[OS X TeX] Getting students to use LaTeX (and apa.cls)
@ Rocteur CC
macosx at rocteur.cc
Fri Aug 18 06:10:35 EDT 2006
On 17 Aug 2006, at 18:30, Niels Kobschaetzki wrote:
> On 8/17/06, Michael Kubovy <kubovy at virginia.edu> wrote:
>
>>
>> Dear MacOSXTeXans,
>>
>> On Aug 17, 2006, at 1:10 AM, John Vokey wrote:
>>
>> > As Michael noted, there is apa.cls, but it needs apacite.bst or
>> > apacitex.bst to produce apa-like references (either can be used
>> > independently of apa.cls, although I recommend the combo: if you
>> > use apa.cls, you do not have to call apacite with
>> > \bibliogreaphystyle{}, as it does that for you). apa.cls produces
>> > virtually perfect APA documents in three modes: `jou': reproduces
>> > the journal output in amazing JEP:X fidelity, `doc' produces your
>> > document in a single-column format more useful for distributing to
>> > colleagues and co-authors for commenting and editing, and `man'
>> > format faithfully (well, better than anything else that I have
>> > seen) reproduces every flipping stupid APA rule you can imagine,
>> > and many you probably didn't even know for journal submission.
>> > apacite sometimes, but rarely, requires some tweaking to get
>> > obscure referencing types to type-set correctly, but these are all
>> > well-documented in the manual. I have a template for apa.cls that
>> > sets out much of the format for you (read, you probably won't have
>> > to read the manual to use it successfully). Just drop it in your
>> > TeXShop templates folder. Write me if you are interested. I don't
>> > let my students use anything else (and, in the bargain, they don't
>> > have to learn APA format: LaTeX takes care of that for them, as it
>> > should).
>>
>> I concur with John's assessment of apa.cls.
>>
>> Your write "I don't let my students use anything else". Do you impose
>> this on students working in your lab, or students in a course? If the
>> latter, are these grad students? How do you persuade them to do
>> what's best for them and abandon the deeply ingrained MSW habit?
>>
>> It might be useful for people on the list to see your template. I for
>> one would.
>
> I would be more interested how I could convince my not so tech-savvy
> lecturers that using LaTeX is a good thing and that some of their
> guidelines
> for papers don't work well with LaTeX...
>
> Niels
I believe the big POINT for anyone, not just non tech-savvy people is
the NON WYSIWYG phobia.
At the office we have 3 types of users, those that use Microsoft
products and the other use *nix systems, of these *nix people some
are emacs/vi people who use emacs/Mutt for sending emalis and LaTeX
for WP. The others uses Kmail and Kate/OpenOffice ...
A additional interesting comparison is that those that use Mutt use
Ion3 and Ice as X desktop environments, the others use KDE..
I don't think you can easily convince someone who has used MSW/
OpenOffice to use LateX.
If someone comes up with a way to show that this:
\begin{letter}
{Mr. Joe Smith\\
2345 Princess St. \\
Edinburgh, EH1 1AA}
\end{letter}
is an acceptable way of writing, then I think the battle will be won!
In order to write the above you have to be awake and able to think,
this is not necessary when using WYSIWYG editors.
Interesting topic though!
Jerry
P.S. sorry for the slightly off topic addition to this thread but it
is something that has me intrigued, NON WYSIWYG phobia!
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