Portada De Un Trabajo Normas: Apa ~upd~

Her hands were shaking. The clock read 11:47 p.m. Deadline: midnight.

Then she saw it: the title was supposed to be in title case—major words capitalized. She’d written “Heuristics and Anchoring: How First Impressions Skew Clinical Diagnoses.” That was correct. But the professor also required a “author note” for graduate papers. Elena wasn’t in grad school, but the rubric said: “For this assignment, include an author note with ORCID ID and disclosure of conflicts.” She’d almost missed that. portada de un trabajo normas apa

She clicked into the header. Typed: HEURISTICS AND CLINICAL BIAS — then tabbed over to the right and inserted the page number “1.” She checked the font: Times New Roman, 12 point. Yes. Her hands were shaking

She hit “Save As,” named it “Vasquez_APA_Cover_Final,” and uploaded it to the portal. At 11:59 p.m., the green checkmark appeared. Submission received. Then she saw it: the title was supposed

APA. The very acronym made her heart sink. She’d spent weeks fine-tuning the margins, the running head, the in-text citations. But the cover page? She’d left it for last, thinking it was just a formality. Now, with only forty-five minutes until the deadline, she realized it was a minefield.

Course number and name: one double-spaced line below the institution. PSY 401: Advanced Cognitive Psychology.

But something felt wrong. She pulled up a sample from Purdue OWL. Her title was in bold, yes. But the rest? No bold on name, institution, or course info. She unbolded them quickly.