OMG! I got a bit emotional when I noticed the subject of your sample paper. It made a perfect video even better. Thank you! PS. I bet Hermione did all of the work herself.
Writing my IBP Thesis, this video helped out! Thank you for confirming and answering a few of my questions, as well as teaching me a few things that l also missed. ESPECIALLY THE STUDENT STUFF ; )
Great video. The question is, with the new APA 7 Table format, how do you create the "List of Tables" in the Table of Contents to include the Table number, title and page?
APA Style does not have any specifications for creating a table of contents. Check with whomever you are submitting your work to for how to set one up.
Hi, thank you for this video, but I was wondering if the figure number and the title are now written separately, what happens to the list of tables and figures? Is it just Figure 1.................................page number?
@@thankyou7741 Take a look at that sample in the video again. Level 1 heading is the one that is centered and bold: "Literature Review". Levels 2 and 3 are correctly shown flush left **and also on their own lines.** The text that follows those Level 2 and 3 headings should have a first-line indent as usual... yep, Sam made a mistake there with "For Minor Flesh Wounds". Let's forgive him for that. Level 4 and 5 headings are indented correctly in this example, **and followed immediately by the first paragraph of text.** (They don't get their own lines to themselves, as Level 2 and 3 do.) Any additional paragraphs are indented as usual, within Level 4 or 5, and within Level 1, 2, or 3 as well. I hope this helps clear up any misunderstanding! You'll find a helpful summary/confirmation here: owl.purdue.edu/owl/research_and_citation/apa_style/apa_formatting_and_style_guide/apa_headings_and_seriation.html
You don't need to. More bluntly, you cannot: the publisher of the article assigns the doi upon publication. It can be tricky to *find* the doi sometimes, though, depending on how articles were distributed during your course... Once you do find it, if it is just the plain number, you can make your own URL for it like this: doi.org/[add the number here, without the brackets, of course] Here's more information if you're curious: apastyle.apa.org/learn/faqs/what-is-doi