Submissions

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As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.

  • The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  • The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, or RTF document file format.
  • Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
  • The text is single-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.
  • The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines.


The authors are responsible for obtaining and submitting to the Editor permission to reproduce in their text illustrative materials covered by copyright.

Submission of the text for printing means an agreement  to the printing without receiving royalties in exchange for the copy of the publication. The Editor reserves the right to the final decision regarding the text for the print.

We ask for consistent application of principles, which significantly accelerate prepress.

GUIDELINES FOR PREPARING THE TEXT TO PRINT "Transfer. Reception studies "

Need to check the DOI number

Since the magazine is available in the open access resources, editorial office is required to check with each article selected for publication, whether bibliographic references cited in the text (footnotes, bibliographies) are accompanied with DOI numbers by the publishers,  and place such a number in the bibliographic description of a cited publication. Editorial office asks the authors to check the availability of cited works in open access and to enter DOI number. The easiest way to check the DOI numbers is to look up publishers and editors websites relevant to the referenced articles, also on CrossRef website: http://www.crossref.org/guestquery.

Therefore, bibliographic entry is as follows: Władysława, Szulakiewicz, "Ego-dokumenty i ich znaczenie w badaniach naukowych," Przegląd Badań Edukacyjnych 16 (2013): 65-84, http://dx.doi.org/10.12775/PBE.2013.006.

I. Basic requirements

  1.  All documents in an electronic version should be sent in MS Word format (*doc). 
  2. Format: A4 paper size (margins: 25 mm), font  12 pt Times New Roman, 1,5 spacing between the lines. 
  3. Font size in supplementary materials (tables, footnotes, signatures) should be 9 points. The maximum width of the table is 12.5 cm for the vertical layout and 18 cm for the horizontal layout.
  4. The author's name in the upper left corner, below the affiliation; the title of the paper should be centred and bold.
  5. By using any material from other publications, you must obey the copyright laws.

II. Main text

  1. Paragraphs should begin with indentations set equally for the entire document (using the upper ruler or the paragraph formatting window).
  2. Accurate quotes are entered using "quotation marks". Quote in quotation are marked with French  quotation marks. French quotation marks can be inserted from the character table (command: insert symbol). You can also use a separate paragraph with a smaller font of writing.
  3. The titles of printed works (O dobrej i złej polszczyźnie, Kamienie na szaniec), foreign words (a propos, ex lege), Latin systematic names (Corvus corvus), Italian musical terms (legato) should be written in italics.
  4. Text can be distinguished by bold font. No distinction should be made by underlining. Also avoid combining several types of distinctions. Distinctions should be applied consistently within a given work.

III Footnotes

Cf.  https://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/tools_citationguide/citation-guide-1.html


Examles:

Book

Notes

Shortened notes

Bibliography entries (in alphabetical order)

For many more examples, covering virtually every type of book, see 14.100–163 in The Chicago Manual of Style.

 

Chapter or other part of an edited book 

In a note, cite specific pages. In the bibliography, include the page range for the chapter or part.

Note

Shortened note

Bibliography entry

In some cases, you may want to cite the collection as a whole instead.

Note

Shortened note

Bibliography entry

For more examples, see 14.103–5 and 14.106–12 in The Chicago Manual of Style.

 

Translated book

Note

Shortened note

Bibliography entry

 

E-book  

For books consulted online, include a URL or the name of the database. For other types of e-books, name the format. If no fixed page numbers are available, cite a section title or a chapter or other number in the notes, if any (or simply omit).

Notes

Shortened notes

Bibliography entries (in alphabetical order)

For more examples, see 14.159–63 in The Chicago Manual of Style.

 

Journal article 

In a note, cite specific page numbers. In the bibliography, include the page range for the whole article. For articles consulted online, include a URL or the name of the database. Many journal articles list a DOI (Digital Object Identifier). A DOI forms a permanent URL that begins https://doi.org/. This URL is preferable to the URL that appears in your browser’s address bar.

Notes

Shortened notes

Bibliography entries (in alphabetical order)

 

Journal articles often list many authors, especially in the sciences. If there are four or more authors, list up to ten in the bibliography; in a note, list only the first, followed by et al. (“and others”). For more than ten authors (not shown here), list the first seven in the bibliography, followed by et al.

Note

Shortened note

Bibliography entry

For more examples, see 14.16887 in The Chicago Manual of Style.

 

News or magazine article 

Articles from newspapers or news sites, magazines, blogs, and the like are cited similarly. Page numbers, if any, can be cited in a note but are omitted from a bibliography entry. If you consulted the article online, include a URL or the name of the database.

Notes

Shortened notes

Bibliography entries (in alphabetical order)

 

Readers’ comments are cited in the text or in a note but omitted from a bibliography.

Note

For more examples, see 14.18890 (magazines), 14.191–200 (newspapers), and 14.208 (blogs) in The Chicago Manual of Style.

 

Book review

Note

Shortened note

Bibliography entry

 

Interview

Note

Shortened note

Bibliography entry

 

Thesis or dissertation

Note

Shortened note

Bibliography entry

 

Website content

It is often sufficient simply to describe web pages and other website content in the text (“As of May 1, 2017, Yale’s home page listed . . .”). If a more formal citation is needed, it may be styled like the examples below. For a source that does not list a date of publication or revision, include an access date (as in example note 2).

Notes

Shortened notes

Bibliography entries (in alphabetical order)

For more examples, see 14.205–10 in The Chicago Manual of Style. For multimedia, including live performances, see 14.261–68.

 

Social media content

Citations of content shared through social media can usually be limited to the text (as in the first example below). A note may be added if a more formal citation is needed. In rare cases, a bibliography entry may also be appropriate. In place of a title, quote up to the first 160 characters of the post. Comments are cited in reference to the original post.

Text

Notes

Shortened notes

 

Personal communication

Personal communications, including email and text messages and direct messages sent through social media, are usually cited in the text or in a note only; they are rarely included in a bibliography.

Note

 

Papers should be prepared according to the editorial requirements set out on the website of the magazine.

 

 Papers must be accompanied by the following set of metadata:

  1. title, abstract, keywords (5) in Polish, German, and English (abstract should reflect the content of the whole article, i.e. the background / context, objectives, method, results, conclusions, and it should contain all keywords)
  2. bibliography containing the list of cited sources (bibliographic citations using the Latin alphabet along with the page number)
  3. affiliation of the author containing  name and last name, academic degree, academic title, position, name of the division / department / institute, department name (extra-departmental institute)
  4. author’s email, short biography (research interests, the most important publications)
  5. the author's statement about the sources of financing of the research presented in the scientific article, or of the development of a scientific article (if studies were funded by another institution than the unit of author ‘s affiliation, or with his or her private funds)
  6. a statement about the contribution of individual authors into the creation of the article (if the article has more than one author).
  7. Declaration by the Author and placement of the DOI numbers.

Article qualification/rejection criter

In case of positive evaluations received from both Reviewers, or one positive evaluation, and the second which indicates the need for introducing changes, the Editorial Board decides to publish the text, provided that the Author has made corrections and added supplements required by one of the reviewers.

In case of one negative evaluation, the text will not be allowed for publication.

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