Placement
The abstract acts as the second major section of the document and typically begins on the second page of the paper. It follows directly after the title page and precedes the main body of the paper.
The abstract is a succinct, single-paragraph summary of your paper’s purpose, main points, method, findings, and conclusions, and you usually compose it after the rest of your paper has been completed.
General Format
How should the abstract page be formatted?
The abstract’s length should be a minimum of 150 words and a maximum of 250 words; it should be confined within a single paragraph. Unlike in other paragraphs in the paper, the first line of the abstract should not be indented five spaces from the left margin.
Like the rest of the paper, the pages of the abstract should be double-spaced and typed in Times New Roman, 12-pt. The margins are set at 1” on all sides. The page number is flush with the upper right-hand corner of every page.
The title of the abstract is simply “Abstract,” and the word “Abstract” should be centered at the top of the page; there is no extra space between the title and the paragraph. Avoid formatting the title with bold, italics, underlining, or quotation marks, or mislabeling the abstract with the title of the research paper.
When writing the abstract, note that the APA recommends using the active voice and past tense in the abstract, but the present tense may be used to describe conclusions and implications. Acronyms or abbreviated words should be defined in the abstract.
How should the list of keywords be formatted?
According to your professor’s directives, you may be required to include a short list of keywords to enable researchers and databases to locate your paper more effectively. The list of keywords should follow after the abstract paragraph, and the word Keywords should be italicized, indented five spaces from the left margin, and followed by a colon. There is no period at the end of the list of keywords.
Candela Citations
- Revision and Adaptation. Authored by: Gillian Paku. Provided by: SUNY Geneseo. License: CC BY: Attribution
- Formatting the Abstract Page (APA). Authored by: Jennifer Janechek. Provided by: Writing Commons. Located at: http://writingcommons.org/open-text/writing-processes/format/apa-format/1100-formatting-the-abstract-page-apa-sp-770492217. License: CC BY-NC-ND: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives