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Devry University
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I have an essay, 2 pages
Read my attachment carefully and send me topic that you will write about.
Title of Paper Goes Here
Your Name
School Name
Author Note
A brief author note goes here. It may include acknowledgment of funding sources, expressions of gratitude to research assistants and contact information for the author who will handle requests. First, I am very grateful to everyone who has emailed me with suggested improvements; I’m sorry I can’t acknowledge you all here. Second, you are hereby granted permission to use this document for learning and research purposes. You may not sell this document either by itself or in combination with other products or services. Third, if you use this document, you use it at your own risk. The document’s accuracy and safety have been thoroughly evaluated, but they are not guaranteed. Thanks!
An abstract is a single paragraph, without indentation, that summarizes the key points of the manuscript in 150 to 250 words. For simpler papers, a somewhat shorter abstract is fine. The purpose of the abstract is to provide the reader with a brief overview of the paper. When in doubt about a rule, check the sixth edition APA manual rather than relying on this template. (I prefer only one space after a period, but two spaces are suggested by the sixth-edition APA manual at the top of page 88.) This document has a history that compels me to give credit where it’s due. Many years ago I downloaded a fifth-edition template from an unspecified author’s web site at Northcentral University. I modified the template extensively and repeatedly for my own purposes and in the early years I shared my highly-modified templates only with my own students. By now, I have edited this document so many times in so many ways that the current template bears virtually no similarity to the old Northcentral document. I want to be clear, however, that I am in debt to an unknown author who spared me the inconvenience of having to create my own templates from scratch.
Keywords: writing, template, sixth, edition, APA format, self-discipline, is, good
Title of Paper Gets Repeated Here Exactly As It Appears On Title Page
Feasibility report: You will write about a situation (for example, a problem or opportunity) and a plan for doing something about it and then determine whether that plan is "feasible"—whether it is practical in terms of current technology, economics, social needs, and so on. The feasibility report answers the question "Should we implement Plan X?" by stating "yes," "no," but more often "maybe." Not only does it give a recommendation, it also provides the data and the reasoning behind that recommendation.
2 pages – 3 sources
This should be a local/state proposal. We’re now taking our global/national issue and acting locally.
Introduction
Here you will state the purpose of the report, who your audience is, the context (what the problem is), and an overview of the report.
Existing Problem/Issue
Write about the existing problem, including technical information/statistics, cost, etc. Include citations.
Proposed Solution
Write about your solution, including technical information/statistics, cost, etc. Include citations.
Conclusion
Summarize everything in the report thus far.
Recommendation
This is your sales pitch. Why is your solution the best?
References
Ajournalarticle, R. H., Spud, P. T., & Psychologist, R. M. (2002). Title of journal article goes here. Journal of Research in Personality, 22, 236-252. doi: 10.1016/0032-026X.56.6.895*
B’Onlinesourcesareconfusing, S. O. (2010). Search for answers at apastyle.org and include issue numbers after volume numbers when there is no DOI. Journal of Articles Without Digital Object Identifiers, 127 (3) , 816-826.
Cmagazinearticle, B. E. (1999, July). Note the last names on this page: Each source type has to be formatted in a different way. [Special issue]. Prose Magazine, 126 (5), 96-134.
Dbookreference, S. M., Orman, T. P., & Carey, R. (1967). Google scholar’s “cite” feature is usually accurate and time-saving. New York: Dawkins-Harris Publishing.
O’encyclopedia, S. E. (1993). Words. In The new encyclopedia Britannica (vol. 38, pp. 745-758). Chicago: Forty-One Publishing.
Pchapter, P. R., & Inaneditedvolume, J. C. (2001). Scientific research papers. In P. Z. Wildlifeconservation, R. Cirk, & J. H. Dennett (Eds.), Research papers are hard work but boy are they good for you (pp. 123-256). New York: Lucerne Publishing.
Qosenberg, Morris. (1994, September 11). This is how you cite an online news article that has an author. The Washington Post. Retrieved from http://www.washingtonpost.com/dir/subdir/2014/05/11/a-d9-11e3_story.html
* On p. 189, the 6th ed. manual says “We recommend that when DOIs are available, you include them”—so you can skip the DOI if you can’t find it. Footnotes like this aren’t appropriate in a real references section.
Footnotes
1 Some professional journals ask authors to avoid using footnotes. In an undergraduate paper they are almost never necessary.
2 As of 2013, I do not recommend using the footnote and endnote features in Word if you want to keep your footnotes in APA format.
Table 1
Correlations Among and Descriptive Statistics For Key Study Variables
|
|
M (SD) |
Sex |
Age |
Income |
Educ. |
Relig. |
Dist. Intol. |
|
Sex |
1.53 (.50) |
|
.07 |
-.09 |
.02 |
.14 |
.06 |
|
Age |
31.88 (10.29) |
|
|
.08 |
.19* |
.20* |
.01 |
|
Income |
2.60 (1.57) |
|
|
|
.04 |
-.14 |
-.09 |
|
Educ. |
3.44 (1.06) |
|
|
|
|
-.29* |
-.06 |
|
Relig. |
1.21 (.30) |
|
|
|
|
|
-.19* |
|
Dist. Intol. |
3.75 (1.19) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Notes. N’s range from 107 to 109 due to occasional missing data. For sex, 0 = male, 1 = female. Educ. = education. Dist. Intol. = distress intolerance. Relig. = religiosity.
* p < .05.

Figure 1. This simple path model, adapted from results in a Journal of Consumer Behaviour paper, is an example of a figure. The figure appears on the last page (although in the rare case that you have an appendix, the appendix would follow the figure).
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