Writing Rules

a. PAGE LAYOUT
Manuscripts to be sent to the journal should be prepared as Word files. 2.5 cm margins should be left on all sides of the page and paragraphs should be 1 cm. it must start from the inside. The entire text should be edited using Microsoft Word program in "Times New Roman" font, 11 pt. (Turkish and English short summary 10 pt), single line spacing, and paragraphs (excluding headings) justified. The length of the text (including titles, abstract, text, tables, bibliography, large abstract in English) should not exceed 10,000 words.

b. ARTICLE TITLE and AUTHOR INFORMATION

Article title; It should consist of 10-15 words at most, and should be written in 11 pt, centered and bold, with only the first letter of the words capital. The title should be prepared in both Turkish and English, the English title should be under the Turkish abstract and above the English abstract, only the first letter of the words should be capital.
Author Information; It should be written under the title of the article without specifying the title. The first letter of the authors' names must be capital, others must be in lowercase, and their surnames must be all capital letters. Author names should be right justified, bold and in 11 pt. If there is more than one author, the names and surnames of the authors should be written one under the other. Information such as authors' title, institution, e-mail address and ORCID numbers should be included as a footnote.

c. SUMMARY AND KEY WORDS:
"Abstract" and "Abstract" should be written in Turkish and English, not exceeding 150 words. Below the abstracts, there should be keywords between 3 and 5 words that will give information about the scope of the study.
Abstract, summary text, keywords, English summary title, English summary text and keywords should be prepared in bold and 10 pt.

D. ARTICLE TEXT:
The article text should start right after the Turkish and English summary. Main texts should consist of introduction, method, findings and conclusion and discussion sections respectively. In the introduction part, the theoretical literature related to the study should be included and the purpose of the study should be explained. The method section should consist of subheadings such as sample (or research group), data collection tools and analysis of data. Different titles can be used in theoretical or review studies, depending on their content. In the main and sub titles in the article, only the first letter of the words should be capital.

e. TABLES AND FIGURES
Table title and table texts should be in single line spacing and 10 points. Table titles should be left justified and italicized, with only the first letter of the words capitalized. Tables should be numbered. Graphics, charts, drawings and pictures should be titled as "Figure". Figures should also be numbered, and only the first letter of the words in the headings should be capitalized, 10 pt, single line spacing and left aligned. Bibliography of figures, photographs and other visuals taken from anywhere (internet, book, etc.) should be shown.

f. REFERENCES:

APA-6 (American Psychological Association) spelling rules should be based on the references.
References should start right after the Conclusion and Discussion section under the title of "Bibliography" and should be written in 11 pt.

Displaying Resources in Text
References should not be included as footnotes in the text. However, a footnote should be used if there is additional information about the source that needs to be explained. The surname of the author and the year of publication in the text; In direct quotations, reference should not be given by giving the page number.

Display in studies with a single author;
According to Eker (2011)…,
Eker (2011)…,
(Eker, 2011).

Showing in studies with two authors;
According to Yıldırım and Şimşek (1999) ...
Lightning and Lightning (1999)
(Yıldırım and Şimşek, 1999)
DeBell ve Chapman (2006)
(DeBell ve Chapman, 2006)

Display in studies with more than two authors;
If the number of authors is more than three, only the first author's surname is given, for others, the year is written with the expression "et al.,".
Dilidüzgün et al. (2019) …….
Direct quotations should be given in quotation marks and the number of pages should be indicated.

References in Bibliography

Published Journals

Single author
Mamur Işıkçı, Y. (2019). Evaluation of Academic Studies on the Relationship between Public Administration and Child Rights. Child and Medeniyet Journal, 4(8), 119–129.
Two authors
Uslu Üstten, A., & Haykır, T. (2020). Text Selection in Teaching Turkish as a Foreign Language. Kırşehir Faculty of Education Journal, 20(3), 1633–1652.
Gibson, T. M., & Kirkwood, P. E. (2014). A purchase-on-demand pilot project at the University of Arkansas. Journal of Interlibrary Loan, Document Delivery, & Electronic Reserve, 19(1), 47-56. doi:10.1080/10723030802533853
More than three authors
Elma, C., Kesten, A., Dicle, A. N., Mercan Uzun, E., Çınkır, Ş. and Palavan, Ö. (2009). Attitudes of primary school 7 grade students towards media and media literacy lesson. Ondokuz Mayıs University Faculty of Education, 27, 93–113.
Yaden, D. B., Smolkin, L. B., & MacGillivray, L. (1993). A psychogenetic perspective on children’sunderstanding about letter associations during alphabet book readings. Journal of Reading Behavior, 25(1), 43–68.


Books

Single author
Balcı, A. (2011). Sosyal bilimlerde araştırma (9. Baskı). Ankara: Pegem Akademi Yayıncılık.
Two authors
Yalçın, A., & Aytaş, G. (2008). Children's Literature. Ankara: Akçağ Publications.
Norton, D., & Norton, S. (2010). Through the eyes of a child: An introduction to children’s literature. Boston, MA: Prentice-Hall.
Edited book
Çifçi, M. (2006). Turkish teaching problems. G. Gülsevin and E. Boz (Ed.), Contemporary problems of Turkish (pp. 77-134). Ankara: Gazi Publishing House.
Pilgrim, J., & Ward, A. K. (2017). Universal design for learning: A framework for supporting effective literacy instruction. In C. M. Curran & A. J. Peterson (Ed.), Handbook of research on classroom diversity and inclusive education practice (pp. 282-310). Hershey, PA: IGI Global.
Translated Book
Rowley, J. (1996). Organization of information: introduction to information access. (Trans. S. Karakaş, H. Ü. Can, A. Yıldızeli, B. Kayıran). Ankara: Turkish Librarians Association. (Original air date, 1992)


Theses and Dissertations
Geliş, A. (2020). Freedom of belief of the child in the UN convention on children's rights (Unpublished master's thesis). Ankara University Institute of Social Sciences, Ankara.
Electronic Publications
Convention on the Rights of the Child. [Access address: https://www.unicef.org/turkey/%C3%A7ocuk-haklar%C4%B1na-dair-s%C3%B6zle%C5%9Fme, Access date: 18.11.2020.]
T.R. Ministry of Development, Information Society Department 2015). Information society strategy and action plan (Publication No. 2939). [Access address: www.kalkinma.gov.tr, Access date: 10.12.2018.]


Conference Papers
Santhanam, E., Martin, K., Goody, A., & Hicks, O. (2001). Bottom-up steps towards closing the loop in feedback on teaching: A CUTSD project. Paper presented at Teaching and Learning Forum – Expanding horizons in teaching and learning, Perth, Australia, 7-9 February 2001.


g. EXTENDED SUMMARY
If there are Appendices in the article, if not, a 750-1000 word long English abstract should be included after the Bibliography section. This summary should be in paragraphs, without subheadings (such as Introduction, Method), covering all of the main ideas of the article. Exact quotation should not be included in the broad summary. Tables or figures should not be used in the broad summary. If the language of the article is Turkish, the extended abstract should be in English.