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Why it Matters
• Different types of writing follow different style
guidelines. For example, in your other college
courses, you may be required to adhere to the
MLA, Turabian or APA styles guides. In
journalism and public relations, you must
know Associated Press Style.
Why it Matters
• Therefore, you must know Associated Press
style if you intend to get a job in the media or
public relations.
Why it Matters
• Strictly following a particular usage style
provides consistency, accuracy and clarity in
grammar, punctuation and other language
issues.
Why it Matters
• While some publications, such as The New
York Times, have their own unique style, the
vast majority of newspapers, magazines and
press releases follow the rules of the AP
Stylebook. And because communicating with
the media is a significant part of public
relations, PR practitioners must know and
utilize AP style, as well.
Why it Matters
• AP style aims to be totally accurate, clear to
anyone with a high school education and
inoffensive (curse words are generally
avoided, for example) -- all while being as
succinct as possible. Note that AP style differs
significantly from style guides typically used in
English classes, such as the APA and Oxford
style guides.
How to Study
• Read some of your AP Stylebook every day.
Keep it handy and refer to it often. You
probably won't be able to memorize
everything inside the book, but you should at
least remember common style issues (such as
the aforementioned rules) and be familiar
enough with the book that you can look up
other issues quickly when you're writing on
deadline.
Practice Makes Perfect
• Many free practice quizzes are available
online.
Top 15 AP Style Rules
• The AP Style book contains hundreds of rules.
But some come up much more often than
others.
• What follows are 15 of the most common AP
Style rules. You should memorize these. And
you must follow these in your writing
assignments for this course, or you will lose
points.
1. Use a person's full name and title the first time
you mention him or her in an article. For example,
write Terrence Ross, professor of communications,
not Prof. Ross. Once people have been fully
identified, refer to them by last name only. There
are exceptions, so always check the AP Stylebook.
Also: Do not use courtesy titles such as Mr., Miss,
Mrs., or Ms., except in direct quotes or where
needed to distinguish between people of the same
name. Only use Dr. if the person works in
healthcare; do not use for PhDs or professors.
Using courtesy titles may be polite. And The New
York Times uses them in its articles. But it is not AP
Style.
2. Capitalize formal titles used before a name.
For example, write Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo. Very long titles may be shortened or
summarized unless they are essential to the
story, but the shortened form should not be
capitalized (for example, you may use
spokesperson instead of Vice President for Public
Affairs and Communications). Use lowercase
when formal titles follow a name (e.g., Mike
Pompeo, secretary of state). General titles, such
as actor Matt Damon and activist Greta
Thunberg , are lowercased.
3. Abbreviate months when used with days,
and use numerals (1, 2, 3, etc.) not ordinal
numbers (1st, 2nd, etc.). Exceptions are March,
April, May, June and July -- write them out, don't
abbreviate. For example, write Feb. 2, 2017, not
February 2nd, 2017. But, when using only the
month and year, spell out the month.
4. Generally, spell out the numbers zero
through nine and use numerals for 10 and
higher. Note, however, that numbers used at the
beginning of a sentence are spelled out.
Example: Five hundred twenty-four students
attended. It is better, however, to rewrite the
sentence so that it doesn't begin with a number.
Example: Attending the event were 524 students
from local colleges. Years are one of the
exceptions. For example: 2016 was a bad year
for investors.
5. But use numerals even for ages younger than
10. This is another exception to that
aforementioned number rule. When used like an
adjective, say X-year-old, including the hyphens.
Otherwise, don't use the hyphens. For example:
the 5-year-old girl kicked her brother, who is 8
years old.
6. For percentages, use numerals for the
number and the % sign for percent. Examples:
Participation increased 5%. Nearly 28.5% of all
students don't like algebra.
7. To indicate time, use figures and lowercase
letters (9 a.m., 6 p.m.). Put a space between the
figure and the letters. Exceptions are noon and
midnight. Do not say 12 noon or 12 midnight --
it's redundant.
8. Spell out abbreviations or acronyms on first
reference. For example, use Nassau County
Community College the first time you refer to
the college in a story. You may use NCCC on any
references made after that. Another example
would be to use UC only after you have spelled
out University Center on first reference. Note:
there are some exceptions, such as FBI.
9. Capitalize names of people, places or things
to set them apart from a general group. These
include proper nouns such as Mike, Canada,
Hudson River, and Garden City High School. But
use lowercase for common nouns (i.e. nouns not
coupled with a proper name), such as the river
or the high school. Also, put a word in lowercase
when you have more than one proper noun
sharing the word. Example: Nassau and Suffolk
counties. Capitalize the first word in a sentence.
Refer to the dictionary or AP Stylebook, if
needed. When in doubt, use lowercase.
10. For addresses, abbreviate street, avenue
and boulevard when they’re used with a specific
address, such as 1 South Ave., but spell them
out otherwise (e.g., We took a drive down
Nassau Boulevard). Spell out First through Ninth
is they’re street names, then go to numerals
after that (e.g. 222 10th Ave.) If you have a
complete address, abbreviate any compass
points, such as 712 Jones St. S.E. But, without an
exact address, it’s just Southwest Jones Street.
11. For States: Spell out the names of the states
in text regardless of whether they appear with a
town/city or alone (e.g. Wildfires continued to
rage through southern California yesterday;
She’s from Garden City, New York). When
referring to the United States as a noun, spell
out United States on first reference. As an
adjective, as part of an organization’s name or
on subsequent references, use U.S. with no
spaces.
12. Use the name of the website rather than
the Web address. For example: YouTube, no
YouTube.com or New York Times, not
nytimes.com. Keep in mind that a URL is merely
a source’s address in cyberspace. So, for
example: when you cite sources, saying
adelphi.edu instead of Adelphi University would
be the equivalent of saying “According to 1
South Avenue in Garden City,” instead of
“according to Adelphi University.” Use the
source’s name, not address (physical, Internet or
otherwise).
13. Punctuation
• Periods: Use a single space after the period at
the end of a sentence. Do not put a space
between initials (e.g. C.S. Lewis).
• Commas: Do not put a comma before the
conjunction in a simple series (e.g. John, Paul,
George and Ringo). Use a comma to set off a
person's hometown and age (e.g. Pat Smith,
34, was arrested yesterday).
14. Quotation Marks (“ ”): In dialogue, each
person’s words are placed in a separate
paragraph, with quotation marks at the
beginning and end of each person’s speech.
Periods and commas always go within quotation
marks. Dashes, semicolons, question marks and
exclamation points go within the quotation
marks when they apply to the quoted material.
They go outside when they apply to the whole
sentence. Use single marks for quotes within
quotes (e.g. She said, "He told me, 'I love you.'").
15. Money: When referring to money, dollar
amounts are always expressed as numerals and
the “$” sign is used. For cents or amounts of $1
million or more, spell the words cents, million,
billion, trillion etc. Examples: $3, $26.52,
$250,000, $8 million, 6 cents.
Remember

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Associated Press Style

  • 1.
  • 2. Why it Matters • Different types of writing follow different style guidelines. For example, in your other college courses, you may be required to adhere to the MLA, Turabian or APA styles guides. In journalism and public relations, you must know Associated Press Style.
  • 3. Why it Matters • Therefore, you must know Associated Press style if you intend to get a job in the media or public relations.
  • 4. Why it Matters • Strictly following a particular usage style provides consistency, accuracy and clarity in grammar, punctuation and other language issues.
  • 5. Why it Matters • While some publications, such as The New York Times, have their own unique style, the vast majority of newspapers, magazines and press releases follow the rules of the AP Stylebook. And because communicating with the media is a significant part of public relations, PR practitioners must know and utilize AP style, as well.
  • 6. Why it Matters • AP style aims to be totally accurate, clear to anyone with a high school education and inoffensive (curse words are generally avoided, for example) -- all while being as succinct as possible. Note that AP style differs significantly from style guides typically used in English classes, such as the APA and Oxford style guides.
  • 7. How to Study • Read some of your AP Stylebook every day. Keep it handy and refer to it often. You probably won't be able to memorize everything inside the book, but you should at least remember common style issues (such as the aforementioned rules) and be familiar enough with the book that you can look up other issues quickly when you're writing on deadline.
  • 8. Practice Makes Perfect • Many free practice quizzes are available online.
  • 9. Top 15 AP Style Rules • The AP Style book contains hundreds of rules. But some come up much more often than others. • What follows are 15 of the most common AP Style rules. You should memorize these. And you must follow these in your writing assignments for this course, or you will lose points.
  • 10. 1. Use a person's full name and title the first time you mention him or her in an article. For example, write Terrence Ross, professor of communications, not Prof. Ross. Once people have been fully identified, refer to them by last name only. There are exceptions, so always check the AP Stylebook. Also: Do not use courtesy titles such as Mr., Miss, Mrs., or Ms., except in direct quotes or where needed to distinguish between people of the same name. Only use Dr. if the person works in healthcare; do not use for PhDs or professors. Using courtesy titles may be polite. And The New York Times uses them in its articles. But it is not AP Style.
  • 11. 2. Capitalize formal titles used before a name. For example, write Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. Very long titles may be shortened or summarized unless they are essential to the story, but the shortened form should not be capitalized (for example, you may use spokesperson instead of Vice President for Public Affairs and Communications). Use lowercase when formal titles follow a name (e.g., Mike Pompeo, secretary of state). General titles, such as actor Matt Damon and activist Greta Thunberg , are lowercased.
  • 12. 3. Abbreviate months when used with days, and use numerals (1, 2, 3, etc.) not ordinal numbers (1st, 2nd, etc.). Exceptions are March, April, May, June and July -- write them out, don't abbreviate. For example, write Feb. 2, 2017, not February 2nd, 2017. But, when using only the month and year, spell out the month.
  • 13. 4. Generally, spell out the numbers zero through nine and use numerals for 10 and higher. Note, however, that numbers used at the beginning of a sentence are spelled out. Example: Five hundred twenty-four students attended. It is better, however, to rewrite the sentence so that it doesn't begin with a number. Example: Attending the event were 524 students from local colleges. Years are one of the exceptions. For example: 2016 was a bad year for investors.
  • 14. 5. But use numerals even for ages younger than 10. This is another exception to that aforementioned number rule. When used like an adjective, say X-year-old, including the hyphens. Otherwise, don't use the hyphens. For example: the 5-year-old girl kicked her brother, who is 8 years old.
  • 15. 6. For percentages, use numerals for the number and the % sign for percent. Examples: Participation increased 5%. Nearly 28.5% of all students don't like algebra.
  • 16. 7. To indicate time, use figures and lowercase letters (9 a.m., 6 p.m.). Put a space between the figure and the letters. Exceptions are noon and midnight. Do not say 12 noon or 12 midnight -- it's redundant.
  • 17. 8. Spell out abbreviations or acronyms on first reference. For example, use Nassau County Community College the first time you refer to the college in a story. You may use NCCC on any references made after that. Another example would be to use UC only after you have spelled out University Center on first reference. Note: there are some exceptions, such as FBI.
  • 18. 9. Capitalize names of people, places or things to set them apart from a general group. These include proper nouns such as Mike, Canada, Hudson River, and Garden City High School. But use lowercase for common nouns (i.e. nouns not coupled with a proper name), such as the river or the high school. Also, put a word in lowercase when you have more than one proper noun sharing the word. Example: Nassau and Suffolk counties. Capitalize the first word in a sentence. Refer to the dictionary or AP Stylebook, if needed. When in doubt, use lowercase.
  • 19. 10. For addresses, abbreviate street, avenue and boulevard when they’re used with a specific address, such as 1 South Ave., but spell them out otherwise (e.g., We took a drive down Nassau Boulevard). Spell out First through Ninth is they’re street names, then go to numerals after that (e.g. 222 10th Ave.) If you have a complete address, abbreviate any compass points, such as 712 Jones St. S.E. But, without an exact address, it’s just Southwest Jones Street.
  • 20. 11. For States: Spell out the names of the states in text regardless of whether they appear with a town/city or alone (e.g. Wildfires continued to rage through southern California yesterday; She’s from Garden City, New York). When referring to the United States as a noun, spell out United States on first reference. As an adjective, as part of an organization’s name or on subsequent references, use U.S. with no spaces.
  • 21. 12. Use the name of the website rather than the Web address. For example: YouTube, no YouTube.com or New York Times, not nytimes.com. Keep in mind that a URL is merely a source’s address in cyberspace. So, for example: when you cite sources, saying adelphi.edu instead of Adelphi University would be the equivalent of saying “According to 1 South Avenue in Garden City,” instead of “according to Adelphi University.” Use the source’s name, not address (physical, Internet or otherwise).
  • 22. 13. Punctuation • Periods: Use a single space after the period at the end of a sentence. Do not put a space between initials (e.g. C.S. Lewis). • Commas: Do not put a comma before the conjunction in a simple series (e.g. John, Paul, George and Ringo). Use a comma to set off a person's hometown and age (e.g. Pat Smith, 34, was arrested yesterday).
  • 23. 14. Quotation Marks (“ ”): In dialogue, each person’s words are placed in a separate paragraph, with quotation marks at the beginning and end of each person’s speech. Periods and commas always go within quotation marks. Dashes, semicolons, question marks and exclamation points go within the quotation marks when they apply to the quoted material. They go outside when they apply to the whole sentence. Use single marks for quotes within quotes (e.g. She said, "He told me, 'I love you.'").
  • 24. 15. Money: When referring to money, dollar amounts are always expressed as numerals and the “$” sign is used. For cents or amounts of $1 million or more, spell the words cents, million, billion, trillion etc. Examples: $3, $26.52, $250,000, $8 million, 6 cents.