Reviewer Guidelines
1. Presentation
- Manuscripts should be well-organized and clearly formatted according to the journal's submission guidelines.
- All figures, tables, and references must be clearly presented and appropriately cited.
2. Writing
- The writing should be clear, concise, and coherent, with proper grammar and spelling.
- The tone should be academic and formal, suitable for scholarly communication.
3. Length
- Review the manuscript for adherence to the journal's word count guidelines. Typically, articles should range between 5,000 to 8,000 words, including references.
4. Title
- The title should accurately reflect the content and main findings of the manuscript.
- It should be engaging and informative, allowing readers to grasp the essence of the research.
5. Abstract
- The abstract should provide a concise summary of the research, including the purpose, methodology, key findings, and implications.
- It should typically be between 150 to 250 words.
6. Introduction
- The introduction should clearly state the research problem and its significance.
- It should provide a brief overview of relevant literature and outline the objectives of the study.
7. Method
- The methodology section should detail the research design, participants, materials, and procedures used.
- It should be sufficient for replication by other researchers and must adhere to ethical standards.
8. Result
- The results section should present findings clearly and logically, using appropriate statistical analyses where applicable.
- Data should be accompanied by relevant tables and figures, properly labeled and referenced in the text.
9. Discussion
- The discussion should interpret the results, relating them to existing literature and addressing the research questions.
- Authors should discuss the implications of their findings and acknowledge any limitations of the study.
10. Conclusion
- The conclusion should summarize the main findings and their significance, suggesting potential areas for future research.
- It should avoid introducing new information that was not covered in the previous sections.