How to Use an Appendix
This article was co-authored by Annaliese Dunne and by wikiHow staff writer, Danielle Blinka, MA, MPA. Annaliese Dunne is a Middle School English Teacher. With over 10 years of teaching experience, her areas of expertise include writing and grammar instruction, as well as teaching reading comprehension. She is also an experienced freelance writer. She received her Bachelor's degree in English.
This article has been fact-checked, ensuring the accuracy of any cited facts and confirming the authority of its sources.
This article has been viewed 85,268 times.
You’ve probably seen an appendix (or appendices) at the end of an academic paper. However, you might be unsure of how to include them in your own work. When you’re writing an academic paper, you can use an appendix to add important information that doesn’t fit into your paper. You might include your research materials, raw data, or detailed information that’s good to know but not necessary for readers to understand.
Things You Should Know
- Format your appendix in traditional paragraph style, and put each appendix on a separate page.
- Label all your figures, tables, and visuals with the letter of the corresponding appendix, and number the elements within each appendix to make it clear what you’re referring to.
- Refer to each appendix in the text of your paper, and put your appendices in the order that they’re mentioned.
Method 1 of 3:
Deciding When to Use an Appendix
- Surveys or questionnaires you used in your research
- Copies of letters or emails
- Transcripts from interviews
- Important words that need to be defined
- Further description of the testing methods or process for choosing a particular testing method
- A detailed description of the materials or testing equipment you used
- Interesting details that might interest the reader but aren’t necessary to understand your conclusions
- Additional background about your topic
Advertisement
- For instance, you might include your raw data in 1 appendix and your mathematical proofs in a separate appendix.
- For example, let’s say you conducted an environmental study. You might include a map of the area you studied.
- Similarly, you might include a photo of your lab setup for a chemistry experiment.
Advertisement
Method 2 of 3:
Formatting Appendices
- For instance, let’s say you want to create appendices for a questionnaire, emails you exchanged with an expert on your topic, and raw data from an experiment you did. You’d need 3 separate appendices.
appendix on a separate page." width="460" height="345" />
- For instance, Appendix A might be on pg. 23, Appendix B may be on pg. 25, and Appendix C could be on pg. 26.
- If you have 3 or fewer short appendices, you may decide to include them on the same page. However, it’s easier for readers to scan them if they’re on separate pages.
- You don’t need to describe what’s included in the appendix in the title.
Variation: You can use numbers if you prefer. You might choose to label multiple appendices “Appendix 1,” “Appendix 2,” Appendix 3,” and so on. [8] X Research source
- For instance, you might have an “Appendix A,” Appendix B,” and Appendix C” at the end of your paper. Similarly, you could write, “Appendix 1,” Appendix 2,” and “Appendix 3.”
- For instance, you might start over with “Appendix Table 1” or “Appendix Figure A.”
- If a particular table or graph is necessary for your reader to understand your conclusions, include in your paper rather than an appendix.
Advertisement
Method 3 of 3:
Inserting Appendices into Your Paper
- For instance, when discussing survey results, you might include this text: “See Appendix A for a copy of the survey.”
- For example, let’s say you have an appendix for a survey, an appendix for your raw data, and an appendix for an interview transcript. If you reference the interview first, followed by the survey and data, you’d put the appendices in that order.
- Check the instructions from your instructor or the journal where you’re submitting to see if they have specific rules about where the appendices should be placed.
page numbers that continue the paper’s numbering sequence." width="460" height="345" />
- For instance, if your paper ended on page 22, your first appendix would be page 23.
- You don't need a table of contents to have appendices.
Advertisement
Expert Q&A
Can you give another example of using an Appendix?
Annaliese Dunne
English Teacher
Annaliese Dunne is a Middle School English Teacher. With over 10 years of teaching experience, her areas of expertise include writing and grammar instruction, as well as teaching reading comprehension. She is also an experienced freelance writer. She received her Bachelor's degree in English.
English Teacher
Expert Answer
For instance, in a cookbook, an appendix might offer alternative ingredient substitutions for readers lacking specific items. Essentially, it functions as a resource for accessing extra details pertinent to the subject matter of the book. In literary works like The Lord of the Rings trilogy, appendices can include additional stories or background information about characters, enhancing readers' comprehension of the narrative. These appendices offer context or elaboration on aspects of the main text, enriching the reader's understanding of the content.
Thanks! We're glad this was helpful.
Thank you for your feedback.
If wikiHow has helped you, please consider a small contribution to support us in helping more readers like you. We’re committed to providing the world with free how-to resources, and even $1 helps us in our mission. Support wikiHow