MLA vs. APA vs. Chicago: A Cheat Sheet for the Perplexed Student
If your assignment lists a style but you need the quick differences, start with the table below. Most students only need to know three things: field, citation format, and page layout.
Which Style Fits Your Paper?
| Style | Common in | In-text citation | Bibliography name | Page numbers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MLA | Literature, languages | (Smith 42) | Works Cited | Top right with last name |
| APA | Psychology, education, sciences | (Smith, 2020) | References | Top right only |
| Chicago | History, fine arts | Footnotes or (Smith 2020, 42) | Bibliography | Bottom center or top right |
Check your syllabus first. If the prompt says “social sciences” or includes a year in the citation example, lean toward APA. Literature classes almost always want MLA.
Sample Citations You Can Copy
Book with one author:
- MLA: Smith, John. The Study Guide. Norton, 2020.
- APA: Smith, J. (2020). The study guide. Norton.
- Chicago: Smith, John. The Study Guide. New York: Norton, 2020.
Journal article:
- MLA: Smith, John. “Student Stress.” College Journal, vol. 15, no. 2, 2020, pp. 45-60.
- APA: Smith, J. (2020). Student stress. College Journal, 15(2), 45-60.
- Chicago: Smith, John. “Student Stress.” College Journal 15, no. 2 (2020): 45-60.
Work through your references list once, then run a quick check: MLA uses sentence-style titles on the Works Cited page, APA capitalizes only the first word and proper nouns, and Chicago keeps headline style. That single difference catches most mix-ups.
