Papers submitted to the Polish Journal of Applied Psychology are to be in English only. Send two typewritten copies of your submission to
Prof. UWr dr hab. Alicja Kuczyńska
Department of Psychology
University of Wroc³aw
ul. Dawida 1
50-527 Wroc³aw
Poland
and one e-mail copy to:
aku@dawid.uni.wroc.pl
Maximum article length is to be 20 typed pages (including references, footnotes, figures and figures captions, and tables as well as their caption). Book reviews should not exceed five typed pages. Typescripts should be Times New Roman and standard font size, double-spaced throughout, with 1.5-4 cm margins left and right. Email copy should be 1800 ASCII characters per computer page.
Papers should include an abstract (maximum 115 words) and key words. Type the text, references, footnotes, figures, and tables on separate pages in that order. Indicate in a separate footnote the address to which requests for reprints should be sent. Figures will be prepared at the publisher's expense. Tables are to be treated as selfcontained: that is, do not repeat in the text data presented in tables. Do not draw vertical lines in tables. Keep the number of tables and figures to a minimum. Indicate their placement in the text.
For referencing, follow the APA Stylesheet. Exemples of the most commonly used types of citations are given here:
Book: one, two, or more autors:
Smith, P.B., & Bond, M.H. (1998). Social psychology across culture. Hemel Hemstead, UK: Prentice-Hall.
Article in scholarly journal:
M±czyński, J. (2001). The cultural impact on the leadership style of Polish managers. Polish Journal of Applied Psychology, I (1), 107-132.
Chapter (or article) in a book:
Sashkin, M. (1998). The visionary leader. In: J. A. Conger & R. A. Kamungo (Eds.).
Charismatic leadership: The elusive factor in organizational effectiveness. San Francisco: JoseyBass, 122-160.
We are asking authors to use PJAP templates for creating their manuscripts for submission. Use of these templates will make post-proof processing of manuscripts significantly faster, producing noticeable decreases in time between submission of final proof-edited manuscript and publication. |