TRENDS in RESEARCH WRITING for INTERNATIONAL PUBLICATIONS
DR. DAVID CABABARO BUENO Dean- Graduate School Director- Research and Publications Office Columban College, Inc.-Olongapo City docdave3090@gmail.com docdave30@yahoo.com
Research ď ľ Is
exploration combined with learning.
ď ľA
"detailed study of a subject in order to discover information or achieve a new understanding of it."
R E S E A R C H
A
process of searching, discovering, and investigating information, as well as collecting, interpreting, and evaluating the information you find.
R E S E A R C H
Research
= expansion of knowledge + inquiry and investigation aimed at the discovery of facts, theories, or laws.
S U R V I V O
r Tip
To
be a successful researcher, you need to develop knowledge and skills in information literacy and research and build upon these skills year after year.
I N F O R M A T I O N LITERACY
One
must know how to apply the tools and techniques for finding, evaluating, and using information effectively
WHY do R E S E A R C H
Applying
concepts learned in coursework to "real life" situations.
Learning
about issues, and methods in chosen fields.
Sharpening
skills.
Learn
problem-solving
to read primary literature.
WHY do R E S E A R C H
Exploring
and preparing for future careers.
Enhancing
professional communication skills.
Developing
marketable skills.
Collaborating
with others and working effectively as part of a team.
WHY do R E S E A R C H
Discovering personal interests.
Growing as a critical, analytical, and independent thinker.
Developing internal standards of excellence.
CHALLENGES in PUBLICATION
•Journal publication
is a
process that entails close coordination between human resources and technology.
CHALLENGES in PUBLICATION
1.The knowledge and skills of the workers should be optimized to get a wide array of publication jobs done no matter the cost.
CHALLENGES in PUBLICATION
2.The technology that the publication office needs to upgrade should be given due consideration.
CHALLENGES in PUBLICATION
3. This is a revolutionary concept that also requires establishing and updating quality standards. Source: Style Sheet for PAIR International Journals
QUALITY ASSURANCE The authors are advised to subject their paper to plagiarism detection, grammar checker, and readability prior to submission since quality assurance begins with the writer.
QUALITY ASSURANCE
ď ľ The
Editorial Board of each journal prefers scientists who, on their own, initiate the sanitizing part of scientific writing.
Standards for Submission C R I T E R I O N
#1. Scope, Newness and Relevance/ Applicability to International Community
Standards for Submission S T A N D A R D S
The scope (extent of what one intends to cover) of the study is wideranging. The aspects of the paper such as, but not limited to, methods and results are seemingly new. The entire paper is interesting to read by other nations.
Standards for Submission S T A N D A R D S
The research results have international character and applicability. The quality of academic writing reflects the nature and nuances of the discipline. The quality of academic writing is graduate level.
Standards for Submission C R I T E R I O N
#2: Results of Plagiarism, Grammar and Readability Check
Standards for Submission S T A N D A R D
The manuscript obtains the minimum result: plagiarism detection – 95%; grammar check – 90%.
Standards for Submission C R I T E R I O N
#3: Quality of References
Standards for Submission S T A N D A R D S
ď ąSources (journals, books, and other references) are traceable online unless otherwise a justification is made. ď ąJournals are internationally refereed and indexed.
Standards for Submission S T A N D A R D S
ď ąArticles on Wikis and gray literature (non-scientific sources) must be avoided. ď ąScientific sources cited were published preferably in Year 2010 onwards unless otherwise a justification is given.
Standards for Submission C R I T E R I O N
#4: Completeness of Parts
Standards for Submission S T A N D A R D S
ď ąEach part of the manuscript contains appropriate and sufficient substance.
Standards for Submission 1. HEADING
P A R T S
Title Name of the Author(s) Email Address Affiliation Address
Standards for Submission 2. ABSTRACT
P A R T S
3. KEYWORDS 4. INTRODUCTION
5. FRAMEWORK OF THE STUDY 6. OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
Standards for Submission
P A R T S
7. METHODOLOGY (for nonexperimental researches) MATERIALS AND METHODS (for experimental researches)
Standards for Submission 8. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
P A R T S
9. CONCLUSIONS 10. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 11. REFERENCES
FULL MANUSCRIPT
1. HEADING Title Boldface 12-15 Title
characters
by result (preferably); the most important result is made as the title.
1. HEADING
Title Catchy,
interesting, relevant to international audience
Language Set
universally understandable
the first letter of each key word in uppercase.
For example, Title by Scope: Communication
Strategies in the Oral Expositions of Students (X)
Title by Result: Fillers,
Mime and SelfRepetitions as Most Frequently Used Communication Strategies in Oral Expositions (√)
1. HEADING
Name
of the Author(s)
Provide
middle initial in the author’s name (or names of the authors for team research), if applicable.
Set
in uppercase
1. HEADING
Address
Use
an email address that is not embarrassing.
Pursuant
to ISO Standards, no author shall use yahoo mail. An email address (preferably Google account) should at least have his/her name or nickname on it to help other people easily identify him/her.
1. HEADING
ď ąAffiliation ďƒźUse
the name of the institution in which the author is connected and its geographical location (City and country).
1. HEADING
ď ąAffiliation ďƒź For
submissions (thesis, dissertation, seminar paper, etc.) completed by a graduate student, the name of the institution from which he/she graduated should be used if funding has been granted, otherwise the author decides on which institution should be used.
ILLUSTRATION Research Skills of Graduate School Professors as Input to Training and Development DAVID CABABARO BUENO http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0072-0326 docdave3090@gmail.com Columban College, Inc. Olongapo City, Philippines
2. ABSTRACT ď ľ Should
contain 200 (minimum)- 300 (maximum) words
ď ľ The
Abstract must contain five parts written in one paragraph: Introduction
to the topic, chief purpose/objective, method, results, and conclusion.
3. KEYWORDS
Indicate the discipline of the study, concepts studied, research design/ process and setting of the study (country and continent) as keywords.
Set keywords in sentence case.
Example:
Keywords-
Education, teaching strategies, lecture-discussion, descriptive-survey design, Philippines, Asia
4. INTRODUCTION
The INTRODUCTION should contain: First
Section
Global
situational analysis of the problem supported by the literature from different continents
4. INTRODUCTION
ďƒź Second
Section
ď ś Regional
situational analysis supported by literature from the region of the study. Researchers from Middle East, North Africa, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) such as Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam must include literature from these countries to capture the perspective in the study.
4. INTRODUCTION
Third
Section
Local
Fourth Gap
situational analysis of the problem
Section
in the literature from the literature reviews that the study intends to find Differentness of the study from other previous studies Compelling reasons of the writer for choosing the problem
4. INTRODUCTION
Use several sources with several authors embedded in a sentence.
Utilize research review papers and scientific sources preferably from subscription journals because they are more authoritative and credible such as Pubmed, Science Direct, Springer, Proquest, EbscoHost, among others.
Note: Basic research and other types of research may follow a different format.
5. FRAMEWORK
(Optional for experimental researches)
It should contain basic explication of the meaning of the variables of the study.
Present the framework in either schematic or textual form merging the theories discussed in which the study was anchored.
6. OBJECTIVES ďƒź State
the OBJECTIVES of the study in paragraph form.
ďƒź Use
objectives that show what the researcher shall do with the data and not words to indicate what the researcher intends to do as a research process.
6. OBJECTIVES
ďƒź Write
the objectives in paragraph form setting one from the others by a number in close parenthesis.
ďƒź Do
not use problem statements/ questions.
7. METHODOLOGY For
Pure Sciences:
MATERIALS AND METHODS Research Design Research Site Participants Instrumentation Construction, try-out, reliability and validity
7. METHODOLOGY
•
Research Ethics Protocol Informed
consent
Clearance
from the Ethics Review Board
Gratuitous
permit from a government agency for floral and faunal studies
Permit
from the head of the indigenous peoples of the research sites
Representative
of animal welfare society for clinical studies involving animals
Data
Collection Statistical Techniques (No formulae needed )
7. METHODOLOGY
For
Social Sciences:
METHODOLOGY Research Design Research Site Participants Instrumentation Construction, Try-out, Reliability and Validity
7. METHODOLOGY
For
Social Sciences:
Research
Ethics Protocol Informed consent Clearance from the Ethics Review Board
Data
Collection
Statistical
Techniques
8. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Sometimes
termed DISCUSSION only for theoretical papers
Answers
to objectives
Highlight
salient findings of the study supported by global, regional and local situational analysis/ findings
8. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Use
keywords from objectives as side-head of the Results and Discussion.
Intercontinental
literature support of the data (in-text citation)
Summary
results
tables and significant
8. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Long
tables with brimming data should be avoided especially when the text can stand to discuss and/or explain the data.
Validation
Provide
of the theory used (integrated)
a critique on the methods and theories used in the last paragraph.
9. CONCLUSIONS
In paragraph form, not broken down
Highlight new discovery (if any) that you obtained only after completing the study, something (not found in the literature) which contributes to new knowledge.
This section supports or negates previous conclusions, validates theory used and/or generates new theory.
10. RECOMMENDATIONS
ďƒź Write
recommendations only for national, regional and global significance and application.
11. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
(Optional)
Limited to funders of the research with grants award number code and data
Acknowledge service agencies that funded the study (required).
Sources of data mined, e.g. WHO, UNESCO
Do not acknowledge God, family, friends, colleagues
12. REFERENCES
All references used in the manuscript should be traceable online.
Authors are cautioned from using gray literature (any work that is NOT scientifically peer reviewed and published in internationally indexed research journals).
Prefer references which have earned citations already.
12. LITERATURE CITED
URL should be shortened; go to goo.gl and paste your long URL in the search box to obtain the short URL then replace your long URL.
Include Digital Object Identifier (DOI), copy the DOI and DO NOT copy the URL anymore.
12. LITERATURE CITED
NOTE: Do not label this section
“Bibliography”. A bibliography contains references that you may have read but have not specifically cited in the text. Bibliography
sections are found in books and other literary writing, but not scientific journal-style papers.
12. LITERATURE CITED
ď ľ Long
URL
Speer, J. H. (2010). Fundamentals of tree-ring research. University of Arizona Press. Retrieved on May 1, 2014 from http://books.google.com.ph/books? id=XtxEbCzbKUUC&printsec=frontcover&dq=trees +2010&hl=en&sa=X &ei=ha8U8vKIsn3igKH9oHADA&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q =trees%20 2010&f=false
12. LITERATURE CITED
ď ľ Shortened
URL through goo.gl
Speer, J. H. (2010). Fundamentals of tree-ring research. University of Arizona Press. Retrieved on May 1, 2014 from http://goo.gl/Od2qtR
12. LITERATURE CITED
o
Authored book (two authors)
Taraban, R. & Kerr, M. (2004). Analytic and pragmatic factors in college students’ metacognitive reading strategies. Reading Psychology Retrieved on February 12, 2013 from http://www.cognitivesolutionslc.com/metacogread.pdf
12. LITERATURE CITED
o
Authored book (more than two authors)
Taraban, H., Cotter, R., Confir, T. & Jefferson, F. (2004). Analytic and pragmatic factors in college students’ metacognitive reading strategies. Reading Psychology Retrieved on February 12, 2013 from http://www.cognitivesolutionslc.com/ metacogread.pdff
12. LITERATURE CITED
ď ľ
Article in an online scientific journal
ďƒź
Include the issue number in parenthesis (not underlined) immediately following the volume number and preceding the page numbers.
Bogaards, P. (2013) Deux langues, quatre dictionnaires. Lexicographica, 12(6),162-173. Retrieved on March 12, 2012 from http://www.wuenjournal.com/ regular.pdf
Differences Between a Thesis/ Dissertation and a Journal Article
Questions?
REFERENCES Bueno, D.C. (2007). Elements of Research and Thesis Writing. Syneraide Publishing, Quezon City, Phil.
Bueno, D.C. (2016). Educational Research Writing. Great Books Trading, Manila, Philippines Bueno, D.C. (2016). Research Writing for Business and Hospitality Students. Great Books Trading, Manila, Philippines. Bueno, D.C. (2016). Practical Quantitative Research Writing. Books at ibpa, Manila, Philippines. Bueno, D.C. (2016). Practical Qualitative Research Writing. Great Books Trading, Manila, Philippines. Bueno, D.C. (2016). Statistics for Research. Great Books Trading, Manila, Philippines. JPAIR Multidisciplinary Research Journal Publication System
Bibliography Altrichter, Herbert; Feldman, Allan; Posch, Peter; & Somekh, Bridget. (2008). Teachers investigate their work: An introduction to action research across the professions (2nd Ed.). London: Routledge. Craig, Dorothy Valcarcel. (2009). Action research essentials. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. Johnson, Andrew P. (2008). A short guide to action research. Boston: Pearson Education, Inc. Lassonde, Cynthia A.; & Israel, Susan E. (2008). Teachers taking action: A comprehensive guide to teacher research. Newman, DE: International Reading Association. Mertler, Craig A. (2009). Action research: Teachers as researchers in the classroom. Los Angeles, CA: Sage. Sagor, Richard. (2005). The action research guidebook. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press.
“Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.�-Matthew 11:28
Dr. David Cababaro Bueno, LPT
Dean, Graduate School Director, Research and Publications Office AB-General Science BSE-General Science Master of Arts in Science Education Doctor of Education Master in Public Management Master in Business Administration Doctor in Business Administration Doctor in Public Management (ip) Author of 21 Books and Modules published nationwide Author of 89 Research Journal Articles/ Abstracts docdave3090@gmail.com docdave30@yahoo.com fb : Doc Dave
Thank You po !!!