Workplace Discrimination: Understanding Legal and Ethical Requirements

QKhalid
PowerPointpresentationtemplate.pptx

[Presentation Title Goes Here]

[Your Name Here]

School

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Go to the Home tab at the top and click on the New Slide or Layout button to access different formatting for your slides.

Choose formatting that presents your information in the most logical way.

Use a consistent, grammatically parallel format for bulleted lists. (For example, on this slide, each element begins with an imperative verb.)

[Heading Goes Here]

Go to the Home tab at the top and click on the New Slide or Layout button to access different formatting for your slides.

Choose formatting that presents your information in the most logical way.

Use a consistent, grammatically parallel format for bulleted lists. (For example, on this slide, each element begins with an imperative verb.)

[Heading Goes Here]

Your slides can also contain entire paragraphs, like this one does. Citation rules apply to presentations just as they do to papers—when using or referencing another author’s ideas, you must cite the source. When incorporating a citation in a slide, do so just as you would in a traditional paper (Smith, 2010). According to Jones (2007), presentations are not very different from papers!

Use APA style rules to format any tables and figures in your presentation:

Figure 1. Bar graph showing useful information. From “Utilizing bar graphs,” by A. Jones, 2011, Journal of Handy Graphs, 76(2), 3. Reprinted with permission.

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Remember to adhere to any assignment guidelines regarding presentation format. This template contains suggestions only.

Keep in mind that there is no such thing as an “APA standard PowerPoint.” Review http://blog.apastyle.org/apastyle/2010/09/dear-professor.html for more information.

References

Always include a Reference list at the end of your presentation, just as you would in a paper. Reference list entries take the same format they would in a paper:

Jones, P. (2004). This great book. New York, NY: Publisher.

Smith, W., & Cat, D. (2010). How to make a good presentation

great. Presentations Quarterly, 45(4), 56–59.

doi:10.123.45/abc