Print References
- Periodical -- p. 429, #16-#20, 2nd
custom ed. for IWU; p. 474-475, #22-#30, 3rd custom ed. for IWU.
Bouchikhi,
H., & Kimberly, J. R. (2003). Escaping the identity trap. MIT
Sloan Management Review, 44(3), 20-26.
- Note: Periodicals often list volume numbers, issue numbers
and page numbers. APA requires the volume number. The issue number is
encouraged but not always available. Page numbers are required when one
has access to the paper format of the article. These are listed in a specific
order and the volume number is always in italics; issue number is not
italicized and the issue number is enclosed in ( ). The page numbers
are listed as a range, unless the article is found on a single page.
- Volume(Issue), Page(s).
- Example: 44(3), 20-26.
- Book -- p.
428-p. 429, #1-14, (2nd custom ed for IWU); p. 471-474, #1-21, (3rd custom
ed. for IWU)
Drucker,
Peter F. (2001). The essential Drucker: Selections from the management
works of Peter F. Drucker. New York: Harper Business.
Fogg, C.
D. (1999). Implementing your strategic plan. New York: AMACON.
Retrieved January 23, 2009, from NetLibrary database.
Electronic Article
References
- How these are cited in the References list changed from the
2nd custom ed. Prentice Hall Reference Guide (2006) and the
3rd custom ed. Prentice Hall Reference Guide (2008). Students starting
cohorts in January 2009 and beyond will click on the examples for the 3rd
custom ed. and student starting cohorts before 2009 should click on 2nd
custom ed.
Examples for the 2nd
custom ed., Prentice Hall Reference Guide.
Examples for the 3rd
custom ed., Prentice Hall Reference Guide.
Examples for the 2nd custom ed., Prentice Hall Reference Guide.
- Article from subscription database --
p.431, #28; p. 431, #25, 2nd example (2nd custom ed.
for IWU).
Hopkins,
S. A., Hopkins, W. E., & Thornton, B. (2002). Transforming low-tech
environments into high-tech environments: Strategies and developmental
barriers. SAM Advanced Management Journal, 67(1), 14-21. Retrieved
January 23, 2009, from General Business File ASAP database.
- Most articles in the library subscription databases, e.g. Academic
Onefile; Business Source Premier, Gale Virtual Reference Library, etc.,
are simply scanned from the original paper format of the book/journal.
For those it is preferable to use the format per below (PDF Format).
But sometimes you only have access to the content of the article where
it looks more like a web page than a scanned presentation of the original
(HTML format). For example, we offer full text of WSJ. The articles
do not look anything like the paper newspaper, yet the full content of
the articles is available to you through our online source for WSJ.
These HTML articles need to include the date you looked at the article
online and decided to use it and the name of the actual database (not vendor)
that you got it from online. Note that the database name is capitalized
but the word database is not.
- The following is correct if your article truly represents
its paper equivalent with no alterations (PDF format). These
are scanned from the original paper and look like a journal article.
-– p. 431, #25, 1st example (2nd custom ed for IWU).
Hopkins,
S. A., Hopkins, W. E., & Thornton, B. (2002). Transforming low-tech
environments into high-tech environments: Strategies and developmental
barriers [Electronic version]. SAM Advanced Management Journal,
67(1), 14-21.
- Note that the Electronic version is in square brackets, the
E is capitalized and the v is not. It immediately follows the article
title with no punctuation until after the ending square bracket.
- Note the capitalization of the first letter of the first
word of the subtitle.
Examples for the 3rd custom ed., Prentice Hall Reference
Guide.
- Article from subscription database, DOI available --
p. 476-477, #31, (3rd custom ed. for IWU).
Srikantia,
P., & Pasmore, W. (1996). Conviction and doubt in organizational
learning. Journal of Organizational Change Management, 9(1),
42-53. doi:10.1108/09534819610107312
- When using the library databases, first look for a DOI. It
is usually labeled with that accronym and is a combination of
numbers and perhaps letters. It is usually located somewhere
in the citation information in the database and/or the first
page of the article. If evident, then use the format shown above.
If you do not see a DOI, then go on to the next example below.
- Note:
The DOI is the article's unique address on the internet.
You can "google" a DOI and locate the citation information about
the article. Then depending on your library's access you can
get the full text of the article yourself, or you can request
Off Campus Library Services to obtain the article using InterLibrary Loan
(ILL).
- Article from a subscription database, no DOI available
-- p. 477, #33, 2nd example, #34, (3rd custom ed. for IWU)
Friel,
T. J., & Dubott, R. S. (2009). The last act of a great CEO. Harvard
Business Review, 87(1), 82-89. Retrieved from Business Source Premier
database.
- If you find no evident DOI, then use this format.
- Internet-only journal, not restricted
by a password — p. 431, #26.
Oger, H.
(2003) ‘Residence’ as the new additional inclusive criterion for citizenship.
Web Journal of Current Legal Issues, 5. Retrieved January 23, 2009,
from http://webjcli.ncl.ac.uk/2003/issue5/oger5.html
- Note that there is no period or underlining (hypertext) at
the end when a url is used.
- Chapter/section from an internet document/website
-- p. 431, #29
Drucker,
P. (n.d.) Will the corporation survive? Retrieved January
23, 2009, from http://drucker.cgu.edu/DruckerArchives/data/index.htm