Session No. XX (12pt Arial flush right underlined)

Title of Paper (16pt TNR, upper & lower case, centered)

Author name(s), degrees, credentials (12pt Arial, flush right)

Name of company (if applicable)

City and State (if applicable)

Introduction (or 1st level heading) (14pt Arial flush left) (one line of space above and below)

First paragraph after heading (11pt Times New Roman, no indent under heading, single spaced). Insert one extra line of space between paragraphs.[1]

1st level head (14pt Arial flush left) (one line of space above and below)

2nd level subhead (12pt Times New Roman underlined, upper and lower case, no space between head and text)

Text: The text should be 11pt Times Roman or Times New Roman. First paragraph under a subhead is not indented; the rest are indented six spaces (Stucka, 2016). The previous material is the format for an in-text citation; do not use with footnotes or endnotes.

Bulleted lists: 11pt Times Set flush left to margin. Numbers should be followed by a period. Space 1/8 inch from bullet to beginning of text. Insert one additional line space above and below lists.

·  First item in list (list bullet)

·  Second item in list

·  First entry in a sublist (indent 0.25 spaces from main list)

·  Third item in list

Numbered lists: Set up the same as for bulleted lists:

1.  first item in list (list number)

2.  second item in list

3.  third item in list

a.  first item in sublist (indent 0.25 spaces from main list)

3rd level head (11pt Times Roman flush left, upper & lower case, no space between text)

Safety managers need to know when to become safety leaders and build personal responsibility rather than hold people accountable. And most importantly, whether or not you hold a safety management position, you can be a safety leader and help people transition from an other-directed to a self-directed motivational state. Remember, few manage, but many must lead.

Endnotes

1 This is the style for an endnote (including the heading Endnote). DO not use with footnotes or in-text citations. This comes after the text but before the Bibliography/References section.

Bibliography (same as 1st level head)

American Council of Learned Societies. 1994. Teaching the Humanities: Essays for the ACLS Elementary and Secondary Schools Teacher Curriculum Development Project. New York: ACLS.

Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). 2013. “Fatal Occupational injuries by industry and event or exposure, All U.S.” (www.bls.gov/iif/cfoi/cflb0268.pdf).

Deming, W. E. 1991. “Quality, Productivity, and Competitive Position.” Four-day workshop presented in Cincinnati, Ohio by Quality Enhancement Seminars, Inc., Los Angeles, CA, May 1991.

National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH). 2012. “Total Worker Health.” (www.cdc.gov/niosh/TWH/totalhealth.html/).

Norris, W. 1981. The Unsafe Sky: The Unvarnished Truth About Air Safety. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.

Richards, Ellen. 1988. “Four Exercises Women Do Too Many Of.” Self. 42: 174-177.

Margins

Leave 1.25 in. all around (left, right, top and bottom).

For additional information, please refer to the 2017 PDC -- Guidelines for Formatting Proceedings Papers enclosed in your acceptance package.

[1] This is the style for a footnote. Note that the footnote number comes after the period at the end of the sentence.