Thank you for considering our journal for your
publication. Please read the following instructions carefully as failure to do
so may result in automatic rejection of your paper or unnecessary delays during
the processing stages.
Porta Linguarum aims to publish empirical
studies, critical revisions, and theoretical models that relate to the many
factors that influence the FL teaching and learning processes:
High quality state-of-the art articles may be
published, although preference will be given to data-driven papers and empirical studies with a practical orientation directed towards the improvement
of the L2 classroom teaching and learning processes. Articles in this journal normally deal with majority languages and are
generally written in standard British
English. A limited number of articles may be written in other languages
provided that the contents are directly related to the language in question
(i.e. articles in Spanish must deal with the teaching and learning of Spanish
as L2).
The journal accepts proposals for book reviews of high interest related to the subject matter of the
journal.
The Journal Porta Linguarum is entitled to ensure that
its publications are carried out ethically. Thus, it is the obligation of the
Journal to report scientific fraud practices
such as falsification or omission of data, plagiarism and duplicate publication
(self-plagiarism).
The journal does not accept previously published
material. Authors are responsible for obtaining permission to partially
reproduce material from other publications and for citing its source correctly.
Authors should mention in the Methodology of their
manuscript that the procedures used to obtain data have been carried out after
obtaining consent from the carriers.
Authors are encouraged to review the Guidance on good publication practice designed by COPE.
Only submissions through the OJS platform are
accepted. If you wish to submit a manuscript, the correspondence
author needs to register in the Journal and start a new submission. In the case of more
than one author, the correspondence author must introduce information about all
authors in the submission process.
Please provide as much information as possible at the
platform, as this will facilitate the process of revision. All submissions must
attach at least two document files in Word format (.doc or
.docx):
FILE 1: The anonymous version of
the manuscript (step 2 of the submission process in the platform),
please use the provided template, which includes the following order of
components:
ü Title
(maximum 15 words) in both languages: one in the language of the article
(generally English) and the other in Spanish.
ü Two
abstracts of max. 200 words in both languages.
ü Five
keywords in both languages.
ü The main
body of the text.
ü References.
ü Appendices
The author/s
must ensure they cannot be identified in the submitted manuscript so as to
guarantee the double-blind review.
Originals
must not exceed 7000 words including references and appendices.
FILE 2. The TITLE PAGE (step 4), which must
include without exception the following details (you can download the title
page on the platform):
1. The title,
author name(s), affiliation, ORCID no., contact telephone number, and e-mail
address.
2. A short bio
of each author of approximately 60-70 words
3. Information
about funding or grants related to the publication, if applied.
4. A
declaration that the work is original, unpublished and not submitted for
publication in any other journal.
Papers should have a maximum of three authors and should not have been previously
published or submitted for current consideration elsewhere. Very exceptionally
and under justified circumstances a higher number of authors might be accepted.
The author or authors are responsible for the content
of articles submitted, and for any opinions expressed therein. The journal will
not accept papers signed by more than three authors. In addition, the same author may not publish more than one article
annually. Manuscripts should be prepared in Microsoft Word and submitted
online, as indicated.
EDITING AND FORMAT
·
Footnotes should be
used only if strictly necessary, and indicated in superscript consecutively
throughout the text.
· After revisions, when the authors have to edit the
originals and introduce the suggested changes in later submissions, these modifications will be highlighted in yellow in the subsequent
versions that are sent to the platform. In addition, a cover letter will also be sent explaining the changes that have
been made to the original paper.
TABLES AND FIGURES
• Tables must be centred and inserted in
their corresponding place and not at the end of the paper or in an independent
file. The graphic design may vary but, as shown below, the format must include
two horizontal lines for the table head and another horizontal line at the
bottom. When it shows totals at the bottom, two horizontal lines may be
clearer.
• The table may be divided in vertical or
horizontal sections as shown below.
• The categories in the table head must be
centred and typed in small caps.
If there is a second row in the table head, it may be typed in italics.
• If the table content includes numbers, they
should be centred and if it is text, it must be aligned on the left of each
cell.
• If the text on the left column is short it
may be typed in Times Roman, font size 9
as shown below (small caps or italics may also be used).
• Table
captions must be in italics, font size
10, centred and on top of the table. The table source must be mentioned
underneath in cases where it has not been designed by the author and with
permission from the original author.
• FIGURES should be in [.tif]
or word format. It is advisable that papers do not include more than seven or eight boxes,
tables or figures. Exceptionally and
if the study requires it, more than eight tables or figures may be accepted.
Examples of
tables and figures:
Table 1. Demographic
information of the participants
Gender |
Number |
Age |
Female |
90 |
15-18 |
Male |
90 |
15-18 |
Total |
180 |
15-18 |
Table 2. Reliability statistics
|
Total sample (N
= 180) |
Female Participants (n
= 90) |
Male Participants (n
= 90) |
|
|
Reliability |
Reliability |
Reliability |
|
Speaking (Total) |
.99 |
.99 |
.98 |
|
Speaking / Part 1 |
.97 |
.96 |
.97 |
|
Speaking / Part 2 |
.97 |
.98 |
.96 |
|
Pragmatics /
Micro Components |
Speech Acts |
.98 |
98 |
.99 |
Topic |
.99 |
.98 |
.99 |
|
Turn Taking |
.99 |
.99 |
.99 |
|
Lexical Selection |
.98 |
.97 |
.98 |
|
Pragmatics/ Macro Components |
Verbal |
.99 |
.99 |
.99 |
Paralinguistic |
.99 |
.99 |
.99 |
|
Nonverbal |
.99 |
.99 |
.99 |
Table 3. Descriptive statistics
|
Students and teachers /lectures (N= 683) |
4th grade CSE students (N =409
) |
University students (N= 201 ) |
English and NLA teachers /lectures (N= 73) |
||||
Variables |
M |
SD |
M |
SD |
M |
SD |
M |
SD |
1.
Type of institution (public, private, etc.) and the social setting. |
3,31 |
1,13 |
3,16 |
1,15 |
3,53 |
1,04 |
3,59 |
1,03 |
2.
Family environment of the student: social
and cultural. |
3,96 |
,97 |
3,81 |
,97 |
4,21 |
,94 |
4,14 |
,87 |
3.
Family support and involvement in the bilingual program. |
3,63 |
1,10 |
3,46 |
1,11 |
3,79 |
1,08 |
4,23 |
,83 |
4.
Support from the responsible institution and administration for the
bilingual program. |
3,93 |
,98 |
3,70 |
,98 |
4,24 |
,86 |
4,39 |
,83 |
5.
Students’ general capacity, intelligence and abilities. |
3,74 |
,89 |
3,64 |
,92 |
3,89 |
,83 |
3,89 |
,80 |
Notice that figures’
captions are not on top of the illustration, but underneath.
Figure 1.
Caption [Style: Table & Figure]
Source: http://elpajareteorquidiado.blogspot.com.es/2015/05/faber-castell-ondoro.html
The presentation of originals and enumeration of
sections is presented in the TEMPLATE(see sample model at the Platform).
REFERENCES IN TEXT
Parenthetical citations:
One author:
(Luna, 2020)
Two authors:
(Madrid & McLaren, 2004, pp.135-136)
More than
three authors: (Martín et al., 2020)
Narrative citations:
One author:
Luna (2020), Madrid (2004, p. 35)
Two authors:
Lasagabaster and Sierra (2003)
More than
three authors: Martín et al. (2020)
Quotations:
Quotations must
be indented and typed with font 9 as in the example:
In order to increase the quality of
bilingual programmes in higher education, Barrios and López Gutiérrez (2019)
propose the following:
… the burden of quality EMI
provision and the sustainability of EMI initiatives must neither rest on the
lecturers’ shoulders exclusively nor rely on their voluntarism. A system of
substantial incentives should be in place in order to compensate the additional
time and effort required for training and teaching in English (Barrios &
López Gutiérrez, 2019, p. 82).
FINAL REFERENCES
Only those references that are strictly necessary
should be employed. Unnecessary and/or excessive self-citation may be a motive
for article exclusion.
All references included in the article must be for
genuine, scientific reasons and not for the purpose of increasing the
visibility of work by the authors, associates or potential reviewers. They must
be listed following APA last edition. Some examples
are provided below but we recommend the following website: https://apastyle.apa.org/style-grammar-guidelines/references/examples/
BOOKS
Book with one author:
Richards, L. M. (2019). The new
book (2nd ed.). American Psychological Association.
https://doi.org/10.1037/0090168-008
Book with two or more authors:
Coyle, D., Hood, P., & Marsh, D. (2010). Content and
language integrated learning. Cambridge University Press.
Edited book:
Brumfit, C.J. & Carter, R. (Eds.) (1986). Literature
and language teaching. Oxford University Press.
Two or more works by the same author (arrange by the year of publication, the earliest first).
Postman, N. (1979). Teaching as a conserving activity.
Delacorte Press.
Postman, N. (1985). Amusing ourselves to death: Public discourse
in the age of show business. Viking Press.
Works by the same author in the same year:
McLuhan, M. (1970a). Culture is our business. McGraw-Hill.
McLuhan, M. (1970b). From cliché to archetype. Viking Press.
Unpublished theses and dissertations:
Jordan, J.J. (2005). Psychosocial effects of gifted programming [Unpublished
master’s thesis]. University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada.
Proceedings published in book form:
McKay, G. (1999). Self-determination in aboriginal education. In L. B.
Muller, & T. Smith (Eds.), Changing the climate: Proceedings of the
1998 Conference for Graduate Students in the Social Sciences and Humanities (pp.
1-11). Springer. https://doi.org/10.107/976-3-039-02348-56
Book by an institution ( associations, corporations, agencies, government departments when
there is no single author):
American Psychological Association (1972). Ethical standards of
psychologists. American Psychological Association.
Book chapters:
Vez Jeremías, J.M.
(1996). The social context of EFL. In N. McLaren & D. Madrid (Eds.), A
handbook for TEFL (pp. 25-34). Marfil.
Pérez Cañado, M.L.
& Ráez Padilla, J. (2011). Introduction and overview. In D. Marsh, M. Pérez
Cañado, & J. Ráez Padilla (Eds.) CLIL in action: Voices from the classroom (pp. 1-12). Cambridge Scholars.
https://doi.org/10.107/975-3-039-00348-56
ARTICLES
Article in a journal:
Cook, V.J. (1983). What should be language teaching be
about? ELT Journal, 37(3), 229-34. https://doi.org/10.1037/030303030333.
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.
Madrid, D., & Pérez Cañado, M.L.
(2004). Teacher and student preferences of native and
non-native foreign language teachers. Porta Linguarum, 2,
125-138. http://www.ugr.es/local/portalin.
NOTICE THAT CONTENT
WORDS IN BOOKS´ AND ARTICLES´ TITLES ARE NOT TYPED WITH CAPITAL LETTERS UNLESS ORTHOGRAPHICALLY
REQUIRED.
Paper presentation:
Evans, A. C., Jr., Garbarino,
J., Bocanegra, E., Kinscherff,
R. T., & Márquez-Greene, N. (2019, August 8–11). Gun violence: An event on
the power of community [Conference presentation]. APA 2019 Convention, Chicago,
IL, United States. https://convention.apa.org/2019-video.
Appendix
The appendix comes after the references and, where it
exists, any funding details.
Reviews should be no longer than 500 words, and should
comply with the directions given above. An illustration of the book cover
should be included in “.tif” format. The book
illustration must be inserted on the right with (measures: 5 cm wide by 8 cm
high).
The book review reference must be presented as
follows:
International Perspectives
on Critical Pedagogies in ELT. López-Gopar, M. E. (Ed.) (2019). Palgrave, Cham, 287 pages, ISBN:
978-3-319-95620-6.
İsmail Yaman Ondokuz
Mayıs University (Turkey)