Publications Standards

Submission of originals and refereeing system:


P.E.M. Revista de Evaluación, Innovación y Didáctica receives unpublished articles that are not subject to refereeing or evaluation in other journals or publication media. Collaborations must comply with the standards established by P.E.M. Revista de Didáctica, Evaluación e Innovación, indicated in the Instructions to Authors section. Articles that comply with the instructions will be sent to evaluation through the system of academic peers with expertise in the proposed topic. The Evaluation process will be carried out under the double-blind system, that is, in the anonymity of both the evaluator and the author. If necessary, a third evaluation will be requested. Articles may be accepted, accepted or rejected. Modifications may be requested for accepted articles, for which the author will have a new deadline for submitting corrections.

Original articles and reviews are received throughout the year in Spanish.

The editorial committee reserves the right to order the appearance of accepted articles.

 

Copyright


The authors assign their publication rights to P.E.M. Journal of Didactics, Evaluation and Innovation, whose published works will be their property, and may be reproduced in whole or in part with the exclusive authorization of the Editorial Committee. Authorization for the reproduction of materials that include copyright will be the exclusive responsibility of the applicant.

 

Publication Standards


The following standards constitute the basic standard for pre-approval of articles to be peer reviewed under the double-blind system. All requested texts must be prepared with APA citation format, seventh edition, considering the specifications of our journal, and must also consider the following formal aspects:

  • Word document in letter format.
  • Length of 10 to 20 pages with bibliography included.
  • Times New Roman font 12
  • Line spacing 1.5
  • Justified text.
  • Title with Bold and Centered.
  • Author's name aligned to the right.
  • Institutional affiliation under the name aligned to the right.
  • Abstract no longer than 300 words.
  • Keywords from 3 to 5.
  • It must also contain the abstract and keywords in English (Abstract & Key Word)
  • Articles not in Spanish must also contain a summary and keywords in Spanish.
  • The sections in each text must have a subtitle aligned to the left in Bold.
  • Submit a biographical summary of the author on a separate sheet.

 

Citation Mode for the different documents

 


Any citation of a text under APA Seventh Edition (book, article, document, etc.) that is made in the work must be clearly indicated, precisely establishing its origin. The citations that are incorporated into a work can be of three types:

   a. direct (when a phrase or paragraph from a book or article is reproduced verbatim)

   b. indirect (when a phrase or paragraph is reproduced that was not consulted directly but is taken from a citation made by another author, which must be indicated)

   c. glossed (when it is not reproduced verbatim but rather a text by another author is summarized or glossed)

When the cited text does not exceed 3 lines, it can be integrated into the exposition, distinguishing it between quotation marks. If the text to be cited takes up five lines or more, it is advisable to put it in a separate paragraph and indented on the left (it is also often used by reducing the font size by 1 point in the citation in an indented paragraph, and reducing the line spacing to 1.0). The citation in the text is indicated between quotation marks; if it is in an indented paragraph, it should not have quotation marks.

Sometimes it is necessary in citations to delete or add some explanatory word or phrase. In the first case, this is indicated with ellipses placed between normal parentheses: (...); in the second case, the intercalation is placed between square brackets or brackets: [in the 17th century]. If there is a word or phrase in the cited text that may raise doubts, the formula [sic] is added immediately after, to indicate that "this is how" it appears in the cited original.

To indicate the source of a quote, the author's surname, the year of publication of the cited text, and the page(s) on which the quote is found are noted in parentheses. (Ex.: Kuhn, 1971: 139). This abbreviated reference refers to the bibliography placed at the end of the work.

Footnotes should be reserved to refer to works that are used occasionally and are not part of the specific bibliography of the work or to expand and/or complement some information or to include a side comment that is not part of the body of the text. In these cases (bibliographic reference in notes), the name and surname(s) of the author are placed in the normal form; The Last Name + First Name formula is only used in Bibliographies, to facilitate their ordering.

 

Literature


The bibliography consulted to prepare the work must be recorded at the end of the work under APA Seventh Edition standard. It is recommended to make it only with books and articles that have actually been used for the work and that are related to the topic it deals with.

In some works it is convenient to separate in the Bibliography the works that are used as source and direct material of the work (works or documents that are studied) from those that are reference texts and support material. It is usually distinguished as primary and secondary bibliography.

The basic ordering criterion for a Bibliography is alphabetical order according to the author's last name. In a Bibliography, the books that are registered must contain information on the surname and first name of the author(s), year of publication (in parentheses), full title of the work (in italics), the place (city) in which it was published. edits, the publisher or institution that publishes it. Ex.: Rovira, José Carlos (1999). Various persecutions in the 18th century in New Spain. Rome: Bulzoni Editore.

In the case of articles from a magazine, the last name and name of the author(s), title of the article (in quotes), name of the magazine (in italics), place of publication (in parentheses), number of the magazine, must be noted. date of publication (in parentheses) and pages on which the article is found. Ex.: Roig, Arturo Andrés: "Moments and currents of humanist thought during the time of the Spanish-American colony: Renaissance, Baroque and Enlightenment." Magazine of Philosophy (University of Chile), XXI-XXII (December 1983): pp. 55-83.

If a text taken from the Internet is used, it must be recorded in the Bibliography, indicating in parentheses the phrase (Online) and then the Web site and the corresponding specifications, as they appear in the upper search table on the computer screen. This reference must allow anyone, with that data, to repeat the query. In the case of Web sites, it is convenient to add, between square brackets [ ], the date on which the query was made. Eg Rojas, Daniel (2011). Batman, a metic in Chile or the histrionic deformation of an idol and its rhetoric. (Online) http://letras.s5.com/drp051111.html [Visited in May 2013]