OK, Here’s the Deal

OK—not okay, says AP. The APA crew does not have a firm ruling on this word, and a quick peek at the APA Style blog reveals that bloggers use both okay and OK. I’m guessing, then, that if you are writing an APA-Style paper, you’d be fine with either version just be consistent with your use by picking one spelling and sticking with it throughout your masterpiece.

As a fan of AP-Style writing, I’m choosing OK (and OK’d, OK’ing, and OKs).

OK?

Nothing Goes Before Something

Building a perfect APA reference list is no easy task. There’s just so much to consider—like what to capitalize, italicize, and abbreviate; how to cite a podcast, a musical recording, and the zillion electronic sources of information; and then there’s the whole DOI thing.

What’s a DOI, anyway? It’s a digital object identifier, and we’ll pursue that topic in another post. 

For now, I want to impart a quick tip for alphabetizing that might be helpful not only for the crafting of your reference page but also for your general A-B-C needs.

Nothing goes before something.

And by that, I mean:

Donald goes before Donalds goes before Donaldson.

Basically, you alphabetize letter by letter, and the word with fewer letters goes before the word with more letters.

APA Style says to alphabetize by author surname, so that’s the first task. Then, we move on to initials. So, Donald, J. precedes Donaldson, D., even though first initial D. comes before first initial J.

Easy enough?