08-30-2020, 02:20 PM
(08-30-2020, 01:43 PM)cecilgambe7 Wrote:(08-30-2020, 11:59 AM)ss20ts Wrote: There are some big differences between 6 and 7. One of them is when there's 20 or more authors. The formatting has changed so you don't list all of the authors. I got dinged on this yesterday.
The Purdue Owl links Sophia includes are not consistent. One is APA 6 and one is APA 7. I will check with them on the chat when it's open during the week.
I never check in deep the differences between APA 6 & 7, but to cite a 20 or more authors article is pretty rare; actually, 20 or more authors source (book, article, etc) are extremly rare. I remember a specific physic paper about weird issue that include 100+ authors, but again, it is so strange.
In the other hand, i use APA 6 when i wrote my Sophia papers, i didn't get any feedback in my refernce section, i think as students learning propouse, the reference section may include a similar-APA style that include the main information of the source "Authors, year, title, source, number, volume, etc", but they don't go so deep on the references details.
Oh I know it's rare. I have a journal article that has something like 30 authors. Kind of crazy. I am going to switch to APA 6 with my next paper and see if that changes the complaints on my references. I use a APA citation generator and have for quite awhile. i've never been marked off for my references in the past. That's what's so confusing. I wrote papers weekly at CSU Global and was never marked off for the way my citations were done. That's why I think they aren't using APA 7. Wish they would make it clear on Sophia which APA they're using. The 20 author thing isn't the only change.
https://owll.massey.ac.nz/referencing/ap...dition.php
Key changes at a glance
- Et al.: “et al.” is used in the first in-text citation for works with three or more authors.
- Up to 20 authors cited: In the reference list, give the surnames and initials for up to 20 authors.
- Website names: Website names are now included as well as the webpage title.
- Publication location: The location of the publisher (i.e., city, country/state code) is no longer required.
- Ebook publisher: You no longer need to give the platform, format, or device (e.g., Kindle) for ebooks, but you do need give the publisher.
- "Retrieved from": You no longer need to write “Retrieved from” before a URL.
- DOIs: DOIs are formatted the same as URLs. You do not need to write "DOI."