Some courses may require you to write application papers that respond to prompts, similar to a question and answer format. In these cases, use the following formatting rules unless otherwise specified by your instructor:
To format questions and answers in APA format:
If the Instructor has specific instructions about bold type, follow their preference, but APA does not require it.
Use an academic tone; avoid "I" statements such as "I think" or "I believe" or "My opinion is..."
These types of papers are typically not essays that require an introduction and conclusion. However, you will still need to retain the usual APA components: proper formatting, a title page, a references page, and in-text citations.
When in doubt, ask your instructor!
1. Discuss the approaches psychologists have taken to understand human perception.
Psychologists have taken three main approaches in their efforts to understand human perception. First, is the computational approach. These psychologists try to determine the computations that a machine would have to perform to solve perceptual problems in an effort to help explain how complex computations within the human nervous system might turn raw sensory stimulation into a representation of the world. The computational approach owes much to two earlier approaches .... (and so on and so forth).
Imagine that you've been asked to respond to the following question:
A solid writing strategy for responding to essay questions is the following:
Keep your responses focused, structured, and prove your points with evidence.
1) Begin with a direct answer to the question. The easiest way to do this is to restate the question in a way that incorporates your answer. If you will give more than one reason or address more than one topic in your response, pre-outline the topics/reasons you will discuss in order.
2) Address your reason(s) in order.
A. Use transitions to move smoothly between reasons.
B. Incorporate examples to amplify your reasoning.
C. Use signal phrases and in-text citations to identify your sources.
3. End with a closing statement that wraps up your response and reminds the reader of your position on the question.
Thanks to Texas State University for the example here.
Sometimes an instructor will prepare a prompt that is more than one question, and may require a response that tackles more than one topic. Here's an example:
This is actually two related questions -- a main question and then a subset of that main question.
Adjust your strategy as follows:
1) Prepare a direct response that focuses on the general main topic or question.
2) Respond to each question in the prompt as a separate paragraph under the restatement of the question. Use a transitional sentence to move smoothly from the first paragraph of response to the second.
3) Wrap it up with a concluding sentence at the end of the final paragraph.
Note: Latin "Lorem ipsum" text is used in lieu of real responses, as you may encounter this question in one of your courses!