QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- what style and size of font should be used?
a. apa only requires that a font be accessible to all readers and used consistently throughout the paper.
b. arial style in size 14.
c. a simple style, like times new roman or courier, in size 12 is required.
- what’s the difference between a header and a heading?
a. a header includes the title of the paper and goes at the top of the page outside of the margin and a heading introduces a section within the body of the paper.
b. header is another name for the title of the paper and goes in the center of the title page, while a heading introduces a portion of the paper.
c. there is no difference; they are the very same thing.
stylistics
- three basic areas of stylistic concern when writing in apa are:
a. point of view, formatting, and pronoun choice.
b. point of view, clarity/conciseness, and word choice.
c. point of view, references, and eloquence.
- stylistic things to avoid are:
a. bias in language concerning gender, race, disability, and sexuality.
b. the exclusion of poetic language.
Question 6
To determine the correct font style and size for APA, we analyze each option:
- Option a: APA requires font accessibility and consistency, which is correct.
- Option b: Arial size 14 is not a strict APA requirement; APA allows any accessible font, not just Arial 14.
- Option c: APA does not mandate Times New Roman or Courier size 12 specifically; it allows flexibility as long as the font is accessible and consistent.
To find the difference between a header and a heading:
- Option a: A header is at the top of the page (outside margins, often with title/info), and a heading introduces a section in the body. This matches APA formatting.
- Option b: A header is not the title of the paper (the title is separate), so this is incorrect.
- Option c: Headers and headings are distinct, so this is wrong.
For APA stylistic concerns:
- Option a: Formatting is more about layout, not a core stylistic concern like the others.
- Option b: Point of view (e.g., avoiding first-person in some cases), clarity/conciseness, and word choice (precise, unbiased language) are key APA stylistic areas.
- Option c: References are about citations, not stylistic concerns, and eloquence is not a focus (clarity is).
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a. APA only requires that a font be accessible to all readers and used consistently throughout the paper.