Submissions


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Submission Preparation Checklist

As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.
  • The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
  • Writing must academic. Each paragraph should be an idea and be correctly developed
  • The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, or RTF document file format.
  • Where available, DOIs for the references have been provided.
  • The text is scientifically rigorous and has a deep analysis.
  • The text is accurate in the use of concepts and methodology.
  • The text follows all the indications mentioned in our guidelines/a, as well as our template
  • Citations and references have been double-checked according to this videotutorial.
  • Authors' contributions are included (according to https://credit.niso.org/).

Author Guidelines

Purpose

The CALJ is mainly concerned with disseminating research articles, pedagogical innovations and theoretical reviews relevant to the field of applied linguistics and language education. The editorial team is interested in participating in an academic dialogue with the existing national, Latin American and global academic community about issues related to language teacher education.

Selection Process

All the process goes through the Open Journal System Platform. This means that authors, editors, peer-reviewers and other participants will get emails and notifications send from the platform.

In order to guarantee a high-quality process of selection and publication, the manuscripts received by the CALJ editor pass through a revision process prior to being approved. Once a manuscript is received, the assistant to the editor does the first technical revision of the document. At the second stage, all manuscripts we receive are verified through Turnitin. This provides a service to determine the originality of texts based on comparisons with their internal database and net-wide searches. Next, the articles that pass the preliminary evaluation are sent for content evaluation to the members of the editorial committee. With the consent from the editorial committee, the editor appoints two external evaluators following a blind review process. The articles that are not ready to be sent for evaluation are returned to the authors for revisions until they fulfil the requirements for proceeding to the evaluation stage. All the articles go through the double-blind review process. The evaluation can take from one to two months depending on the time availability of the experts. As both evaluators provide a concept, there could be some disagreements that will be solved according to the following chart:

If the concept provided by evaluator A is and If the concept provided by evaluator B is Then...
Accepted Revise and resubmit Feedback will be provided, and the manuscript will be sent to the author for revision and resubmission.
Rejected Revise and resubmit Feedback will be provided, and the manuscript will be rejected.
Accepted Rejected The article will be sent to a third reviewer.
Only the two similar concepts will be taken into account for the final decision.

The evaluators are invited to evaluate the manuscripts and they receive a copy of the article and a copy of the evaluation format. Once we receive the two concepts from the evaluators, we contact the author and report the results of the evaluation. In the event that the article requires minor revisions to its content, as suggested by the evaluators, the author(s) are given two weeks to do so. Articles requiring major modifications are given one to two months to be re-submitted. On the event that an article is not accepted, the assistant also informs the author immediately of the results of the evaluation. From the moment a manuscript is received to the moment the authors are informed about the acceptance or rejection of a manuscript, the process can take from six to eight months. Finally, the process of evaluation, revision, acceptance and preparation for publication regularly takes a year. However, after the proofreading process, the article is uploaded (anticipated publication) to be available for readers.


In order to be accepted for publication in CALJ, contributions should:

  • Be original and interesting concerning the subject, methodology and conclusions
  • Writing must academic. each paragraph should be an idea and be correctly developed
  • Be relevant to current research and theoretical implications
  • Include knowledge of previous research in the same field
  • Be scientifically rigorous and have great depth of analysis
  • Be accurate in the use of concepts and terminology
  • Have correct formatting, style and organisation according to American Psychological Association (APA) style
  • Be well-written with sophistication and conciseness
  • Be without bias or prejudice

Types of Articles

  • Research Articles: A document that details the original results of research projects. The structure of this type of article typically contains the following sections: title, abstract, keywords, introduction, theoretical framework, methodology, analysis and discussion of results, conclusions and references. Authors are encouraged to include graphic aids.
  • Reflections on Praxis/ Pedagogical Innovations: A document that shows research results on a specific topic from the author’s analytical, interpretative, or critical perspective that presents an innovation with pedagogical implications. This type of article may include theoretical considerations, pedagogical context, findings, discussion, etc. Authors are encouraged to include graphic aids. It should contain original sources.
  • Theme Reviews: A document resulting from a critical revision of literature related to a specific topic. This kind of article is derived from research in which published or non-published research results in a scientific field are analysed, systematised and integrated in order to inform readers of the latest tendencies and developments. This type of publications must have at least 50 references.
  • Pedagogical Innovations: This document focuses on the pedagogical core of the teaching profession, namely the pedagogical knowledge base of teachers. In this category, the authors are expected to include a solid justification, a description of the processes followed in a given educational setting, samples of a pedagogical intervention in specific teaching fields of such processes, results of the experiences and conclusions. The authors are also expected to support their manuscript with theoretical and/or research studies and to present analytical perspectives.
  • Teaching Issues: A document that identifies and arranges profiles in relation to two connected areas of professional teacher practices: classroom teaching practices and participation in professional learning communities. It compares these profiles across different educational systems, examines evidence and links to inputs and processes.
  • Book Review: Critical, analytical review which should provide some context for the work under consideration. This does not have to be extensive, no more than 2000 words, but should answer basic questions for an informed reader. Always be specific, and provide evidence to back up your opinions.

Form and Style

  • We recommend that you download the template, which contains the instructions mentioned here.
  • General information: Includes the title and a footnote where the author indicates whether the article is based on original research or a thesis. If it stems from a research project, the title of the project should be included, as well as the sponsor, the code number of the project or the contract number. It should also include the name, institutional affiliation and e-mail address of each author (in separate footnotes for each author).
  • Abstract: The abstract should be between 150 and 200 words. Abstracts must clearly show the problem or issue under study, the theoretical perspective(s) under which the problem is examined, the methodology employed and, finally, results and conclusions.
  • Keywords: List four to six keywords for the article. Write ‘Keywords’: in italics at the end of your abstract. Do not make bold. We suggest the authors use some Thesaurus optimize their keywords. You can find one here.
  • Scientific articles regularly include four main sections: Introduction (which includes the description of the problem and the theoretical support to the study), Methodology, Results, Discussion of Results and Conclusions.
  • Graphic Aids: Authors are encouraged to submit graphic aids with their articles. Graphic aids could include tables, diagrams, appendices, illustrations, etc. that help the reader understand the article better. They should include the corresponding reference citations.
  • In addition to appearing in the body of the text, graphic aids should be submitted as separate files, according to the following guidelines:
    • If the body of the text contains statistical charts, include original editable files that support these charts with .xls or. xlsx extensions.
    • If the body of the text contains other graphics such as photographs, maps, diagrams, include original files with .jpg or .tiff extensions. The optimal resolution of these elements must be 1536 x 1024 pixels or 300 dpi to guarantee the quality of the printed and digital media. Otherwise, they should be changed or removed.
  • In no case should tables be inserted as images; they must be created with a word processor as they need to be editable.
  • Each graphic aid should be clearly labelled with number and caption. They should be numbered Figure 1, Figure 2, Table 1, Table 2, etc. Graphics may be modified or left out at the discretion of the editor, according to the needs of the publication. Any changes will be discussed with the author before publication.
  • Length: Articles should be between 4,000 and 8,000 words (including the abstract, footnotes, references, tables, figures, appendices and all other matter). The length of the manuscript should not exceed 8,000 words.
  • Software Requirements: All articles should be submitted in .docx or equivalent format.
  • Languages published: Papers are received in formal academic English or Spanish. Linguistic expressions from other cultural groups (e.g. Spanglish, slang, Cockney, Afro-American, Quechua, etc.) are welcome as samples and objects of research.
  • Permission and Consent: If the article contains extracts from other works, especially figures, tables, etc., please contact the authors and publishers (the holders of the copyright) to seek permission to use their work before submitting the final version. By submitting the article, authors warrant that they have obtained permission from the copyright holder to reproduce (in any printed or electronic format) material not written by the author and that the author has acknowledged the source. If primary data is to be included, research participants should have signed a consent form.
  • Submissions: The submission should be broken into two types of files: the article and any graphic aids. All articles must be submitted through the Open Journal System, http://revistas.udistrital.edu.co/ojs/index.php/calj/login.
  • Waiver: Every article shall be subject to the review of the editorial committee. The editor reserves the right to make formal modifications to articles throughout the editing process.
  • Contact: Communicate with the journal at caljournal.ud@correo.udistrital.edu.co

Format

      • We recommend that you download the template, which contains the instructions mentioned here.
      • Font: Times New Roman, 12-point. Double space the entire document. Spaces between words or after full stops and colons should be a single space.
      • Title: Use lower case, capitalise only the first letter of every word except prepositions and do not extend beyond two lines.
      • Headings: No more than two levels of heading below the title. Headings should not be numbered. The first level heading is in bold, and the first letter of every word is capitalised. A second level heading is in italics, and the first letter of every word is capitalised.
      • Paragraphs: Do not use a hard return at the end of a line in running text except at the end of a paragraph.
      • Page breaks: Do not insert page breaks in the text or extra spacing to avoid widows and orphans as page breaks will be different in the typeset proofs. Turn Hyphenation off.
      • Proofread and spell check your work when you have finished, including the reference list. Please make sure the references follow APA style. Make a back-up of all your work. If you detect any virus on your machine, please inform all your CALJ contacts immediately.
      • Footnotes: These should be kept to an absolute minimum. Citations should appear within the text, not in footnotes.
      • In-text references: These should appear in the body of the article, not in footnotes, giving the author's last name followed by the year and page number where relevant. Use double quotation marks for quoted material. Any quotation that runs for more than 40 words should be set off from the main paragraph as a block quote and does not need quotation marks. Refer to APA for more information. We also suggest you to see this video:

Documentation of Sources

Please follow APA latest guidelines for appropriate documentation of sources in your paper and for your reference list. You might find the following link useful:

      • APA Citation Guide: 

https://apastyle.apa.org/instructional-aids/reference-guide.pdf


Sections

  1. Research Articles

    Defined as a document that details the original results of research projects. The structure of this type of article typically contains the following sections: title, abstract, keywords, introduction, theoretical framework, methodology, analysis and discussion of results, conclusions, and references. Authors are encouraged to include graphic aids.

  2. Pedagogical Innovations

    This type of document focuses on the pedagogical core of the teaching profession, namely, the pedagogical knowledge base of teachers. In this category, the authors are expected to include a solid justification, the description of the processes followed in a given educational setting, samples of a pedagogical intervention in specific teaching fields of such processes, results of the experiences and conclusions. The authors are also expected to support their manuscript with theoretical and/or research studies and to present analytical perspectives.

  3. Teaching Issues

    Defined as a study that identifies and arranges profiles in relation to two connected areas of professional teacher practices: classroom teaching practices and participation in professional learning communities. It compares these profiles across different educational systems and examines evidence and links to inputs and processes.

  4. Reflections on Praxis

    A document that shows research results on a specific topic from the author’s analytical, interpretative, or critical perspective that presents an innovation with pedagogical implications. This type of article may include: theoretical considerations, pedagogical context, findings, discussion, context, etc. Authors are encouraged to include graphic aids. It should contain original sources.

  5. Theme Review

    This is a document resulting from a critical revision of literature related to a specific topic. This kind of article is derived from research in which published or non-published research results in a scientific field are analysed, systematised, and integrated in order to inform readers of the latest trends and developments.

  6. Book Review

    A critical, analytical review which should provide some context for the work under consideration. This does not have to be extensive, no more than 2000 words, but should answer basic questions posed by an informed reader. Always be specific and provide evidence to back up your opinions.



Privacy Statement

The names and email addresses entered in this journal site will be used exclusively for the stated purposes of this journal and will not be made available for any other purpose or to any other party.

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