[[This is apost has been retitled once and re-editededited twice. This is the second edit. The original post had a sample reference that was faulty for purposes of having the question answered. For this edit, I added a "good" example of a reference and explained the difference between the examples. I felt this would be helpful to sustain context for the entire thread.]]
Per APA 7, if an article has an article number, you should use that instead of a page range. The university insists on compliance with APA 7. I am editing a paper andIf an article number is not its author. I strive for accuracy and to decreaseself-evident in the possibilityPDF, on the article's web landing page, or in the citation download, you are expected to dig a paper will be returned for noncompliancebit further.
I have discovered twoseveral indicators that an article number is likely (not always, but likely) to exist:
- a page range that starts with "1", or
- a single page number of any value instead of a page range, or
- a paper by a popular seminal author.
There are, no doubt, other ways to find elusive Articlearticle numbers. The fact that an article number cannot be immediately or easily found does not mean the article number does not exist.
For those who have read this far and want a crack at it, here is a exampleare two examples of a citationcitations in the student paper (the paper has mostly T&F sources). The citation seems a candidatecitations seem to be candidates for a hidden article number becausefor different reasons as noted.
Example 1: This is a reference provided by the student. The page range starts with "1the number 1 and the article is fairly recent." As best I can tell In my experience, although it has been published onlineeither or both of those factors are often (not always, it has not yet appeared inbut often) a clue that the journal. I mention this as it may inform answers to this postpaper has an article number.
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Bédard-Thom, C., Guay, F., & Trottier, C. (2020). Mental toughness in sport: The Goal Expectancy-Self-Control (GES) model. Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, 7(3), 1-17. https://doi.org/10.1080/10413200.2020.1808736 ===
Example 2: This is a reference provided by the student. Although the article is very old, the author is seminal and popular. Given that publishers have a backlog of articles that are being encoded for online access, then this seems a good candidate for having an associated article number.
=== Bandura, A. (1990). Perceived self-efficacy in the exercise of personal agency. Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, 2(3),128-163. https://doi.org/10.1080/10413209008406426 ===
Comment: Note that I am editing a paper and not its author. I strive for accuracy and to decrease the possibility a paper will be returned for noncompliance.