About the Journal
Focus and Scope
The Indian Journal of Extension Education is the open access, indexed, and peer-reviewed official publication of the Indian Society of Extension Education (ISEE), Division of Agricultural Extension, ICAR- Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi 110012, INDIA. The first issue of the journal was published during 1965 with the initial financial assistance United States Agency for International Development (USAID), New Delhi, which was later carried over by the ISEE resources. The focus subject areas of the Indian Journal of Extension Education include; Agricultural Extension, Agricultural Communication, Agricultural Entrepreneurship, Extension Management, Agricultural Education, Socioeconomic Studies, Rural Sociology and educational Psychology, Adoption and diffusion of Farm Innovations, Agricultural Diversification, ICT application in Agriculture, Planned Agricultural Change, Agricultural & Rural Development, and Contemporary Agricultural Extension issues related to Agricultural Science/ Dairying / Communication/ Home Science / Fisheries / Veterinary and allied social sciences. The Indian Journal of Extension Education publishes peer-reviewed original manuscripts in the field of extension education and allied fields. The journal accepts original research papers, research tools, and research notes only.
The journal has been listed on the UGC-CARE List since January 2023.
https://portal.issn.org/resource/ISSN/2454-552X
About the Publisher (The Indian Society of Extension Education (ISEE), New Delhi)
The Indian Society of Extension Education, New Delhi, is the publisher of the Indian Journal of Extension Education. From June 2021, Ms. ACS Publisher,1st Floor, DCM Building, Barakhamba Road, Near Gate No. 3, Barakhamba Metro Station, New Delhi – 110001, is a Service Providing Agency for DOI activation and data submission to indexing agencies. The ISEE is a registered professional society under the Societies Registration Act 21 of 1860 (Punjab Amendment Act,1957) as extended to the Union Territory of Delhi. The registration number is S-2504 of 1964-65. The ISEE is mandated to advance the cause of Extension Education. The Society shall seek to achieve the objectives by publishing the Indian Journal of Extension (ISSN 0537-1996 (print) and 2454-552X (online)), books, monographs, etc. The ISEE facilitates closer association among members and other scientific workers in India and abroad to promote professional experience in teaching, research, and extension. The ISEE encourages fundamental as well as applied research in the field of extension education.
As per the bylaws of ISEE, anyone with a post-graduate degree in Extension Education/ Agricultural Extension/ Dairy Extension/ Agricultural Communication/ Home Science Extension/ Fisheries Extension/ Veterinary Extension, and allied social sciences can become a life member. However, ordinary membership (annual only) is open to all those who are interested in the field of extension education. Student membership is open for any student of a university/ technical college/ research institute/ college/ technical school pursuing a Master's or Doctoral degree in any of the branches (agriculture/ dairy/veterinary/home science/ fisheries, etc.) of extension education. Student membership is valid for five years only.
The society believes in long-term relations with the prospective authors of the manuscripts. To publish a manuscript in the Indian Journal of Extension Education, it is expected that at least the first or corresponding author must be a life member/ ordinary member of the Indian Society of Extension Education, New Delhi. The details of the membership requirements and fee, etc., may be accessed at http://www.iseeiari.org/
The publication of the Indian Journal of Extension Education is carried over with the resources of the Indian Society of Extension Education, New Delhi.
The Indian Journal of Extension Education is the peer-reviewed, open-access, and indexed official publication of the Indian Society of Extension Education (ISEE), New Delhi. It publishes original research papers in the field of extension education and allied fields.
It publishes original Research articles, Research Notes, and Research Tools in the field of extension education and allied fields. Manuscripts for publication should be submitted online on https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/IJEE/about/submissions . Before submission of the manuscript, it is strongly advised that it may be checked and edited by your coauthor(s), professional colleagues for its technical contents, including grammatical and spelling correctness. The length of the manuscript should not exceed 5000 words. The manuscripts below 3000 words will be considered for RESEARCH NOTE only. Do not submit manuscripts below 2000 words. Under the Research Tool section, do not explain well-established facts and methodology. Only the explanation of the methodology followed is required. Try to sum up in 1-2 tables only. The plagiarism must be checked before submission with appropriate software (Turnitin/URKUND/ithenticate/ original, etc.), and should be submitted as a supplementary file; it should be below 10 %. The Research Ethics Statement (in prescribed format), duly signed by all authors, must be submitted with the manuscript. The official email of the chief editor of the society is chiefeditorisee@gmail.com
Without a research ethics statement and plagiarism check report, the manuscript will not be further processed.
The submitted manuscripts will be evaluated by the editorial members and referees for their suitability. The manuscript will be sent back to the author to carry out the changes or modifications as suggested by the referees and editorial members. Any manuscript has to be uploaded only through the electronic form (as an attachment) through http://epubs.icar.org.in/ejournal/index.php/ijee. While uploading, care must be taken to submit complete metadata of all the authors, plagiarism check report, research ethics statements etc.
The manuscript should be arranged as follows: Title, authors and their affiliations, highlights, abstract, keywords, introduction, methodology, results, discussion, conclusion, and references. Kindly check the recent issues at https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/IJEE/index or http://www.iseeiari.org/
Title Page: The names, current affiliation, complete address (the place where work was conducted,) including e-mail address of author(s), Present address(es) of the author(s) if applicable; Complete correspondence address, including email address to which the proofs should be sent. Do not use abbreviations or acronyms for the designation of job, position, and institution name. Care should be taken to submit metadata of all the authors in complete (without adding Dr./Prof./Sh./Smt., etc.) in the same order as written in the manuscript. No alteration of authorship at a later stage is allowed. The title must be centred (14 points bold). The first letter of every word of the title should be in upper case (Capital letters). All other letters should be in lowercase (small letters). Example: Socioeconomic Impact of Self-Help Groups.
The TITLE should not exceed 14 words and must be representative of the content. centred (14 point bold). The first letter of every word of the title should be in uppercase (Capital letter). All other letters should be in lowercase (small letters). Example: Socio-economic Impact of Self-Help Groups.
The HIGHLIGHTS of the manuscript should be presented in 3-5 bullet points. Each bullet should not exceed 20 words. Each bullet should either describe a result or a significant inference.
The ABSTRACT is a mini version of the full paper. Abstract should contain year of study, a brief account of principal objective(s), methods used, principal results, and main conclusion in an understandable form so that the reader need not refer to the whole article except for details. The abstract should ideally be structured according to the IMRaD format (Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion). It should be written in the simple past tense, in complete sentences, limited to 150-200 words. It should not have references to literature, illustrations, and tables. The year of the research endeavor must be part of it.
The KEYWORDS best describe the nature of the research after the abstract. Provide a list of 5 to 8 keywords (indexing terms). The first letter of each keyword should be in uppercase or capital letters. As major words in the title are not used in the subject index, appropriate words from the title (or synonyms) should be listed as keywords.
The INTRODUCTION provides a rationale for the study, written in the present tense, which refers to established knowledge in the literature. It should contain the nature and scope of the problem, a review of relevant literature, a hypothesis, an approach, and a justification for this approach. No trade name should be used, and Industrial products should be referred to by their chemical names (give ingredients in parentheses) at first mention. In the absence of a common name, use the full name or a defined abbreviation, in preference to a trade name. It should be between 450-500 words.
The 'METHODOLOGY ’ describes what was done- an experimental model or field study. It should be an exhaustive one (in a logical order, with sufficient details to reproduce the procedure) without tables and figures (approximately 300- 400 words). The subheadings must be avoided as far as possible in the methodology; rather new paragraph may be initiated if starting a new concept. It should be written in the simple past tense. Where the methods are well known, the citation of standard work is sufficient. All modifications of procedures must be explained. Experimental materials and statistical models should be described clearly and fully. Calculations and the validity of deductions made from them should be checked and validated. Units of measurement, symbols, and standard abbreviations should conform to international standards. Metric measurements are preferred, and dosages should be expressed entirely in metric units (SI units). Give the meaning of all symbols immediately after the equation in which they are first used.
The RESULTS AND DISCUSSION should be written separately and avoid repetition of the results in the discussion.
The RESULTS present the data, the facts- what you found/ calculated/ discovered/ observed. It should be written in the simple past tense to report your observations on the experiment/ fieldwork, and its comparison/contrast. Only the salient results need to be presented, instead of writing the complete tabular/ graphical data in text. Too many paragraphs are discouraged; one concept must be dealt with in one place and time only.
Avoid too many tables just for the numbers’ sake, do not add a socio-personal profile table, and text till it is necessary and has some bearing on the other part of the research. Results should be presented in tabular form and graphs wherever feasible, but not both. The colour figures and plates, during printing in black and white, may lose important information. Mean results with the relevant standard errors should be presented rather than detailed data. The data should be so arranged that the tables would fit in the normal layout of the page. Self-explanatory tables should be typed on separate sheets and carry appropriate titles. The titles of tables/figures should not be more than 12 words. The tabular matter should not exceed 20% of the text. Any abbreviation used in a table must be defined in that table. All tables should be cited in the text. If an explanation is necessary, use an abbreviation in the body of the table (e.g., ND) and explain clearly in footnotes what the abbreviation means. References to footnotes in a table are specified by superscript numbers, independently for each table. Superscript letters are used to designate statistical significance. Use a lowercase p to indicate probability values (i.e., p<0.05). In general, use numerals when two numbers appear adjacent to each other; spell out the first (i.e., three districts were selected rather than 3 districts were selected). In a series using some numbers less than 10 and some more than 10, use numerals for all (i.e., 2 splits, 6 plants were selected). Do not begin a sentence with a numeral. Spell it out or rearrange the sentence. Abbreviate the terms hour (h), minute (min), and second (sec) when used with a number in the text, but spell them out when they are used alone. Do not use a hyphen to indicate inclusiveness (e.g., use 12 to 14 years or wk 3 and 4, not 12-14 mg or wk 3-4). Use Arabic numerals with abbreviated units of measure: 2 g, 5 d, $4.00, 3% and numerical designations in the text: exp 1, group 3, etc. Figures (histogram/pie chart/another type of charts) should be in editable rich text material with the backup data file. The image of the figure or jpg/jpeg is not allowed.
The DISCUSSION shows the relationship among the facts, it puts results in the context of previous research, and the emphasis must be on presenting results in relation to established knowledge. The discussion should contain trends, relationships, generalizations, any exceptions, outlying data, agreement/ disagreement with previous research, with reasons. The discussion should be written in the present tense. The discussion should be written in the present tense. Limit the discussion to 400-600 words.
The CONCLUSION summarises principal findings and should not be more than one paragraph (100-150 words). The discussion explains in general terms the implications of the findings of this research. It has to be written in the present tense, and the emphasis must be on what should now be accepted as established knowledge. The conclusion should relate to the introduction and hypothesis. The significance of your results or any practical application/ implication must find a place in the conclusion. Abbreviations, acronyms, or citations should not be used here. It should not be a repetition of the abstract.
The REFERENCES list should be typed in alphabetical order. The reference list should be first sorted alphabetically by author(s) and secondly chronologically. A recent issue of the journal should be consulted for the methods of citation of references in the text as well as at the end of the article. The Indian Journal of Extension Education (IJEE) follows common APA style references and in-text citations. Journal name should never be abbreviated. For more information on references and reference examples, see Chapters 8, 9, and 10 of the Publication Manual as well as the Concise Guide to APA Style (7th ed.). Also see the Reference Examples pages on the APA Style website. Few examples of references as well as in-text citation are given at https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/ijee/about#:~:text=ISSN/2454%2D552X-,Authors%27%20Guidelines,-The%20Indian%20Journal
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- There must be at least 15 references from the related research. It is appreciated if the references are from Social Science/ Extension Education/Communication/ Entrepreneurship/ Management/Education-related journals. References from other non-social science journals are not appreciated. References from the previous three years’ issues of IJEE available at epubs only are encouraged. Check capitalization Vs sentence case properly. In references, the ‘&’ should be used instead of ‘and’ before the last author name, whereas in the text, it should be ‘and’. The word ‘et al’ must not be italicized in the text. The reference, in general, should not be older than 15 years and should be from published sources only. Avoid unpublished theses (older than five years) references. Wherever possible, provide the URL of the reference. Unauthenticated references may lead to the rejection of the manuscript.
- The manuscript should always be written in the third person form (Avoid I /We / Research Team / Project Team, etc.).There is always a different style for paper writing and thesis writing; try to be precise enough without compromising the quality. Avoid too many paragraphs; one concept must be dealt with in one place and time in one paragraph. There must not be more than 3-4 subheadings in the result, the table & figures must be limited to a maximum of 6 for the research paper and 3 for the research note. Avoid presenting the same data in text, table, and figures verbatim. Avoid giving a socio-personal profile till it is utmost necessary and has some bearing on the other part of the research. Also discouraged too many columns in the table, like number/ frequency in one column, the percentage in the second, and the rank in the third; only one column showing percent will be sufficient.
- Authors must obtain permission to reproduce any copyrighted material and include an acknowledgement of the source in their article. They should be aware that the unreferenced use of the published and unpublished ideas, writing, or illustrations of others, or submission of a complete paper under new authorship in a different or the same language, is plagiarism.
- Articles forwarded to the editor for publication are understood to be offered to the Indian Journal of Extension Education exclusively, and the copyrights automatically stand transferred to the Indian Society of Extension Education. It is also understood that the authors have obtained the approval of their department, faculty, or institute in cases where such permission is necessary. The Editorial Board takes no responsibility for facts or opinions expressed in the Journal, which rests entirely with the authors thereof. Proof-correction should be in Track Change mode. All queries marked in the article should be answered. Proofs are supplied for a check-up of the correctness of typesetting and facts. The proofs should be returned within the stipulated time (normally 3 days). The alternation in the author's name/ corresponding author name is not permitted at any later stage after the article is submitted to the Indian Journal of Extension Education. The submitter of the manuscript will be treated as the corresponding author for all purposes.
- The Article Certificate, Author Contribution Form, Disclosure of Competing Interest, and Declaration of Conflict of Interest, duly signed by all the authors, should be mailed in original to the Chief Editor, ISEE, on acceptance of the manuscript in the prescribed format (https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/ijee/about), downloadable from https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/IJEE/libraryFiles/downloadPublic/id . In the absence of these certificates, the manuscript processing will immediately be stopped and will not be published.
Reference section
Indian Journal of Extension Education (IJEE) follows common APA Style references and citations in text. Journal names should never be abbreviated. For more information on references and reference examples, see Chapters 8, 9, and 10 of the Publication Manual as well as the Concise Guide to APA Style (7th ed.). Also, see the Reference Examples pages on the APA Style website. A few examples of reference sections as well as text citations are given below:
a) Journal Article
Lachner, A., Backfisch, I., Hoogerheide, V., van Gog, T., & Renkl, A. (2020). Timing matters! Explaining between study phases enhances students’ learning. Journal of Educational Psychology, 112(4), 841–853. https://doi.org/10.1037/edu0000396
b) Online Magazine Article
Gander, K. (2020, April 29). The COVID-19 vaccine being developed in Australia raises antibodies to neutralize the virus in pre-clinical tests. Newsweek. https://www.newsweek.com/australia-covid-19-vaccine-neutralize-virus-1500849
c) Print Magazine Article
Nicholl, K. (2020, May). A royal spark. Vanity Fair, 62(5), 56–65, 100.
d) Online Newspaper Article
Roberts, S. (2020, April 9). Early string ties us to Neanderthals. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/09/science/neanderthals-fiber-string-math.html
e) Print Newspaper Article
Reynolds, G. (2019, April 9). Different strokes for athletic hearts. The New York Times, D4.
f) Blog Post
Rutledge, P. (2019, March 11). The upside of social media. The Media Psychology Blog. https://www.pamelarutledge.com/2019/03/11/the-upside-of-social-media/
g) Authored Book
Kaufman, K. A., Glass, C. R., & Pineau, T. R. (2018). Mindful sport performance enhancement: Mental training for athletes and coaches. American Psychological Association. https://doi.org/10.1037/0000048-000
h) Edited Book Chapter
Zeleke, W. A., Hughes, T. L., & Drozda, N. (2020). Home–school collaboration to promote mind–body health. In C. Maykel & M. A. Bray (Eds.), Promoting mind–body health in schools: Interventions for mental health professionals (pp. 11–26). American Psychological Association. https://doi.org/10.1037/0000157-002
i) Online Dictionary Entry
American Psychological Association. (n.d.). Internet addiction. In the APA dictionary of psychology. Retrieved April 24, 2020, from https://dictionary.apa.org/internet-addiction
j) Report by a Group Author
World Health Organization. (2014). Comprehensive implementation plan on maternal, infant, and young child nutrition. https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/113048/WHO_NMH_NHD_14.1_ eng.pdf?ua=1
k) Report by Individual Authors
Winthrop, R., Ziegler, L., Handa, R., & Fakoya, F. (2019). How playful learning can help leapfrog progress in education. Center for Universal Education at Brookings. https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/ uploads/2019/04/how_playful_learning_can_help_leapfrog_progress_in_education.pdf
l) Press Release
American Psychological Association. (2020, March 2). APA reaffirms psychologists’ role in combating climate change [Press release]. https://www.apa.org/news/press/releases/2020/03/combating-climate-change
m) Conference Session
Davidson, R. J. (2019, August 8–11). Well-being is a skill [Conference session]. APA 2019 Convention, Chicago, IL, United States. https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/a5ea5d51/files/uploaded/APA2019_ Program_190708.pdf
n) Dissertation From a Database
Horvath-Plyman, M. (2018). Social media and the college student journey: An examination of how social media use impacts social capital and affects college choice, access, and transition (Publication No. 10937367) [Doctoral dissertation, New York University]. ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global.
o) Preprint Article
Latimier, A., Peyre, H., & Ramus, F. (2020). A meta-analytic review of the benefit of spacing out retrieval practice episodes on retention. PsyArXiv. https://psyarxiv.com/kzy7u/
p) Data Set
O’Donohue, W. (2017). Content analysis of undergraduate psychology textbooks (ICPSR 21600; Version V1) [Data set]. Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research. https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR36966.v1
q) Film or Video
Doctor, P., & Del Carmen, R. (Directors). (2015). Inside out [Film]. Walt Disney Pictures; Pixar Animation Studios.
r) TV Series Episode
Dippold, K. (Writer), & Trim, M. (Director). (2011, April 14). Fancy party (Season 3, Episode 9) [TV series episode]. In G. Daniels, H. Klein, D. Miner, & M. Schur (Executive Producers), Parks and Recreation. Deedle-Dee Productions; Fremulon; 3 Arts Entertainment; Universal Media Studios.
s) Webinar
Kamin, H. S., Lee, C. L., & McAdoo, T. L. (2020). Creating references using the seventh edition APA Style [Webinar]. American Psychological Association. https://apastyle.apa.org/instructional-aids/tutorials-webinars
t) YouTube Video
Above The Noise. (2017, October 18). Can procrastination be a good thing? [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQMwmBNNOnQ
u) Song or Track
Nirvana. (1991). Smells like teen spirit [Song]. On Nevermind. DGC.
v) Radio Broadcast
Hersher, R. (2020, March 19). Spring starts today all over America, which is weird [Radio broadcast]. NPR. https://www.npr.org/2020/03/19/817237429/spring-starts-today-all-over america-which-is-weird3
Podcast Episode
Santos, L. (Host). (n.d.). Psychopaths and superheroes (No. 1) [Audio podcast episode]. In The happiness lab with Dr. Laurie Santos. Pushkin Industries. https://www.happinesslab.fm/season-2-episodes/ episode-1
Infographic
American Psychological Association. (n.d.). Data sharing [Infographic]. https://www.apa.org/pubs/journals/ data-sharing-infographic.pdf
PowerPoint From a Classroom Website
Mack, R., & Spake, G. (2018). Citing open-source images and formatting references for presentations [PowerPoint slides]. Canvas@FNU. https://fnu.onelogin.com/login
Tweet
Obama, B. [@BarackObama]. (2020, April 7). It’s World Health Day, and we owe a profound debt of gratitude to all our medical professionals. They’re still giving [Tweet]. Twitter. https://twitter.com/ BarackObama/status/1247555328365023238
Open Educational Resource
Fagan, J. (2019, March 25). Nursing clinical brain. OER Commons. Retrieved January 7, 2020, from https://www.oercommons.org/authoring/53029-nursing-clinical-brain/view
Webpage
Chandler, N. (2020, April 9). What’s the difference between Sasquatch and Bigfoot? howstuffworks. https://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/strange-creatures/sasquatch-bigfoot-difference.html Webpage on a News Website
Machado, J., & Turner, K. (2020, March 7). The future of feminism. Vox. https://www.vox.com/ identities/2020/3/7/21163193/international-womens-day-2020
Webpage With a Retrieval Date
Center for Systems Science and Engineering. (2020, May 6). COVID-19 dashboard by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University (JHU). Johns Hopkins University & Medicine, Coronavirus Resource Center. Retrieved May 6, 2020, from https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html
Citations in the text
Groups of references cited in a sentence in the text must be listed in chronological order.
In-text citations have two formats: parenthetical and narrative.
In parenthetical citations, the author's name and publication date appear in parentheses. Both the author and the date, separated by a comma, appear in parentheses for a parenthetical citation. A parenthetical citation can appear within or at the end of a sentence. For example
Falsely balanced news coverage can distort the public’s perception of expert consensus on an issue (Koehler, 2016).
In narrative citations, the author's name is incorporated into the text as part of the sentence, and the year follows in parentheses. The author’s surname appears in running text, and the date appears in parentheses immediately after the author’s name for a narrative citation. For example:
Koehler (2016) noted the dangers of falsely balanced news coverage.
In rare cases, the author and date might both appear in the narrative. In this case, do not use parentheses. For example
In 2016, Koehler noted the dangers of falsely balanced news coverage.
Each work cited must appear in the reference list, and each work in the reference list must be cited in the text (or in a table, figure, footnote, or appendix).
Both paraphrases and quotations require citations.
A paraphrase restates another’s idea (or your own previously published idea) in your own words. Paraphrasing allows you to summarize and synthesize information from one or more sources, focus on significant information, and compare and contrast relevant details.
Authors paraphrase their sources most of the time, rather than directly quoting the sources. When you paraphrase, cite the original work using either the narrative or parenthetical citation format. Although it is not required to provide a page or paragraph number in the citation, you may include one (in addition to the author and year) when it would help interested readers locate the relevant passage within a long or complex work (e.g., a book).
Webster-Stratton (2016) described a case example of a 4-year-old girl who showed an insecure attachment to her mother; in working with the family dyad, the therapist focused on increasing the mother’s empathy for her child (pp. 152–153).
A direct quotation reproduces words verbatim from another work or your own previously published work. It is best to paraphrase sources rather than directly quoting them because paraphrasing allows you to fit material to the context of your paper and writing style. Use direct quotations rather than paraphrasing in case reproducing an exact definition, an author has said something memorable or succinctly, or when you want to respond to exact wording (e.g., something someone said).
For quotations of fewer than 40 words, add quotation marks around the words and incorporate the quote into your own text—there is no additional formatting needed. Do not insert an ellipsis at the beginning and/or end of a quotation unless the source includes an ellipsis.
Effective teams can be difficult to describe because “high performance along one domain does not translate to high performance along another” (Ervin et al., 2018, p. 470).
For a direct quotation, always include a full citation (parenthetical or narrative) in the same sentence as the quotation, including the page number (or other location information, e.g., paragraph number). Place a parenthetical citation either immediately after the quotation or at the end of the sentence. For a narrative citation, include the author and year in the sentence, and then place the page number or other location information in parentheses after the quotation.
If the quotation precedes the narrative citation, put the page number or location information after the year and a comma. If the citation appears at the end of a sentence, put the end punctuation after the closing parenthesis for the citation.
Place periods and commas within closing single or double quotation marks. Place other punctuation marks inside quotation marks only when they are part of the quoted material.
Format quotations of 40 words or more as block quotations:
Do not use quotation marks to enclose a block quotation. Start a block quotation on a new line and indent the whole block 0.5 in. from the left margin. Double-space the entire block quotation. Do not add extra space before or after it. If there are additional paragraphs within the quotation, indent the first line of each subsequent paragraph an additional 0.5 in.
Either cite the source in parentheses after the quotation’s final punctuation or cite the author and year in the narrative before the quotation and place only the page number in parentheses after the quotation’s final punctuation.
Do not add a period after the closing parenthesis in either case.
Block quotation with the parenthetical citation:
Researchers have studied how people talk to themselves:
Inner speech is a paradoxical phenomenon. It is an experience that is central to many people’s everyday lives, and yet it presents considerable challenges to any effort to study it scientifically. Nevertheless, a wide range of methodologies and approaches have combined to shed light on the subjective experience of inner speech and its cognitive and neural underpinnings. (Alderson-Day & Fernyhough, 2015, p. 957)
Block quotation with the narrative citation:
Flores et al. (2018) described how they addressed potential researcher bias when working with an intersectional community of transgender people of color:
Everyone on the research team belonged to a stigmatized group but also held privileged identities. Throughout the research process, we attended to the ways in which our privileged and oppressed identities may have influenced the research process, findings, and presentation of results. (p. 311)
The following are general guidelines to follow when writing in-text citations:
Ensure that the spelling of author names and the publication dates in reference list entries match those in the corresponding in-text citations.
Cite only works that you have read and ideas that you have incorporated into your writing. The works you cite may provide key background information, support or dispute your thesis, or offer critical definitions and data.
Readers may find a long string of citations difficult to understand, especially if they are using assistive technology such as a screen reader; therefore, include only those citations needed to support your immediate point.
Cite primary sources when possible, and cite secondary sources sparingly.
Cite sources to document all facts and figures that you mention that are not common knowledge.
To cite a specific part of a source, provide an author–date citation for the work plus information about the specific part.
Even when sources cannot be retrieved (e.g., because they are personal communications), still credit them in the text (however, avoid using online sources that are no longer recoverable).
LAYOUT FORMAT
General: Use Times New Roman font of size 12 points. The paragraphs must be justified and separated from one another with a single space.
Page layout: Format your article so that it can be printed on A4-size paper with a provision of left, right, and top margins of 2.5 cm. The bottom margin must be 4 cm.
Major heading: All major headings (HIGHLIGHTS, ABSTRACT, KEYWORDS, INTRODUCTION, METHODOLOGY, RESULTS, DISCUSSION, CONCLUSION, AND REFERENCES) should be in upper case or capital letters (14 points bold), centre aligned.
Sub-headings: Use a font size of 12 points, bold. To be typed on a separate line and ‘left aligned’, first letter of the first word to be in upper case (capital letter) and all other letters in lower case (small letter), e.g. Socio-economic and psychological characteristics.
Sub-sub headings: Use a font size of 10 points bold, in italics, and ‘left aligned’. To be typed in a separate line with use with the left margin. The first letter of the first word is to be in upper case (capital letter), and all other letters in lower case (small letters)
Table formats: Tables have to be placed in the appropriate place in the text. They should be prepared using the Table facility of Microsoft Word. Tables must have a Table caption (up to 14 words) at the top of the Table. The first letter of the first word of the caption should be in upper case (capital letters) and all other letters in lower case (small letters). A research paper should not have more than seven Tables.
Graphic formats: Only computer-generated charts of figures (as a part of Microsoft Word or GIF, or JPEG files) or photographs relevant to the contents of the paper will be accepted.
Acronyms: You have to spell out the acronym for its first occurrence, followed by the acronym within parentheses. Example: Integrated Rural Development Programme (IRDP) or Training and Visit (T & V).
Plagiarism: Authors must obtain permission to reproduce any copyrighted material and include an acknowledgement of the source in their article. They should be aware that the unreferenced use of published and unpublished ideas, writing, or illustrations of others, or submission of a complete paper under new authorship in a different or the same language, is plagiarism.
Other policies: Articles forwarded to the editor for publication are understood to be offered to the Indian Journal of Extension Education exclusively, and the copyrights automatically stand transferred to the Indian Society of Extension Education. It is also understood that the authors have obtained the approval of their department, faculty, or institute in cases where such permission is necessary. The Editorial Board takes no responsibility for facts or opinions expressed in the Journal, which rests entirely with the authors thereof. Proof correction should be in Track Change mode. All queries marked in the article should be answered. Proofs are supplied for a check-up of the correctness of typesetting and facts. The proofs should be returned within 3 days. The alternation in the author's name is not permitted at any later stage after the article is submitted to the Indian Journal of Extension Education. The submitter of the manuscript will be treated as the corresponding author for all purposes.
Certificates: The Article Certificate, Author Contribution Form, Disclosure of Competing Interest, and Declaration of Conflict of Interest, duly signed by all the authors, should be sent in the original to the Chief Editor, IJEE, on acceptance of the manuscript, whereas the Research Ethics statement should be submitted with the manuscript only at the time of initial submission. In the absence of these certificates, the manuscript processing will immediately be stopped. Format available at https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/ijee/about and can be directly downloaded from https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/IJEE/libraryFiles/downloadPublic/id
Peer Review Process
Initial manuscript evaluation: The Editorial desk first evaluates all manuscripts, and they can be rejected at this stage. Manuscripts rejected at this stage may be suffering from one or more of the following reasons, such as not adhering to the author's guidelines, lack of originality, serious scientific flaws, poor grammar or language, or being outside the aims and scope of the journal. Those who meet the minimum criteria are passed on to the experts in the field for review.
Type of Peer Review: A blind review policy is applied, where the referee remains anonymous throughout the process. Referees are matched to the paper according to their expertise. Zonal Editors of the Indian Journal of Extension Education are also included to review the manuscripts on a need basis. Referees are asked to evaluate whether the manuscript: - Is original - Is methodologically sound - Follows appropriate ethical and author guidelines - Has results presented and support the conclusions - Correctly references previous relevant work- Is Language appropriate, etc. The review form is also asked to be filled out by the reviewer for each manuscript.
How long does the review process take? The time required for the review process varies as per the responses of the referees. Normally, one week is given to the reviewer to respond regarding the acceptance of the assignment. Once the reviewer accepts the assignment, he/she is supposed to complete the task within the next seven days. The referee report is sent to the author(s) with recommendations made by the referees, which usually include verbatim comments by the referees. Revised manuscripts are received by the editor and returned to the initial referees (if recommended at the first stage), who may then recommend revision of the manuscript/ acceptance, or rejection of the manuscript. In case of a minor revision, the revised manuscript is checked by the chief editor/editors for its suitability. Finally, the Editor's decision, as per the recommendations of the referees, will be sent to the author.
Final Report: A final decision to accept or reject the manuscript will be sent to the author along with any recommendations made by the referees, and may include referees' verbatim comments.
Editor's Decision is Final: Referees advise the Chief Editor, who is responsible for the final decision to accept or reject the article.
Becoming a Referee: Any member of the Indian Society of Extension Education or anyone having an interest in the field of Extension Education may be selected as the referee for the manuscripts submitted to the Indian Journal of Extension Education. To become a referee, one needs to register in the role of 'Reviewer' at https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/IJEE/user/profile
The list of referees is updated regularly
Publication Frequency
The Indian Journal of Extension Education is a quarterly publication of the Indian Society of Extension Education, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi-110012. The publisher, ISSN number, frequency, and publication schedule are as follows:
Publisher: Indian Society of Extension Education, New Delhi
Online ISSN: 2454-552X
Print ISSN: 0537- 1996
Number of issues per year: 4
Frequency: Quarterly
Review Process: Blind Peer Review, Refereed Journal
Month(s) of publication: March (April- June issue), June (July- September issue), September (October-December issue), and December (January-March issue)
Open Access Policy
This journal provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge.
Proforma for Ethical Statement
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Step 1. INCLUDE THE STATEMENT OF COMPLIANCE WITH STANDARDS OF RESEARCH INVOLVING THE ANIMALS. |
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(Not Applicable/ Yes/No) |
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If your work does not include animals as subjects, write not applicable and continue to the next step |
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If your work includes animals, it is necessary to include a statement of compliance with the standards of research involving animals. |
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All applicable international, national, and/or institutional guidelines for the care and use of animals were followed. |
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Please note that there are no well-defined standards applicable to all types of research. The main idea is to state that in the research, you observed humane principles, respected the welfare of animals, and excluded situations where animals were in pain. It is easy to find publications in which various special cases are described in detail. It is considered normal when researchers working with animals study the relevant literature and are informed of these principles. If you publish an article and there are reasons to believe that you could have used animals but did not, then you should write: |
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This article does not contain any studies involving animals performed by any of the authors. |
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Step 2: INCLUDE THE STATEMENT OF COMPLIANCE WITH THE STANDARD OF RESEARCH INVOLVING PLANTS AND RESEARCH ON THREATENED/ENDANGERED SPECIES |
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If your work does not include plants and or threatened/endangered species, continue to the next step. |
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If your work includes plants and or threatened / endangered species, it is necessary to include a statement of compliance with standards of research involving plants and or threatened/endangered species. |
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a) |
All applicable international, national, and/or institutional guidelines related to plants in accordance with guidelines provided by the authors’ institution(s) and national or international regulations were followed |
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b) |
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) policies, research involving species at risk of extinction, were followed. |
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STEP 3: INCLUDE THE STATEMENT OF COMPLIANCE WITH STANDARDS OF RESEARCH INVOLVING SOCIAL MEDIA |
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If your work does not include the use of social media platforms, continue to the next step. |
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If your work includes social media platforms, it is necessary to include a statement of compliance with the standards of research involving social media |
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a) |
The ethics statement and framework from the Social Data Science Lab and the ethical guidelines for digital research from the British Sociological Association have been followed |
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b) |
Appropriate anonymization and informed consent from anyone who could potentially be identified have been ensured |
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c) |
Checked the social media platform’s user policy or terms of service in the region where the research was conducted to determine whether permission is required from the platform |
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STEP 4: INCLUDE THE STATEMENT OF COMPLIANCE WITH STANDARDS OF RESEARCH INVOLVING HUMANS AS SUBJECTS. |
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If your work does not include humans as subjects, you may finish the ethical statement or write: |
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This manuscript does not contain any studies involving human participants performed by any of the authors. |
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If your work involves humans, it is necessary to include two additional statements. |
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All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki Declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards. |
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Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants involved in the study. |
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Author’s Signature with name and date
Publisher and Editorial Board Details
Publisher
The Indian Society of Extension Education, Division of Agricultural Extension, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi-110012
Email: presidentisee@gmail.com
DOI Registering agency
ACS Publisher, Plot No. 100/1, Abchal Nagar, Nilothi Extension, New Delhi 110041 and London, 45, Olieve Street, London.
Email: acspublisher@gmail.com, support@acspublisher.com
Editorial Board details
a) Chief Editor
1. Dr. Manjeet Singh Nain, Professor & Principal Scientist, Division of Agricultural Extension, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi-110012.
https://scholar.google.co.in/citations?user=I3OiYjUAAAAJ&hl=hi
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Ms-Nain
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7526-1091
email: msnain_extn@iari.res.in, chiefeditorisee@gmail.com, chiefeditor.iari@icar.gov.in,
b) Zonal Editors
1. Dr. Prashant Shrivastava, Assistant Professor, JNKVV Jabalpur, M P prasantdgg@gmail.com, +919644365656
2. Dr. Umesh Ramkrishna Chinchmaltpure, Associate Professor, Dr PDKV Akola, Maharashtra, rcumesh@rediffmail.com; urChinchmaltpure@pdkv.ac.in +919405168078
3. Dr. Souvik Ghosh, Professor (Agricultural Extension), Institute of Agriculture, Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan, West Bengal 731236, souvik.ghosh@visva-bharati.ac.in ; ghosh_wtcer@yahoo.com Mob. +91 9547504582, 9437205444.
4. Dr. Vikram Singh, Senior Scientist, Intellectual Property and Technology Management Unit, ICAR Hqrs., KAB-I, PUSA, New Delhi-110012, India Email: kmnmvs@gmail.com, Mob: +91 9013691295
5. Dr. C. Karthikeyan, Professor& Head, Extension & Rural Sociologyu, TNAU, Coimbatore, TN email: karthikeyan@gmail.com, +919486324669
(May be downloaded from https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/IJEE/libraryFiles/downloadPublic/id )
INDIAN JOURNAL OF EXTENSION EDUCATION (http://www.iseeiari.org)
(ISSN0537-1996 eISSN 2454-552X )
(To be submitted in original to the Chief Editor, Indian Journal of Extension Education) Article ID: ------------ (Electronic Submission) Dated ……………. Article entitled: ……………………………………………………………………………………… Modified title, if any:-------------------------------------------------------------------------- Author(s) name : …………, …………….
It is certified that:
- The article has been seen by all the authors (signatures given below), who are satisfied with its form and content.
- The sequence of names of authors in the byline is as per their relative contribution to this experiment, giving due credit to all who made notable contributions to it.
- The address of the organization where the research was conducted is given in the byline (changes of the author’s address are given in the footnote).
- The experiment was carried out during (year) ………….. and the article is submitted soon after completion of the experiment/ lapse of ………. months (Mention time in months) at ……………… (mention Institute/University)
- The article is exclusive to this journal, and the results reported here have not been sent (and will not be sent during its consideration by this journal) for publication in any other journal.
- The article has not been rejected for publication in any other journal/rejected in _______________, whose comments are attached (such a rejection does not disqualify the article for consideration in this journal).
- It is based/not based on a part/complete M.Sc/M.Phil/ Ph. D. thesis of the first author, who submitted the thesis (university, place).
- Correct data and facts are presented in the article.
- I/we agree to abide by the objective comments of referees and agree to modify the article into a short note as per the recommendation, for publication in the Indian Journal of Extension Education.
- If published in the Indian Journal of Extension Education, the copyright of this article would vest with the Indian Society of Extension Education, Division of Agricultural Extension, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi-110012 who will have the right to enter into any agreement with any organization in India or abroad engaged in reprography, photocopying, storage and dissemination of information contained in it, and neither we nor our legal heirs will have any royalty claims. I/ we are well aware of the recent developments and issues related to the Indian Journal of Extension Education.
- The lead/ corresponding author is a member of the Indian Society of Extension Education, ICAR-IARI, New Delhi (S-2504)
Signature of the authors with the date (in the same sequence as appears in the article), their names, designations, emails, and present correspondence address:
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Signature with date |
Name in full and designation |
Present official address |
Subscription/ Membership number |
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Optional
The above certificate is correct to the best of my knowledge, and I have no objection to the publication of the article cited above in the Indian Journal of Extension Education.
Signature and address of the Head of the department/head of the Institute
Conflicts of Interest Statement
INDIAN JOURNAL OF EXTENSION EDUCATION
(http://www.iseeiari.org)
(ISSN0537-1996 eISSN 2454-552X )
Manuscript title & Submission Id : ………………………. To be typed or written clearly
The authors whose names are listed immediately below certify that they have NO affiliations with or involvement in any organization or entity with any financial interest (such as honoraria; educational grants; participation in speakers’ bureaus; membership, employment, consultancies, stock ownership, or other equity interest; and expert testimony or patent-licensing arrangements), or non-financial interest (such as personal or professional relationships, affiliations, knowledge or beliefs) in the subject matter or materials discussed in this manuscript.
Author names & affiliations:
1
2
3
4
The authors whose names are listed immediately below report the following details of affiliation or involvement in an organization or entity with a financial or non-financial interest in the subject matter or materials discussed in this manuscript. Please specify the nature of the conflict on a separate sheet of paper if the space below is inadequate.
Author names & affiliations:
1
2
3
This statement is signed by all the authors to indicate agreement that the above information is true and correct (a photocopy of this form may be used if there are more authors):
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Author's name (typed) |
Author's signature |
Date
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Disclosure of Interest
INDIAN JOURNAL OF EXTENSION EDUCATION
(ISSN 0537-1996, eISSN 2454-552X)
(http://www.iseeiari.org)
DISCLOSURE OF INTEREST FORM
Date:
Your Name:
Manuscript Title:
Manuscript number:
In the interest of transparency, we ask you to disclose all relationships/ activities/ interests listed below that are related to the content of your manuscript. “Related” means any relation with for-profit or not-for-profit third parties whose interests may be affected by the content of the manuscript. Disclosure represents a commitment to transparency and does not necessarily indicate a bias. If you are in doubt about whether to list a relationship/activity/interest, you should do so.
The author’s relationships/activities/interests should be defined broadly. In item #1 below, report all support for the work reported in this manuscript without a time limit. For all other items, the time frame for disclosure is the past 36 months.
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Name all entities with whom you have this relationship or indicate none (add rows as needed) |
Specifications/Comments (e.g., if payments were made to you or your institution) |
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Time frame: Since the initial planning of the work (if not applicable, may write ‘None’ |
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All support for the present manuscript (e.g., funding, provision of study materials, writing, article processing charges, etc.) No time limit for this item |
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Time frame: past 36 months |
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Grants or contracts from any entity (if not indicated in item #1 above). |
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Royalties or licenses |
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Consulting fees |
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Payment or honoraria for lectures, presentations, speakers bureaus, manuscript writing, or educational events |
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Payment for expert testimony |
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Support for attending meetings and/or travel |
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Patents planned, issued, or pending |
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Participation on a Data Safety Monitoring Board or Advisory Board |
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Leadership or fiduciary role in other board, society, committee, or advocacy group, paid or unpaid |
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Stock or stock options |
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Receipt of equipment, materials, drugs, medical writing, gifts, or other services |
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Other financial or non-financial interests |
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Please place an “X” next to the following statement to indicate your agreement.
I certify that I have answered every question and have not altered the wording of any of the questions on this form
Signature with date
Authors’ Contribution Form
INDIAN JOURNAL OF EXTENSION EDUCATION
(ISSN 0537-1996, eISSN2454-552X)
(http://www.iseeiari.org)
(Introducing the authors, their order of appearance, and their contribution)
We, the authors (names and orders of appearance are as the below table), by awareness of the non-changeability of the names, orders of appearance, and information of authors (no authors can be added or removed at all) declare that we all have contributed in producing this article (doing the researches or writing the article) and no names have been added without having an effective role to the article. From the following authors, row No. ……… is introduced as the correspondent author whose name will come as this on the published article. Corresponding author Email: …………………………………………
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Order
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Name with email address (1) |
Affiliation (2) |
Last Degree with the subject (3) |
Contribution (4) |
Percent of contribution (5) |
Signature (6) |
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1The whole name of each person as it should be written in the article (First and middle name may be abbreviated but not the last name/ Surname); 2 Affiliation for each author must be accurate as "Group or Department, School or Research Centre, University or Institute, City, Country, Pin code; 3 Such as Ph.D., M.Sc., etc., and subjects like Agril Extension, Veterinary Extension, or Home Science Extension; 4 Main/ Subsidiary Researcher, Data Analyzer, Writer of the Introduction, Writer of the Discussion, or Methodologist; etc.; 5The contribution must be declared as a percentage (must be 100% as a whole); 6 Each author MUST sign his/her name row.
*The corresponding author must have a significantly higher contribution (in percentage) than any other coauthor(s)
**The contribution of the writer of introduction (10%), Writer of discussion (5%), Data analyzer(10%), methodologist (10%), reviser of the manuscript(10%), Chairperson in case of student research (30%), Co-chairperson in student research(15%), Member from Major/minor subject(5%), CO-PI of the project (30%), Project Associate (20%), Cooperating scientists/ technicians (10%), Research Associate(5%) should not exceed ideally as mentioned in parenthesis.
Proforma for Ethical Statement
|
Step 1. INCLUDE THE STATEMENT OF COMPLIANCE WITH STANDARDS OF RESEARCH INVOLVING THE ANIMALS. |
||
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(Not Applicable/ Yes/ No) |
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If your work does not include animals as subjects, write not applicable and continue to the next step |
|
|
|
If your work includes animals, it is necessary to include a statement of compliance with the standards of research involving animals. |
|
|
|
All applicable international, national, and/or institutional guidelines for the care and use of animals were followed. |
|
|
|
Please note that there are no well-defined standards applicable to all types of research. The main idea is to state that in the research, you observed humane principles, respected the welfare of animals, and excluded situations where animals were in pain. It is easy to find publications in which various special cases are described in detail. It is considered normal when researchers working with animals study the relevant literature and are informed of these principles. If you publish an article and there are reasons to believe that you could have used animals but did not, then you should write: |
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This article does not contain any studies involving animals performed by any of the authors. |
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Step 2: INCLUDE THE STATEMENT OF COMPLIANCE WITH THE STANDARD OF RESEARCH INVOLVING PLANTS AND RESEARCH ON THREATENED/ENDANGERED SPECIES |
||
|
If your work does not include plants and or threatened/endangered species, continue to the next step. |
|
|
|
If your work includes plants and or threatened / endangered species, it is necessary to include a statement of compliance with standards of research involving plants and or threatened/endangered species. |
|
|
|
a) |
All applicable international, national, and/or institutional guidelines related to plants in accordance with guidelines provided by the authors’ institution(s) and national or international regulations were followed |
|
|
b) |
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) policies, research involving species at risk of extinction, were followed. |
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STEP 3: INCLUDE THE STATEMENT OF COMPLIANCE WITH STANDARDS OF RESEARCH INVOLVING SOCIAL MEDIA |
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If your work does not include the use of social media platforms, continue to the next step. |
|
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If your work includes social media platforms, it is necessary to include a statement of compliance with the standards of research involving social media |
|
|
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a) |
The ethics statement and framework from the Social Data Science Lab and the ethical guidelines for digital research from the British Sociological Association have been followed |
|
|
b) |
Appropriate anonymization and informed consent from anyone who could potentially be identified have been ensured |
|
|
c) |
Checked the social media platform’s user policy or terms of service in the region where the research was conducted to determine whether permission is required from the platform |
|
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STEP 4: INCLUDE THE STATEMENT OF COMPLIANCE WITH STANDARDS OF RESEARCH INVOLVING HUMANS AS SUBJECTS. |
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If your work does not include humans as subjects, you may finish the ethical statement or write: |
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|
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This manuscript does not contain any studies involving human participants performed by any of the authors. |
|
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|
If your work involves humans, it is necessary to include two additional statements. |
||
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1 |
All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki Declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards. |
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2 |
Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants involved in the study. |
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Author’s Signature with name and date
Edit Copyright Notice
The manuscripts once accepted and published in the Indian Journal of Extension Education will automatically become the property of the Indian Society of Extension Education, New Delhi.