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APA Style Stats Reporting Guide

The document provides examples of how to report various statistics in APA style within a research report or manuscript. Key points include reporting means and standard deviations in parentheses, percentages in parentheses without decimals, chi-square values with degrees of freedom and sample size in parentheses followed by the value and significance level, and t-tests, ANOVAs, correlations, and regressions with relevant statistics and significance levels. Tables can also be used to report statistics but not in addition to the text.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
180 views2 pages

APA Style Stats Reporting Guide

The document provides examples of how to report various statistics in APA style within a research report or manuscript. Key points include reporting means and standard deviations in parentheses, percentages in parentheses without decimals, chi-square values with degrees of freedom and sample size in parentheses followed by the value and significance level, and t-tests, ANOVAs, correlations, and regressions with relevant statistics and significance levels. Tables can also be used to report statistics but not in addition to the text.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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09.12.

2020 Reporting Statistics in APA Style

Reporting Statistics in APA Style


Dr. Jeffrey Kahn, Illinois State University

Modified September 3, 2020

The following examples illustrate how to report statistics in the text of a research report. You will note that
significance levels in journal articles—especially in tables—are often reported as either "p > .05," "p < .05,"
"p < .01," or "p < .001." APA style dictates reporting the exact p value within the text of a manuscript (unless
the p value is less than .001). Finally, this resource does not address how to report effect sizes, but
appropriate effect sizes (e.g., Cohen's d) should be reported with results.

Please pay attention to issues of italics and spacing. APA style is very precise about these. Also, with the
exception of some p values, most statistics should be rounded to two decimal places.

Mean and Standard Deviation are most clearly presented in parentheses:

The sample as a whole was relatively young (M = 19.22, SD = 3.45).

The average age of students was 19.22 years (SD = 3.45).

Percentages are also most clearly displayed in parentheses with no decimal places:

Nearly half (49%) of the sample was married.

Chi-Square statistics are reported with degrees of freedom and sample size in parentheses, the Pearson chi-
square value (rounded to two decimal places), and the significance level:

The percentage of participants that were married did not differ by gender, χ2(1, N = 90) = 0.89, p
= .35.

T Tests are reported like chi-squares, but only the degrees of freedom are in parentheses. Following that,
report the t statistic (rounded to two decimal places) and the significance level.

There was a significant effect for gender, t(54) = 5.43, p < .001, with men receiving higher
scores than women.

ANOVAs (both one-way and two-way) are reported like the t test, but there are two degrees-of-freedom
numbers to report. First report the between-groups degrees of freedom, then report the within-groups degrees
of freedom (separated by a comma). After that report the F statistic (rounded off to two decimal places) and
the significance level.

There was a significant main effect for treatment, F(1, 145) = 5.43, p = .02, and a significant
interaction, F(2, 145) = 3.24, p = .04.

Correlations are reported with the degrees of freedom (which is N – 2) in parentheses and the significance
level:

The two variables were strongly correlated, r(55) = .49, p < .01.

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09.12.2020 Reporting Statistics in APA Style

Regression results are often best presented in a table, but if you would like to report the regression in the text
of your Results section, you should at least present the unstandardized or standardized slope (beta),
whichever is more interpretable given the data, along with the t-test and the corresponding significance level.
(Degrees of freedom for the t-test is N – k – 1 where k equals the number of predictor variables.) It is also
customary to report the percentage of variance explained along with the corresponding F test.

Social support significantly predicted depression scores, b = –.34, t(225) = 6.53, p < .001. Social
support also explained a significant proportion of variance in depression scores, R2 = .12, F(1,
225) = 42.64, p < .001.

Tables are useful if you find that a paragraph has almost as many numbers as words. If you do use a table, do
not also report the same information in the text. It's either one or the other.

Based on:
American Psychological Association. (2020). Publication manual of the American Psychological
Association (7th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.

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