Careful adherence to these conventions is likely to make a good initial impression on the reader, while carelessness may have the opposite effect. When the major sections of a paper are carefully arranged in the appropriate order, the reader may be more inclined to show an interest in the paper’s ideas.
How should the major sections of an APA-style paper be arranged?
- Title Page: acts as the first major section of the document
- Presents a running head and begins the document’s pagination
- Includes the paper’s full title centered in the upper half of the page
- Contains the name(s) of the writer(s) and their institutional affiliation
- Abstract: acts as the second major section of the document
- Presents a single-paragraph summary of the paper’s contents
- Contains approximately 150 to 250 words
- Includes select keywords for easy access by researchers
- Main Body: acts as the third major section of the document
- Presents a report of the writer(s)’ research and findings
- Includes four sections (typically): the introduction, method, results, and discussion
- Provides the reader with pertinent information about the paper’s topic
- References page: acts as the fourth major section of the document
- Presents a compilation of the sources cited in the paper
- Provides a comprehensive list of works that appear as in-text citations in the paper
- Details the full source information for each entry