1(Name, Affiliation, Department, College/ University Name) (10 Italic)
Abstract (11Bold) :
The abstract should summarize the content of the paper.
Try to keep the abstract below 250 word.
Do not make references nor display equations in the abstract.
It is imperative that the margins and style described below to be adhered. This will enable us to keep uniformity in the final printed copies of the Journal.
Keywords (11Bold):key words should be in alphabetical order, separated by comma (10 Italic)
I. Introduction (11 Bold)
The introduction of the paper should explain the nature of the problem, previous work, purpose, and the contribution of the paper. The contents of each section may be provided to understand easily about the paper. (10)
II. Heading (11 Bold)
The headings and subheadings, starting with “1. Introduction", appears in upper- and lower-case letters and should be set in bold and aligned to left.
The font size for heading is 11 points bold face and subsections with 10 points and not bold. Do not underline any of the headings, or add dashes, colons, etc. (10)
III. Indentations and Equations (11 Bold)
The first paragraph under each heading or subheading should be flush left, and subsequent paragraphs should have a five-space indentation.
A colon is inserted before an equation is presented, but there is no punctuation following the equation.
All equations are numbered and referred to in the text solely by a number enclosed in a round bracket (i.e., (3) reads as "equation 3").
IV. Figures and Tables (11 Bold)
To ensure a high-quality product, diagrams and lettering MUST be either computer-drafted.
Figure captions appear below the figure, are flush middle, and are in lowercase letters.
When referring to a figure in the body of the text, the abbreviation "Fig." is used. Figures should be numbered in the order they appear in the text.
Table captions appear centered above the table in upper- and lower-case letters. When referring to a table in the text, no abbreviation is used and "Table" is capitalized. (10)
V. Conclusion (11 Bold)
A conclusion section must be included and should indicate clearly the advantages, limitations, and possible applications of the paper.
Although a conclusion may review the main points of the paper, do not replicate the abstract as the conclusion.
A conclusion might elaborate on the importance of the work or suggest applications and extensions. (10)
Acknowledgments (11 Bold)
An acknowledgment section may be presented after the conclusion. (8)
References (11 Bold)
This heading is not assigned a number.
A reference list MUST be included using the following information as a guide.
Each reference is referred to in the text by a number or Author name enclosed in a square bracket.
References must be numbered and ordered alphabetically.
Examples follow:
1)- Journal Papers:
An article with an author: Goodwin, J. (2009) ‘Whatever happened to the young workers? Change and transformation in 40 years of work’, Journal of Education and Work, 22(5), pp. 417-431.
An article with no author:
Coffee drinking and cancer of the pancreas’ (Editorial) (1981) British Medical Journal, 283(6292), p. 628. (8)
2)- Books:
[1] Boughton, M. Halliday, L. (2008). A challenge to the menopause stereotype: Young Australian women's reflections of 'being diagnosed' as menopausal. Health & Social Care in the Community, 16(6), 565-572. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2524.2008. 00777.x (8).