Title of Your Paper

Name of authors 11, Name of author 22, Name of author 33

1Organisation name, Department
2Organisation name, Department

3Organisation name, Department

Abstract

You are kindly asked to start with an abstract of 250 to 500 words. Please state the problem(s) / knowledge gap(s) you address, your paper’s goals, your methods / approach, as well as your main findings.

Keywords

Include 5-6 keywords. The first keywords should be taken from the title. Please separate keyword by comma.

1Introduction

These are the instructions for the full paper submission. The full paper should be written in British English using this template in preparation for publishing. You are kindly asked to use the predefined headings (Heading 1, 2, 3, 4, 5) and the current format (line spacing and columns). The length of full paper should be around 7-15 pages.

2Structure of the full paper

Each paper should start with a short introduction stating the problem / knowledge gap / problem addressed in the paper, the main goal of the paper as well as a short paragraph about the structure of the paper. Following this introduction, the main part of the paper should follow, e.g. literature review and empirical results or a detailed description of the approach in practitioner papers. Please structure the main part of your paper as it best suits your project. Both academic and practitioner papers should contain a section with the main results / findings followed by a discussion of these findings / results. Papers should end with a conclusion which might include a summary of the paper as well as its limitations, recommendations and suggestions for further research and action. The conclusion should be in harmony with the introduction. The full paper must be an understandable entity by someone that has not attended the session at the conference.

Full papers must be submitted in MS Word Format (.doc or .docx), NOT in pdf–format. If the author does not follow the given instructions, the editorial board may modify the text or even decide not to publish it.

Notes should be avoided, but if used, should be placed as endnotes before the references. Acknowledgements of people, grants, funds, etc. should be placed in a separate section before the references.

All figures and tables should be pasted into the paper, left aligned and named (Figure 1, Figure 2, Table 1, Table 2). There should be 6pt spacing between a graphic/table and the caption. There has to be one blank line above the figure as well as one line between the caption and the text under the figure.

Fig. 1: Capture

References in the text have to be stated as (Simal, 1999) or as described in Closiar (2000). More than one reference has to be put as follows (Simal, 1992; Sanchez, 1995). Page numbers are only required for ‘direct citations’ (Simal, 1999: 120).

Further style elements include:

Bullet point lists:

›Bullet point lists

›Bullet point lists

›Bullet point lists

Numbered lists:

(1)Numbered lists

(2)Numbered lists

(3)Numbered lists

Quotes

Quotes: Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Curabitur blandit, ipsum et varius aliquam, eros lacus aliquet urna, ut semper tellus est ut sem. Donec faucibus mauris a gravida ultricies. Integer neque elit, malesuada nec viverra sit amet, iaculis nec purus.

3Conclusions and recommendations

If you have further questions on how to write your paper, please do not hesitate to contact us at

References

References should be listed in alphabetical order at the end of the article using the format (TOC 3) . Please format the referenes as follows:

Book:

Dagorne, F. G. (2003) French Cultural Developments: A Feminist Perspective. London: Macimillan

Book/Report Produced by an Organisation:

Medical Inc. (2003) French Cultural Developments: A Feminist Perspective. London: Macimillan

Book Chapter

Aggarwal, B. (2005) 'The Declining British Bird Population.' In: A Guide to Contempory Ornithology. ed. by Adams, G. London: Palgrave: 66-99

Book With Multiple Authors

Dagorne, F. G., Ambrose, A. and Baker, M. (2003) French Cultural Developments: A Feminist Perspective. London: Macimillan

Journal Article

Potter, F., Pavliotis, M. and Ball, R. (2005) 'White Noise and Particle Behavious.' Journal of Mathematics and Physics, 2 (1), 67-81

Paper in Conference Proceedings

Shah, A. (1990) 'Neuro-rehabilitation Services in the Midlands.' In: Wood, P. (ed.) Proceedings of the Coventry Conference of Local Psychology Provision, 'Practical Psychology: How to Improve.' Held March 7-9 1990 at Coventry University. London: Prentice Hall: 8-20

A Website or Online-Source

Centre for Academic Writing (2006) The List of References Illustrated [online] available from [20 July 2006]