Author Guidelines

1. Journal of Agricultural Faculty of Gaziosmanpasa University adheres to academic principles and ethical values in its publication policy. The journal conducts its publishing activities in compliance with national and international standards related to ethical principles and values. In this context, the standards established by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) and the principles outlined in the Council of Higher Education (YÖK) Directive on Scientific Research and Publication Ethics are taken into consideration.

2. Journal of Agricultural Faculty of Gaziosmanpasa University is published three issues in a year as in April, August and December.

3. Only original research articles are considered for publication in the Journal of Agricultural Faculty of Gaziosmanpasa University. Review articles are not evaluated within the scope of general submissions. However, review articles may be considered for publication if they are prepared upon the invitation of the Editor-in-Chief and within the framework of specific topics determined by the Editor-in-Chief.

4. The publication language of the Journal of Agricultural Faculty of Gaziosmanpasa University is English.

5. Journal of Agricultural Faculty of Gaziosmanpasa University publishes original research articles in the field of Agricultural Sciences that have not been previously published. Articles that have only been presented as abstracts in conference proceedings may also be considered for publication.

6. Manuscripts with a similarity index of 20% or higher, as determined by iThenticate or intihal.net reports, will be rejected without being subjected to the preliminary evaluation process.

7. All manuscripts submitted to the Journal of Agricultural Faculty of Gaziosmanpasa University must be prepared in accordance with the “Manuscript Template.” The Checklist must be carefully reviewed,  and uploaded to the system as a separate file. Click here for the Checklist Form.

8. A maximum of two articles by the same author may be published in a single issue.

9. All decimal numbers in the manuscript must be written using a period (.) as the decimal separator.

10. The scientific names of species mentioned in the manuscript must be written in italics.

11. Graphics, maps, photos, images, and similar presentations in the manuscript should be labeled as "Figure," and numerical data should be labeled as "Table." All "Figures" and "Tables" in the manuscript must be referenced within the text. The relevant visuals should be placed as close as possible to the first reference to them in the text. However, during the layout phase, changes may be made to their positions due to page formatting requirements.

12. Manuscripts must be prepared in English and submitted under the following main headings:

Title, Abstract, Keywords in English and Turkish, Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results and Discussion, Conclusion, Acknowledgement, Ethics Statement, Conflict of Interest,  References.

13. The manuscript format must be prepared in accordance with the "Manuscript Template" provided above.

a. The manuscript should be written in A4 size, using 12-point Cambria font, and 1.5 line spacing. The page margins should be 2.5 cm on each side.

b. The manuscript file should not contain any information about the authors. The title page (to be prepared as a separate file) should clearly state the names of the authors (academic titles should not be mentioned). The addresses, ORCID IDs, contact information for the corresponding author (e-mail, phone, fax, etc.), acknowledgements or funding information related to the research and authorship contribution statement should be included. Please Click here for the Title Page Template.

c. Each page and line of the manuscript (numbered continuously) must be numbered, and the manuscript should not exceed 20 pages in total.

d. All paragraphs should start from the left margin. The text should be fully justified, with no hyphenation. Bold or underlined text should not be used for emphasis.

Title: The title of the manuscript should be concise and descriptive, and should not exceed 15 words if possible.

Abstract: The abstract should be between 200 and 300 words in both Turkish and English. For manuscripts submitted by authors who are not citizens of the Republic of Türkiye, the abstract may be written only in English.

Keywords: The keywords should be between 4 to 7 words, listed alphabetically.

Introduction: The introduction section should clearly define the problem addressed in the study, review important recent works published, especially in the last few years, and clearly state the objectives of the study.

Materials and Methods: This section should provide a detailed description of all materials used in the study, outline the methods step by step, and present the statistical methods used in detail.

Results and Discussion: The data and findings obtained in the study should be presented in tables and figures, and compared with the results of previous studies for interpretation and discussion.

Conclusion: The contribution of the results to science and practice should be highlighted with suggestions.

Acknowledgement: This section should mention individuals, organizations, and projects that contributed to the completion of the study.

Ethics Statement: If the study does not require approval from an ethics or any legal permission committee, the following statement should be used: "There is no need to obtain permission from the ethics committee for this study."
If the study requires approval from an ethics or any legal permission committee, the following statement should be used: "This study was conducted with approval from the Ethics Committee of [institution name], under permit number […..], dated [../../….]." Please Click here for the Ethics Statement Template.

Conflict of Interest: All authors should disclose any financial or personal relationships that could be perceived as potential conflicts of interest. If there is no conflict of interest, the following statement should be added: "The authors declare no conflicts of interest." Please Click here for the Conflict of Interest Template.


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


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)

-If more than one reference is in parentheses, they should be given in chronological order (from oldest to newest) and separated by semicolons.
(Lobbestael et al., 2010; Afifi et al., 2011; Cohen et al., 2014).

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 (https://doi.org/......................).

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 number

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.




Last Update Time: 5/15/25, 11:13:25 AM