Writing Rules

ARTICLE PREPARATION
1. The Journal of Gaziosmanpaşa University Faculty of Agriculture is published three issues in a year as in April, August and December.
2. The journal publishes original research articles in the field of Agricultural Sciences that have not been published previously and including original research articles published as an abstract in proceeding books.
3. If the authors are the same in the manuscripts, only two of them are accepted for the publication in the same issue.
4. There is no royalty payment to the authors. Also there is no publication fee for the accepted manuscript.
5. Authors are responsible for the scientific content of the manuscripts to be published.
6. The research articles should be prepared in English under the main headings; Title, Abstract, Öz, Keywords in Turkish and in English, Introduction, Material and Methods, Findings and Discussion, Results and References.
7. Article layout;
a. It should be written in A4 size, 12 point Times New Roman type letters and 1.5 line spacing. Page margins should be 3 cm each.
b. Each page and line of the article should be numbered. The article should not exceed 15 pages in total.
c. The Turkish and English title of the article should be written size 14 point, bold, centered and only the first letter of each words should be a capital and the rest in lower case letters.
d. A maximum two levels of headings are recommended. First-level heading should be indented 0.5 cm, justified, bold, and the first letter of each word should be capitalized. Second level heading should be bold, indented 0.5 cm, justified, and only the first letter of the first word should be capitalized.
e. The main body of the text should be indented 0.5 cm. All paragraphs should start from the left margin. The text should be completely justified. There should be no spelling. Highlighting text with the use of bold or underlined is not recommended.
f. The name(s) of the author should be written clearly (academic title should not be specified), the address information of all authors, their ORCID IDs and the contact information of correspondence author should be given (e-mail, telephone, fax, etc.). Addresses should be written clearly just below the authors' names with the first letter of the words capitalized.
Title: The title of the article should be short and descriptive and should not exceed 15 words.
Abstract: Both Turkish and English abstracts should not exceed 200 words, should be written in 12 points and 1.5 spacing, should include the purpose of the article, important data and results of the study. Only english abstract can be written for articles coming from abroad.
Keywords: Should not exceed 5 words in alphabetical order.
Introduction: This section should clearly express the problem in the study, explain previous and especially recent work, and clearly state the aims of the study.
Materials and Methods: This section should contain all the materials used in the study, the methods should be explained in detail, and statistical methods should be explained.
Results and discussionFindings and discussion obtained in the study should be given as tables and information, and should be interpreted and discussed according to the results of the previous studies.
Conclusion: The contribution of the findings to science and practice should be emphasized together with the recommendations.
Acknowledgments: In this section, people, organizations and projects that contributed to the work can be included.
8. Scientific names of the species in the article should be in italics and decimal numbers should be separated by a point.
9. Graphics, maps, photographs, pictures and similar presentations should be named as "Figure" and the presentation of numerical values should be named as "Table". Turkish nomenclature (For Turkish authors) should be placed under the English nomenclature of Figures and Tables. All given tables and pictures should be cited in the text and should be given after the reference in the article close to the cited place.

In-text citations and References
It should be made according to the APA 7 spelling rule.


In-text citations
Author type                                             Parenthetic                                                              Narrative
One-author study                                 (Carducci, 2009)                                                    Carducci (2009)
Two-author study                                 (Vollrath & Torgersen, 2002)                                Vollrath and Torgersen (2020)
Three or more -author study             (Gunay-Oge et al., 2020)                                      Gunay-Oge et al. (2020)
Group with abbreviation
The first cite                                            (World Health Organisation [WHO], 2020)       World Health Organisation (WHO, 2020)
Subsequent cites                                  (WHO, 2020)                                                             WHO (2020)
Group without abbreviation               Group name                                                            Group name

-If more than one reference is in parentheses, they should be given in alphabetical order and separated by semicolons.
(Afifi et al., 2011; Cohen et al., 2014; Lobbestael et al., 2010; Zhang et al., 2012).

-If more than one reference is cited narratively, the order is not important, it can be written as desired.
Zhang et al. (2012), Cohen et al. (2014) and Afifi et al. (2011) examined…..

-If the name of the application or program is given, it is sufficient to write it if the version used is known.
Data were analyzed with IBM SPSS Statistics (Version 25).

-If the same source is cited in more than one narrative form in a paragraph, the year is not written in the case of repetition. However, the year is always indicated in the quotations in parentheses. More detailed information about in-text citation can be found on the APA 7 official website.If the same source is cited in more than one narrative form in a paragraph, the year is not written in the case of repetition.
-However, the year is always indicated in the quotations in parentheses.
-More detailed information about in-text citation can be found on the APA 7 official website.

Resources

Articles
-If an article has a DOI, the DOI is added to the reference.
-The issue number of a journal is always appended.

Grady, J. S., Her, M., Moreno, G., Perez, C., & Yelinek, J. (2019). Emotions in storybooks: A comparison of storybooks that represent ethnic and racial groups in the United States. Psychology of Popular Media Culture, 8(3), 207–217. https://doi.org/10.1037/ppm0000185

-If the journal article has an article number instead of a page range, include the word “Article” and then
the article number instead of the page range

Jerrentrup, A., Mueller, T., Glowalla, U., Herder, M., Henrichs, N., Neubauer, A., & Schaefer, J. R. (2018). Teaching medicine with the help of “Dr. House.” PLoS ONE, 13(3), Article e0193972. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193972

-If the article has missing information
Missing volume numbe
r

Stegmeir, M. (2016). Climate change: New discipline practices promote college access. The Journal of College Admission, (231), 44–47. https://www.nxtbook.com/ygsreprints/NACAC/nacac_jca_spring2016/#/46

Missing issue number

Sanchiz, M., Chevalier, A., & Amadieu, F. (2017). How do older and young adults start searching for information? Impact of age, domain knowledge and problem complexity on the different steps of information searching. Computers in Human Behavior, 72, 67–78. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2017.02.038

Missing page or article number

Butler, J. (2017). Where access meets multimodality: The case of ASL music videos. Kairos: Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy, 21(1). http://technorhetoric.net/21.1/topoi/butler/index.html

-If the journal does not use volume, issue, and/or article or page numbers, omit the missing element(s)from the reference

Book/E-Book References

Jackson, L. M. (2019). The psychology of prejudice: From attitudes to social action (2nd ed.). American Psychological Association. https://doi.org/10.1037/0000168-000

Sapolsky, R. M. (2017). Behave: The biology of humans at our best and worst. Penguin Books.

Svendsen, S., & Løber, L. (2020). The big picture/Academic writing: The one-hour guide (3rd digital ed.). Hans Reitzel Forlag. https://thebigpicture-academicwriting.digi.hansreitzel.dk/

-Provide the author, year of publication, title, and publisher of the book. Include any edition information in parentheses after the title, without italics
-If the book includes a DOI, include the DOI in the reference after the publisher name.
-Do not include the publisher location.
-If the ebook without a DOI has a stable URL that will resolve for readers, include the URL of the book in
the reference. Do not include the name of the database in the reference.
-If the ebook is from an academic research database and has no DOI or stable URL, end the book reference after the publisher name.

Report by a Government Agency

National Cancer Institute. (2019). Taking time: Support for people with cancer (NIH Publication No. 18-2059). U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health. https://www.cancer.gov/publications/patient-education/takingtime.pdf

-The specific agency responsible for the report appears as the author. The names of parent agencies not present in the group author name appear in the source element as the publisher.

Conference Proceedings
Conference proceedings published in a journal

Duckworth, A. L., Quirk, A., Gallop, R., Hoyle, R. H., Kelly, D. R., & Matthews, M. D. (2019). Cognitive and noncognitive predictors of success. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA, 116(47), 23499–23504. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1910510116

-Conference proceedings published in a journal follow the same format as journal articles.

Conference proceedings published as a whole book

Kushilevitz, E., & Malkin, T. (Eds.). (2016). Lecture notes in computer science: Vol. 9562. Theory of cryptography. Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-49096-9

-Conference proceedings published as a whole book follow the same reference format as whole edited books.

Thesis

Published theses.

Kabir, J. M. (2016). Factors influencing customer satisfaction at a fast food hamburger chain: The relationship between customer satisfaction and customer loyalty (Publication No. 10169573) [Doctoral dissertation, Wilmington University]. ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global.

Miranda, C. (2019). Exploring the lived experiences of foster youth who obtained graduate level degrees: Self-efficacy, resilience, and the impact on identity development (Publication No. 27542827) [Doctoral dissertation, Pepperdine University]. PQDT Open. https://pqdtopen.proquest.com/doc/2309521814.html?FMT=AI

Zambrano-Vazquez, L. (2016). The interaction of state and trait worry on response monitoring in those with worry and obsessive-compulsive symptoms [Doctoral dissertation, University of Arizona]. UA Campus Repository. https://repository.arizona.edu/handle/10150/620615

-A thesis is considered published when it is available from a database an institutional repository, or an archive. If the database assigns publication numbers to theses, include the publication number in parentheses after the title of the dissertation or thesis without italics.
-Include the description “Doctoral” or “Master’s thesis” followed by a comma and the name of the institution that awarded the degree. --Place this information in square brackets after the thesis title and any publication number.
In the source element of the reference, provide the name of the database, repository, or archive.
-Include a URL for the dissertation or thesis if the URL will resolve for readers.
-If the database or archive requires users to log in before they can view the dissertation or thesis, meaning the URL will not work for readers, end the reference with the database name.

Unpublished Thesis

Harris, L. (2014). Instructional leadership perceptions and practices of elementary school leaders [Unpublished doctoral dissertation]. University of Virginia.

-When a thesis is unpublished, include the description “[Unpublished doctoral dissertation]” or “[Unpublished master’s thesis]” in square brackets after the dissertation or thesis title.
-In the source element of the reference, provide the name of the institution that awarded the degree..

You can find detailed information about other references types on the APA 7 official website.