Dear Master’s Programs Student,
If you are even remotely acquainted
with APA style and formatting, you know that there are scores of (sometimes
arcane) rules, exceptions to the rules, and exceptions to the exceptions. This week, I’ll clarify the rules on
formatting of numbers.
Rule
1:
The inviolable rule is to spell out all numbers that start a sentence, heading,
or title. For example: Twelve people now comprise the
Pritchett-Dunphy-Delgado-Tucker family now that Fulgencio has entered the
world.
Rule
2: The following should be given as numerals:
- numbers that precede a unit of measurement (e.g. 10 kilometers, 17 grams);
- numbers that represent mathematical functions, percentages, or decimals (e.g. 4 times as many students, 23%, 0.55); and
- numbers that represent time, ages, dates, or exact monetary sums (e.g. 3 hrs 9 min, 4-year-olds, $19,460)
This rule is superseded by Rule
1. So a percentage that begins a
sentence would still be given this way: “Forty-four percent of the students
showed a moderate improvement, and 15% of the survey population showed a
significant improvement.”
[Note that “Forty-four percent” is
spelled out since it heads the sentence, but “15%” is mid-sentence and follows
rule 2.]
Rule
3:
Numbers zero to nine are spelled out as words; numbers 10 and above are given
in numeric form.
For example: Seven of Man Men’s nine writers are women.
After seven seasons and 138
episodes, 30 Rock aired its final
show . Blerg.
Remember that Rule #3 is overridden
by Rule #2 (which is overridden by Rule #1).
Happy Writing!
James