Short-Form Writing Style Guide



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Short-Form Writing Guide

First-Year Sequence

Copyright

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Introduction

This short-form writing style guide has been specially created for the First-Year Sequence of courses at University of Phoenix.

The purpose of this guide is to provide the basic rules necessary for writing papers that are consistent in style and formatting and that respect the intellectual property rights of experts whose material you refer to in your formal papers. This guide is consistent with the university Writing & Style Guidelines and with the publication style of the American Psychological Association (APA). If you have any questions about what these rules mean or how to use them, always check with your instructor.

Formatting Your Paper

Font Styles

• All text must be written in the same font.

• Use Times New Roman, Arial, or Courier, 12-point size.

• Use italics sparingly for emphasis; do not use bold, underlining, or all capital letters.

Margins

• Use 1-inch margins on all sides of each page.

• Align text to the left side of the page, leaving the right side ragged.

Spacing

• Indent the first line of each paragraph ½ inch, or one tab.

• Double-space throughout the text, including the title page and reference page.

• Leave one space between words.

• Use either one space or two spaces consistently after sentence-ending punctuation throughout your paper.

Title Page

• Double-space. Use upper- and lowercase letters, with no bold or underlining.

• Include the following on your title page:

o Title of the paper

o Your name

o Course title

o Date

o Faculty name

• You can use Riverpoint Writer or the title page template in the Center for Writing Excellence to create title pages for assignments. Riverpoint Writer is an advanced APA style and formatting tool that may surpass the requirements for your course. Verify with your instructor whether the tool meets the style expectations for your course.

Pages

• Place the page number in the upper right-hand corner.

• Include the title page, paper content, and reference page (where applicable) as one continuous document rather than as three separate documents.

Lists

• Use numbered lists if you need to describe long, step-by-step processes.

• Use bulleted lists only for information that is significantly easier to read as a list than as part of the text.

Abbreviations

• Use the abbreviations a.m. and p.m. for time.

• For an acronym that will be used throughout the paper, write out the term the first time and then include the acronym in parentheses. Then, in the rest of your paper, use only the acronym.

Example: Those decisions are made by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). For HUD rules and regulations, contact . . .

Recognizing Intellectual Property

You must acknowledge outside sources in your paper by citing the sources in the body of the paper (in-text citations) and on the reference page. There are three main ways of using outside sources in your paper: quoting directly, paraphrasing, and summarizing. Each of those requires an in-text citation and a reference page entry.

In-Text Citations

Direct quotations use two or more words taken word-for-word from the source.

• Enclose direct quotations—the original author’s words—in double quotation marks to differentiate between your words and the original author’s words.

• Include the page or paragraph number of the original material in parentheses after the quotation. This will help your reader locate the original information quickly and easily.

• If you mention the author’s name in your sentence, include the year of publication in parentheses after the name. Otherwise, place both the author’s name and the year in parentheses after the quotation.

Example: According to Mandelbrot and Hudson (2004), “This equilibrium market clearing price is automatically interpreted as being the mean of a normal probability distribution” (p. 46).

Paraphrasing is using another person’s material or information but rewriting it in your words.

• Digest the information, and then rephrase it completely in your own words. Do not use the original author’s phrasing; you may need to reuse one or two key terms, but the rest of the wording should be yours.

• If you mention the author’s name in your sentence, include the year of publication in parentheses after the name. Otherwise, place both the author’s name and the year in parentheses after the paraphrased information.

Example: Some experts contend that price movement does not follow a bell curve at all (Mandelbrot & Hudson, 2004).

Summarizing is similar to paraphrasing; instead of using a particular piece of information, though, you are reviewing an entire source in your own words.

• Review the entire source and then sum it up in your own words. Do not use the original author’s phrasing; you may need to reuse one or two key terms, but the rest of the wording should be yours.

• If you mention the author’s name in your sentence, include the year of publication in parentheses after the name. Otherwise, place both the author’s name and the year in parentheses after the summarized information.

Example: Mandelbrot and Hudson (2004) have combined Mandelbrot’s mathematical framework with Hudson’s knowledge of Wall Street.

Reference Page

Reference Page Citations

All sources cited in the body of a paper must appear at the end of the paper on a separate page titled References, with the title centered at the top of the page.

• Reference page citations include only the sources you cited in the paper. Do not include any references that were not cited in the paper.

• Personal communications—interviews, memos, bulletins, or phone calls—may be cited in the paper but are not included in the reference page.

• Each citation entry must indicate the who, when, what, and where of the source, in that order.

o Who wrote the source information: the authors’ names. If there is no author, indicate the publisher.

o When the source information was written: the year of publication. If none is indicated, use n.d., for no date.

o What is the title of the source information: the title of the article or book.

o Where the source information was retrieved: For a library source, indicate the database you used; for a website, provide the link; for a book, indicate the publishing location.

• Add a period and a single space after each element in an entry (author, date, title, and so on) and at the end of the entry.

• Alphabetize the sources by the author’s last name.

• Double-space the list, and use a hanging indent (the first line of each entry is flush left, and subsequent lines are indented ½ inch).

Reference Example – Book Source

Mandelbrot, B., & Hudson, R. L. (2004). The misbehavior of markets. New York, NY: Basic Books.

Reference Example – Online Library Source

Lovejoy, L. (2002, Winter). The way we learn: A plan for success. Public Personnel Management, 31(4), 441–446. Retrieved from EBSCOhost database.

Reference Example – Website Source

Legacee Management Systems. (n.d.). A short guide on leadership traits. Retrieved from

For Further Information

This style guide is not intended to provide detailed instructions about every question that may arise. For further information on style and formatting, review the following resources:

• The Writing and Style Guidelines at the Center for Writing Excellence on the student website

• Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (2010), sixth edition

• The APA Style website ()

If you have any other specific questions about style and formatting, consult your course instructor.

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