STYLE SHEET FOR FORMAL PAPER

 

1       Formal research papers require formal language.

           

            Absolutely no use of “I, me, my, mine; we, our, us, ourselves, ours, you, your, yours.”

 

            Absolutely no contractions, abbreviations, or symbols.

 

            Do not use “a lot of”; use “much” or “many” or a specific amount.

 

            Avoid “get” and “got” except when it means “obtain”.

 

            How-to information is not formal--ever.   Extract the information; give it as information; not directions.

 

            Polysyllabic words are appropriate and preferred to many small words.

 

            Complex sentences are preferred over simple sentences.

 

            Avoid clichés, such, “nipped in the bud”, “as luck would have it”, and  gung ho”.

 

            Avoid slang.  Anything your grandparents would not use to speak to their boss is slang.

 

            Do not try to be cute or entertaining.  The purpose of this paper is not to impress the reader with your personality.  It is to give information.

 

            Grammar and spelling do count.  Neatness also counts.

 

2          Sentence structure needs to be tight and concise.

 

        Wordiness is the use of too many words--more words than are necessary to express an idea correctly and clearly.

 

Redundancy, the unnecessary repetition of an idea through synonyms, is a common type of wordiness.

 

            Repetition is the same word or phrase used for no clear reason.  This frequently accompanies the problem with simple sentences.

 

3       Sentences should be grammatically correct.

 

            Subject-verb agreement:  If the subject is singular, the verb must be singular.  If the subject is plural, the verb must be plural.

 

Pronoun-antecedent agreement:  The following words are singular: everyone, anyone, anybody, anything, everything, someone, something, each, one.  Therefore, every word referring to them must    also be singular.

 

4       Logic/organization is important.

 

Just because three pieces of information came from the same source does not mean that they all must be in one paragraph.  Make sure there is a topic sentence since it is helpful in creating a unified, organized paragraph.

 

 

5       Papers are to be typed.

 

            Use white paper 8 1/2 by 11 inches.

 

            Type your name and other required information in the cover sheet.

 

Center the title about two inches from the top of the page.  Use no punctuation mark after the title unless a question mark or an exclamation point is needed, do not enclose quotes, and do not    underline the title.

 

            Skip a line after the title.  Double-space the text.  Allow two spaces between sentences, one space between words.

 

In the title the first and last words are always capitalized.  Articles (a, an, the), prepositions (in, on, with, to, at), and conjunctions (and, for, but) are not capitalized unless they are the first or last word.

 

            Indent the first word of every paragraph.

 

            At the end of a line, divide a word only between syllables.  Place a hyphen at the end of the line.

 

            Do not number the first page.  Number each of the following pages in the upper right-hand corner.

 

            Type only on the front side of the paper.

 

To correct an error, use ink eradicator, a clean ink eraser, white out, or a self-correcting typewriter; then write in the correct word or words.  Do not use this method to correct a group of words or an entire sentence.

 

            Use only complete sentences.

 

            Underline book titles.

 

            In general, number of fewer than three digits should be spelled out.  A date is not spelled out unless it begins a sentence.

 

6       All sources must be acknowledged.

 

Students are encouraged to paraphrase and have few quotes.  Any information copied directly must be enclosed in quotes and the source identified.  Source identification could be the abbreviated technical form keyed to the bibliography (last name of author, page number) and placed at the end of the sentences.  Example:  Only one author has analyzed this theory (Smith, 20-23).

 

            Be careful not to plagiarize someone else’s work.  One may NOT copy word for word from any source.