Author Guidelines

The articles in the journal should comply with the following spelling rules:

a) Articles should be written in MS Word program with the character of "Times New Roman 11 Point", one and a half line spaced and justified. The space between paragraphs should be before "0 pt" and after "6 pt".

b) Page structure; It should be A4 and should be adjusted so that the right / left / bottom / top margins are 2.5 cm.

c) General fiction of the article; Turkish / English name of the article should consist of Turkish Abstract, Turkish keywords, English abstract (abstract), English keywords, introduction, litearture review, method, findings, conclusion, references and suffixes.

d) The Title of the Article should comply with the content and should contain no more than 10-12 words. The title of the article should be centered, capital letters and Times New Roman, 14 points. English title should be Times New Roman, 11 pt, Capital Letter, Italic.

e) Abstract, keywords, English abstract (abstract) and keywords should be in Times New Roman 8 font size and not exceed 150 words. The purpose, scope, method, original aspect, contribution and findings of the study should be mentioned.

f) Keywords should be minimum 3 and maximum 6.

g) There should be no paragraph indent in the article.

h) Main headings in the text should be left justified, capitalized and bold, Second level headings left-aligned, bold and the first letters of the words are capitalized, and Third level headings should be left-aligned, bold and the first letter of the first word should be capitalized. The fourth level titles should be written in italics, unlike the third level.

ı) The parts that should be highlighted in the text should be written in italic letters, not bold.

i) Tables, Figure titles should be numbered on the tables and figures and should be written as “Times New Roman 11 font size”. The source should be given under the table and figure with "Times New Roman 10 font size". The title and source of tables and figures should be left justified, and tables and figures should be centered.

j) Page numbers should be under the page and in the middle.

k) Manuscripts should not exceed 7,000 (seven thousand) words including abstract and references. Must be no more than 20 pages.

l) The study should be prepared in two files. The first file; The title file should be explicitly numbered without specifying author names in academic degrees. If the institution and address of the affiliate and the address of each author are clearly and the address, e-mail address and phone numbers of the responsible author, the fax number should be indicated in the footnote. The second file is the main file with the study. Author information should not be included in the main file.


1. Book – one author/ Tek Yazarlı Kitap

Reference List:
Collier, A. (2008). The world of tourism and travel. Rosedale, New Zealand: Pearson Education New Zealand.

2. Chapter in an edited book / Editörlü kitapta bölüm
Reference List:
Palmer, F. (2007). Treaty principles and Maori sport: Contemporary issues. In C. Collins & S. Jackson (Eds.), Sport in Aotearoa/New Zealand society (2nd ed., pp. 307-334). South Melbourne, Australia: Thomson.


3. Serial/journal article( print) / Makale (basılı)
Reference List:
Thompson, C. (2010). Facebook: Cautionary tales for nurses. Kai Tiaki: Nursing New Zealand, 16(7), 26.


4. Serial / journal article – more than one author (print)/ Birden fazla yazarlı makale (basılı)
Reference List:
Gabbett, T., Jenkins, D., & Abernethy, B. (2010). Physical collisions and injury during professional rugby league skills training. Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport, 13(6), 578-583


5. Serial / journal – more than one author (online– DOI) / Online makale
Reference List:
Gabbett, T., Jenkins, D., & Abernethy, B. (2010). Physical collisions and injury during professional rugby league skills training. Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport, 13(6), 578-583. doi:10.1016/j.jsams.2010.03.007
In text citation:
(Gabbett et al., 2010).


6. Internet – Organisation / Corporate author
Reference List:
Ministry of Health. (2014). Ebola: Information for the public. Retrieved from http://www.health.govt.nz/your-health/conditions-and-treatments/diseases-andillnesses/ebolainformation-public
In text citation:
First time cited: (Ministry of Health [MOH], 2014).
Second and subsequent citations: (MOH, 2014)


7. Blog post/ Blog
Reference list:
Stefanie. (2014, October 8). What a tangled web: Website versus webpage [Blog post]. Retrieved from http://blog.apastyle.org/apastyle/2014/10/what-a-tangled-web-website-versus-webpage.html
In text citation:
(Stefanie, 2014).


8. Conference Paper/ Bildiri
Reference list:
Williams, J., & Seary, K. (2010). Bridging the divide: Scaffolding the learning experiences of the mature age student. In J. Terrell (Ed.), Making the links: Learning, teaching and high quality student outcomes. Proceedings of the 9th Conference of the New Zealand Association of Bridging Educators (pp. 104-116). Wellington, New Zealand.
In text citation:
(Williams & Seary, 2010).


9. Conference paper (online)/ Bildiri (online)
Reference list:
MacColl, F., Ker, I., Huband, A., Veith, G., & Taylor, J. (2009, November 12-13). Minimising pedestriancyclist conflict on paths. Paper presented at the Seventh New Zealand Cycling Conference, New Plymouth, New Zealand. Retrieved from http://cyclingconf.org.nz/system/files/NZCyclingConf09_2A_MacColl_PedCycleConflicts.pdf
In text citation:
First time cited: (MacColl, Ker, Huband, Veith & Taylor, 2009).
Second and subsequent citations: (MacColl et al., 2009).


10. Thesis (print) / Tez (Basılı)
Reference list:
Johnson, S. (2013). Style strategies (Master’s thesis). UCOL, Whanganui School of Design, Whanganui, New Zealand.


11. Thesis (online) / Tez (online)
Reference list:
Mann, D. L. (2010). Vision and expertise for interceptive actions in sport (Doctoral dissertation, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia). Retrieved from http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/44704


12. Three, four or five authors /Üç, Dört ve Beş Yazarlı
If a work has three (3), four (4) or five (5) authors, cite all authors the first time and from then on include only the last name of the first author followed by the words et al. (‘et al.’ is Latin for ‘and others’)
Example:
Research can be defined as a systematic method of creating new knowledge or a way to verify existing knowledge (Watson, McKenna, Cowman & Keady, 2008).
Deciding on a research method demands the researcher consider carefully the problem or area of investigation being researched (Watson et al., 2008).
Reference list entry:
Watson, R., McKenna, H., Cowman, S., & Keady, K. (Eds.). (2008). Nursing research: Designs and methods. Edinburgh, Scotland: Churchill Livingstone Elsevier.










Last Update Time: 1/22/19