Junior ScientiFic Researcher Journal

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[JUNIOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCHER
JOURNAL]
JSR
ARTICLE TITLE ARTICLE TITLE ARTICLE
TITLE ARTICLE TITLE ARTICLE TITLE ARTICLE TITLE
Author 1 surname forename (author for correspondence), University, Department, Country, email
Author 2 surname forename, University, Department, Country, e-mail
……….
Abstract
It is one of the most important parts of the article because it summarizes the subject,
results and methods employed in the research. It also is a decisive factor in ensuring that the
whole article will be read. We advise you to include in here (without giving references) your
research purposes, results summary and the methodology you used. The abstract should contain
no more than 200 words.
Keywords: use the most relevant keywords for your article, in alphabetical order (6 key words)
and use the corresponding JEL code/codes.
JEL Classification: https://www.aeaweb.org/jel/guide/jel.php
Introduction
The introduction must address the chosen subject and be a preamble for further
research.
The article must follow the journal editing, page layout and structure norms: 12
point Times New Roman font, at single spacing between lines of text, no spaces
between paragraphs and justify type alignment. The pages should have the following
specifications: top: 3 cm; bottom: 3 cm; left 3 cm; right: 3 cm. The title must be written
in 14 point TNR and it must be centered, uppercase and bold. Chapter titles should be
written 12 point TNR, bold, with one blank line spacing before and one after the titles.
Authors' names, information about membership and contact address are written under
the title after leaving a blank line, right-aligned. The author for correspondence should
have this quality mentioned in brackets (author for correspondence) and his name
should be underlined.
The abstract and keywords must be written in TNR, 11, single spacing, Italic.
Please use this template in your article without modifying it.
Background
The background information on the article should contain previous research
done in the field, with references to results published by other researchers and it should
clarify the terms used in the article. Please be extremely judicious when using
information published by other authors and quote such information accordingly (with
quotes or by paraphrasing).
The quoting norms are those included in the Harvard Referencing Guide. For
more information you can access the following link:
https://www.staffs.ac.uk/assets/harvard_quick_guide_tcm44-47797.pdf
Examples of quotations:
Aluculesei (2015) states that……
Or
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[JUNIOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCHER
JOURNAL]
JSR
Spa tourism is a viable solution for lowering organizational stress levels (Aluculesei et
al., 2015)….
Methods
This is the part that shows your personal contribution and the importance of your
research in its field. Here you can include the purpose, research objectives, hypotheses,
methods and types of research and software programs employed in your study.
Results and discussions, including research limits and advantages
This is the most important part of your article because it conveys the new
elements you bring to your field of research in order to enrich the information published
thus far. Here you can include your research results, whether your hypotheses were
proven or not, future directions for research, if it is a statistically relevant research, etc.
Footnotes – please use as few footnotes as possible in your article.
Mathematical formulas (equations) – if you use mathematical formulas please
assign them Arabic numerals in brackets placed to the left and position them on separate
lines of text. Use Equation Editor to write them (see more here:
https://support.office.com/en-us/article/Where-is-Equation-Editor-6eac7d71-3c74-437b80d3-c7dea24fdf3f).
Figures and tables - when designing graphic materials, please keep in mind
criteria such as their visibility at a high resolution and their clarity – for both color and
black and white versions. Please do not use colors that may have a negative impact (ex:
red and green in the case of color blind readers). We advise you to use predominantly
white / black and to use colored fonts only where deemed to be absolutely necessary.
Figures and tables must occur in sequential order; they must be assigned Arabic
numerals in parentheses, ex (Fig. No. 1) when announced in text; the title must be
centered above the graphic material and the source should be placed under the table /
figure, centered.
Ex. table
Variable
Age
Pocket money /
monthly
Table No. 1 The sample structure (N=207)
Mean
Median Variable:
Frequency
21,55
21,00
€333.07
€300.00
Gender:
Female
Percent
135
65
72
35
Male
€195.34
€170.00 Total
207
100
Cost of
accommodation
Source: Developed by authors based on the research in January-May 2015
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Ex. figure
Figure No. 1 Positioning the balneary tourism
Health tourism
Wellness tourism
Medical tourism
Secondary
preventive Cure
Medical recovery Cure
Therapeutic spa cure
Balneary
tourism
(Holistic)
Yoga and
meditation
Beauty cure
SPA tourism:
Preventive cure
Sport and Fitness
Source: Made by the author, after Stăncioiu, Băltescu, Botoș, Pârgaru (2013, p. 126)
Conclusions
You should keep in mind that a large number of readers will concentrate on the
conclusions in order to decide if they should read the whole article. Thus, it is advisable
to allocate more than one or two paragraphs to this section of summing up the main
conclusions, but in a manner that would not merely repeat the abstract.
Aknowledgement
In this section you can mention information about the people that contributed to
the research but not as co-authors, information about the research grant, etc.
Bibliography
Your bibliography must correspond in its entirety with the text. JSR Journal
prefers the Harvard Referencing Guide for both text and bibliography. For more
detailed
information
you
can
access
the
following
examples:
https://www.staffs.ac.uk/assets/harvard_quick_guide_tcm44-47797.pdf.
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[JUNIOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCHER
JOURNAL]
JSR
Your bibliographic sources must be assigned Arabic numerals, in alphabetical
order.
Bibliographic source examples (after Harvard Quick Referencing Guide):
Ex => Books with one author
1. NEVILLE, C. (2010) The Complete Guide to Referencing and Avoiding
Plagiarism. 2nd Ed. Maidenhead: Open University Press.
Ex => Books with multiple authors
2. BRADBURY, I., BOYLE, J. and MORSE, A. (2002) Scientific Principles for
Physical Geographers. Harlow: Prentice Hall.
Ex => Articles
3. WILSON, J. (1995) Enter the Cyberpunk librarian: future directions in
cyberspace. Library Review. [Online] Emerald Database 44 (8). p.63-72.
Available from: http://www.emeraldinsight.com. [Accessed: 30th January
2012].
Ex => Websites
4. BBC NEWS. (2008) Factory gloom worst since 1980. [Online] Available from:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7681569.st m. [Accessed: 19th June 2012].
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