant publication details, with sources sorted alphabetically by author surname.  For a journal article, the information required includes:  Author Name(s) and Initial(s) (Year). Title of article. Title of Periodical, Volume Number (Issue Number), Pages.  The Priestly article cited above, for instance, would appear as:  Priestley, G. K. (2006). Planning implications of golf tourism. Tourism and Hospitality Research, 6(3), 170-178.  If youââ¬â¢re citing an online version of a journal article, you should also include the relevant DOI or URL in the reference list:  LeClerc, J. E., Che, J. P. K., Swaddle, J. P.,  Cristol, D. A. (2005). Reproductive success and developmental stability of eastern bluebirds on golf courses. Wildlife Society Bulletin (1973-2006), 33(2), 483-493. Retrieved from jstor.org/stable/3785076    
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