Assignment: Click on the YouTube link below to access the TED Talk.
Explain Nayar’s comment, “do not lead by rejecting but by accepting” (TEDxAix, 2015)
- Describe and explain the role of management using Nayar’s model. List and explain the “three steps for successful execution” (TEDxAix, 2015)
- Use two peer-reviewed journal articles and the textbook to support your response (review APA Course Resources). You must cite. Since your papers are research-based (not opinions), practically every sentence will be cited. There is no word limit, but the paper must thoroughly answer the questions provided and should be at least two pages of text. This assignment must be in APA format (review APA Formatting). Please review Week #8 in the syllabus for guidance.
- Refer to assignment directions in Weeks #4 and #6 for formatting.
Publication Manual, 7th Edition
Student Paper Checklist
Use this checklist while writing your paper to make sure it is consistent with seventh edition APA Style. This
checklist corresponds to the writing and formatting guidelines described in full in the Publication Manual of the
American Psychological Association (7th ed.).
Refer to the following chapters for specific information:
• paper elements and format in Chapter
2
• writing style and grammar in Chapter
4
• bias-free language in Chapter
5
• mechanics of style in Chapter
6
• tables and figures in Chapter 7
• in-text citations in Chapter 8
• reference list and reference examples in
Chapters 9 and 10
Information and resources are also available on the APA Style website. If you have questions about specific
assignment guidelines or what to include in your APA Style paper, please check with your assigning instructor
or institution. If you have questions about formatting your thesis or dissertation, check your institution’s
guidelines or consult your advisor.
Student Title Page
Format (Section 2.
3
): Double-space the title
page. Center each element on its own line. Do
not use italics, underlining, or different font
sizes.
Title (Section 2.4): Concise, engaging summary
of the paper and its main topic and/or variables.
Write the title in title case: Capitalize the first
letter of the title, the subtitle, and any major
words of four letters or more (plus linking verbs
“Is,” “Are,” and “Be”). Double-space, center,
and bold the title in the upper half of the title
page (three or four lines down from the top
margin).
Author Name (Section 2.5): Full name of each
author of the paper. The preferred format is first
name, middle initial(s), and last name (e.g.,
Maribel S. Quantez). Center the name two
double-spaced lines after the title (i.e., one
blank line between the title and author name).
Author Affiliation (Section 2.6): Name of the
department of the course to which the paper
is being submitted and name of the college or
university. Use the format: Department, College
(e.g., Department of History, Williams College).
Do not include the school’s location unless part
of its name. Center the affiliation one double-
spaced line after the author name(s).
Course Number and Name (Section 2.2):
Number and name of course to which the paper
is being submitted. Use the format shown
on course materials (e.g., syllabus). Write the
number and name on the same line. Center the
number and name one double-spaced line after
the affiliation.
Instructor Name (Section 2.2): Name of the
instructor of the course to which the paper is
being submitted. Use the title and name shown
on course materials (e.g., syllabus). Center the
name one double-spaced line after the course
number and name.
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Due Date (Section 2.2): Due date of the
assignment. Include the month, day, and year
in the format used in your country (e.g., May 4,
2020, or 4 May 2020). Spell out the month and
write the full year. Center the date one double-
spaced line after the instructor name.
Page Header (Section 2.18): Page number 1.
Flush right in the header (upper right corner).
Paper Format
Page Header (Section 2.18): Page number.
Appears flush right in the header (upper right
corner) of all pages. Insert page numbers using
the automatic page-numbering function of your
word-processing program.
Font and Font Size (Section 2.19): Use the
same font and font size throughout your
paper (exception: figure images require a
sans serif font and can use various font sizes).
Recommended serif and sans serif fonts:
° 11-point Calibri
° 11-point Arial
° 10-point Lucida Sans Unicode
° 12-point Times New Roman
° 11-point Georgia
° 10-point Computer Modern
Line Spacing (Section 2.21): Double-space the
entire paper. Do not add extra lines before or
after headings or between paragraphs.
Margins (Section 2.22): Margins are 1 in. on all
sides (top, bottom, left, and right).
Paragraph Alignment and Indentation
(Sections 2.23–2.24): Left-align the text (do not
use full justification). Indent the first line of each
paragraph 0.5 in. (one tab key).
Paper Length (Section 2.25): Follow the
assignment guidelines. If not instructed
otherwise, use the word-count function of your
word-processing program to determine paper
length, counting every word in the paper—but
do not count words in figure images.
Paper Organization
Introduction (Section 2.11): Repeat the paper
title on the first line of the first page of text,
before the opening paragraph. Center and
bold the title. Do not include an “Introduction”
heading. Start the first line of the text one
double-spaced line after the title. Use Level 2
headings for subsections in the introduction.
Text (Section 2.11): Use headings as needed to
organize the text. Use Level 1 headings for main
sections after the introduction (e.g., Method,
Results, Findings, Discussion).
Page Order (Section 2.17): Start each main
paper section on a new page. Arrange pages in
the following order:
° title page
° abstract (if needed)
° text
° references
° footnotes (if needed)
° tables (if needed)
° figures (if needed)
° appendices (if needed)
Headings (Section 2.27): Start each new
section with a heading. Write all headings in
title case and bold. Also italicize Level 3 and 5
headings. Follow seventh edition guidelines for
the alignment of headings, as described on the
Headings page.
Section Labels (Section 2.28): Bold and center
labels, including “Abstract” and “References.”
Writing Style
Continuity (Sections 4.1–4.3): Check for
continuity in words, concepts, and thematic
development across the paper. Explain
relationships between ideas clearly. Present
ideas in a logical order. Use clear transitions
to smoothly connect sentences, paragraphs,
and ideas.
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Conciseness (Sections 4.4–4.6): Choose
words and phrases carefully and deliberately.
Eliminate wordiness, redundancy, evasiveness,
circumlocution, overuse of the passive
voice, and clumsy prose. Do not use jargon,
contractions, or colloquialisms. Avoid overusing
both short, simple sentences and long, involved
sentences; instead, use varied sentence lengths.
Avoid both single-sentence paragraphs and
paragraphs longer than one double-spaced
page.
Clarity (Sections 4.7–4.11): Use clear and
precise language. Use a professional tone and
professional language. Do not use jargon,
contractions, colloquialisms, or creative
literary devices. Check for anthropomorphistic
language (i.e., attributing human actions to
inanimate objects or nonhuman animals). Make
logical comparisons using clear word choice
and sentence structure.
Grammar
Verb Tense (Section 4.12): Use verb tenses
consistently in the same and adjacent
paragraphs. Use appropriate verb tenses for
specific paper sections, as described on the
Verb Tense page.
Voice and Mood (Sections 4.13–4.14): Use
the active voice instead of the passive voice as
much as possible. Use the passive voice only
when focusing on the recipient of an action
rather than on who performed the action.
Subject and Verb Agreement (Section 4.15):
Use verbs that agree in number (i.e., singular or
plural) with their subjects.
Pronouns (Sections 4.16–4.21): Use first-
person pronouns to describe your work and
your personal reactions (e.g., “I examined,”
“I agreed with”), including your work with
coauthors (e.g., “We conducted”). Use the
singular “they” when referring to a person who
uses it as their self-identified pronoun or to a
person whose gender is unknown or irrelevant.
Use other pronouns correctly.
Bias-Free Language (Chapter 5)
Eliminate biased language from your writing.
Avoid perpetuating prejudicial beliefs or
demeaning attitudes. Instead, use bias-free
language to describe all people and their
personal characteristics with inclusivity and
respect, including
° age
° disability
° gender
° participation in research
° racial and ethnic identity
° sexual orientation
° socioeconomic status
° intersectionality
For guidelines on writing about people without
bias and examples of bias-free language, see
the Bias-Free Language pages.
Mechanics of Style
Punctuation (Sections 6.1–6.6, 6.8–6.10): Use
punctuation marks correctly (periods, commas,
semicolons, colons, dashes, parentheses,
brackets, slashes), including in reference list
entries. Use varied punctuation marks in your
paper. Avoid having multiple punctuation
marks in the same sentence; instead, split the
sentence into multiple shorter sentences. Use
one space after a period or other punctuation
mark at the end of a sentence. Use a serial
comma before the final element in lists of three
or more items. Use parentheses to set off in-
text citations.
Quotation Marks (Section 6.7): Use quotation
marks correctly. Place commas and periods
inside closing quotation marks; place other
punctuation marks (e.g., colons, semicolons,
ellipses) outside closing quotation marks. Use
quotation marks around direct quotations. Do
not use quotation marks in the reference list.
Italics (Sections 6.22–6.23): Use italics correctly
to draw attention to text. Use italics for the first
use of key terms or phrases accompanied by a
definition. Do not use italics for emphasis.
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Spelling and Hyphenation (Sections 6.11–
6.12): Spelling and hyphenation should match
the Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary or the
APA Dictionary of Psychology. Write words with
prefixes and suffixes without a hyphen.
For more information, including the spelling of
common technology terms, see the Spelling
and Hyphenation pages.
Capitalization (Sections 6.13–6.21): Use title
case and sentence case capitalization correctly.
Capitalize proper nouns, including names of
racial and ethnic groups. Do not capitalize
names of diseases, disorders, therapies,
treatments, theories, concepts, hypotheses,
principles, models, and statistical procedures,
unless personal names appear within these
terms.
For more information, including capitalization
to use for specific paper elements, see the
Capitalization pages.
Abbreviations (Section 6.24–6.31): Use
abbreviations sparingly and usually when
they are familiar to readers, save considerable
space, and appear at least three times in
the paper. Define abbreviations, including
abbreviations for group authors, on first use.
Do not use periods in abbreviations. Use Latin
abbreviations only in parentheses, and use
the full Latin term in the text. Do not define
abbreviations listed as terms in the dictionary
(e.g., AIDS, IQ) and abbreviations for units of
measurement, time, Latin terms, and common
statistical terms and symbols.
For more information, including abbreviations
that do not need to be defined, see the
Abbreviations pages.
Numbers (Sections 6.32–6.39): Use words to
express numbers zero through nine in the
text. Use numerals to express numbers 10 and
above in the text. In all cases, use numerals in
statistical or mathematical functions, with units
of measurement, and for fractions, decimals,
ratios, percentages and percentiles, times,
dates, ages, scores and points on a scale, sums
of money, and numbers in a series (e.g., Year 1,
Grade 11, Chapter 2, Level 13, Table 4).
For more information and exceptions, see the
Numbers pages.
Statistics (Sections 6.40–6.45): Include
enough information to allow readers to fully
understand any analyses conducted. Space
mathematical copy the same as words, with
spaces between signs. Use statistical terms in
narrative text: “the means were,“ not “the Ms
were.” Use statistical symbols or abbreviations
with mathematical operators: “(M = 6.62),” not
“(mean = 6.62).”
Lists (Sections 6.49–6.52): Ensure items in
lists are parallel. Use commas to separate items
in simple lists. Use semicolons to separate
items when any items in the list already contain
commas.
For more information, including how to create
lettered, numbered, and bulleted lists, see the
Lists pages.
Tables and Figures
General Guidelines (Sections 7.1–7.7): Include
tables and/or figures if required for your paper
or assignment. When possible, use a standard,
or canonical, form for a table or figure. Do not
use shading or other decorative flourishes.
In the text, refer to each table or figure by its
number. Explain what to look for in that table
or figure by calling out the table or figure in the
text (e.g., “Table 1 lists…” “As shown in Figure
1…”).
Either embed each table or figure in the text
after it is first mentioned or place it on a
separate page after the reference list. If
embedded, place the table or figure at either
the top or the bottom of the page with an extra
double-spaced line between the table or the
figure and any text.
Tables (Sections 7.8–7.21): Use the tables
feature of your word-processing program to
create tables. Number tables in the order they
are mentioned in the text. Include borders only
at the top and the bottom of the table, beneath
column headings, and above column spanners.
Do not use vertical borders or borders around
every cell in the table.
All tables include four basic components:
number, title, column headings, and body.
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Write the table number above the table title
and body and in bold. Write the table title one
double-spaced line below the table number
and in italic title case. Label all columns. Center
column headings, and capitalize them in
sentence case. Include notes beneath the table
if needed to describe the contents. Start each
type of note (general, specific, and probability)
on its own line, and double-space it.
See sample tables on the APA Style website.
Figures (Sections 7.22–7.36): Use a program
appropriate for creating figures (e.g., Word,
Excel, Photoshop, Inkscape, SPSS). Number fig-
ures in the order they are mentioned in the text.
Within figures, check that images are clear, lines
are smooth and sharp, and font is legible and
simple. Provide units of measurement. Clearly
label or explain axes and other figure elements.
All figures include three basic components:
number, title, and image. Write the figure
number above the figure title and image and in
bold. Write the figure title one double-spaced
line below the figure number and in italic title
case. Write text in the figure image in a sans
serif font between 8 and 14 points. Include a
figure legend if needed to explain any symbols
in the image. Position the legend within the
borders of the figure, and capitalize it in title
case. Include notes beneath the figure if need-
ed to describe the contents. Start each type of
note (general, specific, and probability) on its
own line, and double-space it.
See sample figures on the APA Style website.
In-Text Citations (Chapter 8)
Cite only works you read and ideas you
incorporated into your paper.
Include all sources cited in the text in the
reference list (exception: personal
communications are cited in the text only).
Make sure the spelling of author names and the
publication dates in the in-text citations match
those of the corresponding reference
list entries.
Paraphrase sources in your own words
whenever possible.
For guidance on how to paraphrase sources,
see the Paraphrasing pages.
Cite appropriately to avoid plagiarism, but do
not repeat the same citation in every sentence
when the source and topic do not change.
For guidance on appropriate citation, see the
Appropriate Level of Citation page.
Write author–date citations according to
seventh edition guidelines: Include the author
(or title if no author) and year. For paraphrases,
it is optional to include a specific page
number(s), paragraph number(s), or other
location (e.g., section name) if the source work
is long or complex.
° One author: Use the author surname in all in-
text citations.
° Two authors: Use both author surnames in all
in-text citations.
° Three or more authors: Use only the first
author surname and then “et al.” in all
in-text citations.
For more information, including exceptions
to basic in-text citation styles, see the
Basic Principles of Citation pages.
Use either the narrative or the parenthetical
citation format for in-text citations.
° Parenthetical citation: Place the author name
and publication year in parentheses.
° Narrative citation: Incorporate the author
name into the text as part of the sentence and
then follow with the year in parentheses.
For works with two authors,
° use an ampersand (&) in parenthetical in-text
citations: (Guirrez & Castillo, 2020)
° use the word “and” in narrative in-text
citations: Guirrez and Castillo (2020)
For more information, see the Parenthetical and
Narrative Citations page.
When citing multiple works in parentheses,
place the citations in alphabetical order. When
multiple parenthetical citations have the same
author(s), order the years chronologically and
separate them with commas (e.g., Coutlee,
2019, 2020). When the authors are different,
separate the parenthetical citations with
semicolons (e.g., Coutlee, 2019, 2020; Ngwane,
2020; Oishi, 2019).
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For more examples, see the Citation of Multiple
Works page.
Limit the use of direct quotations. Include the
author (or title if no author), year, and specific
part of the work (page number(s), paragraph
number(s), section name) in the citation.
° Short quotation (less than 40 words): Use
double quotation marks around the quotation.
° Block quotation (40 words or more): Use the
block format: Indent the entire quotation 0.5
in. from the left margin and double-space it.
For more information, see the Quotations page.
References (Chapters 9 and 10)
Start the reference list on a new page after
the text.
Center and bold the section label “References”
at the top of the page.
Double-space the entire reference list, both
within and between entries.
Use a hanging indent for each reference
entry: First line of the reference is flush left,
and subsequent lines are indented by 0.5 in.
Apply the hanging indent using the paragraph-
formatting function of your word-processing
program.
All reference entries should have a
corresponding in-text citation. The beginning
of the reference entry (usually the first
author’s surname) and year should match the
corresponding in-text citation.
List references in alphabetical order according
to seventh edition guidelines.
Create the appropriate reference entry for
the type of work being cited, as described in
Chapter 9 and shown in Chapter 10 and on the
Reference Examples pages.
Do not create refence entries for personal
communications and secondary sources.
For a list of works to include and exclude from a
reference list, see the Works Included page.
Each reference entry includes four elements:
author, date, title, and source.
See exceptions for references with missing
information on the Missing Information page.
Use punctuation to group information and
separate reference elements.
For more information, see the Basic Principles
of References page.
List authors in the same order as the original
source. Use initials for authors’ first and middle
names. Put a comma after the surname and a
period and a space after each initial (e.g. Lewis,
C. S.). Put a comma after each author (even
two authors). Use an ampersand before the last
author.
For more information, including what to do
when a work has more than 20 authors, see the
Reference Elements page.
Capitalize titles in sentence case: Capitalize only
the first word of the title, the subtitle, and any
proper nouns. Format titles according to the
type of work.
° Works that stand alone: Italicize the title
(e.g., authored books, reports, data sets,
dissertations and theses, films, TV series,
albums, podcasts, social media, websites).
° Works that are part of a greater whole: Do
not italicize or use quotation marks around
the title (e.g., periodical articles, edited book
chapters, TV and podcast episodes, songs).
Write the title of the greater whole (e.g., journal
or edited book) in italics in the source element.
For more information, including when to
include bracketed descriptions for titles, see the
Basic Principles of References page.
Do not include database information for
works retrieved from academic research
databases. Do include database information
for works retrieved from databases with
original, proprietary content or works of limited
circulation (e.g., UpToDate).
For more information, see the Database
Information page.
Include a DOI for any work that has one. If there
is no DOI, include a URL if the work is retrieved
online (but not from a database). Present DOIs
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and URLs as hyperlinks (beginning with “http:”
or “https:”). Copy and paste DOIs and URLs
directly from your web browser. Do not write
“Retrieved from” or “Accessed from” before a
DOI or URL. Do not add a period after a DOI or
URL.
For more information, see the DOIs and URLs
page.
More information on APA Style can be found in the Publication
Manual of the American Psychological Association (7th ed.) and
the Concise Guide to APA Style (7th ed.).
SOURCE: American Psychological Association. (2020). Publication
manual of the American Psychological Association (7th ed.).
https://doi.org/10.1037/0000165-000
CREDIT: MIRIAM BOWERS-ABBOTT, MOUNT CARMEL
COLLEGE OF NURSING
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