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TĚLESNÁ ZDATNOST, ŽIVOTNÍ STYL ČESKÉ, FINSKÉ A NĚMECKÉ MLÁDEŽE
PHYSICAL FITNESS AND ACTIVE LIFESTYLE OF CZECH, FINNISH AND GERMAN YOUTH
R. Naul1, R. Telama2 & A. Rychtecký3
1University of Essen, Sportpädagogik
2University of Jyväskylä, Faculty of Sport and Health science
3Univerzita Karlova Praha, fakulta tělesné výchovy a sportu,
katedra psychologie, pedagogiky a didaktiky
ABSTRACT: The current study is ... 100 až 200 slov
Keywords: max. 5
SOUHRN: Studie je součástí ... 100 až 200 slov
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Instructions for the authors of the articles
Studia Kinanthropologica
Scientific Journal for Kinanthropology is mainly a place for publishing reports of empirical studies, review articles,
or theoretical articles. Articles are published in Czech, Slovak, and/or English language. The author (senior author) is
responsible for special and formal part of the article. All texts are subject to review process and assessed by at least
two expert referees. The review procedure is authorless. Board of editors decide about article´s publishing having regard
to scientific importance and review process.
Most journal articles published in kinanthropology are reports of empirical studies, and therefore the next
section emphasizes their preparation.
Parts of a Manuscript
- Title Page consists of
- Title. A title should summarize the main idea of the paper simply and, if possible, with style. It should be a
concise statement of the main topic and should identify the actual variables or theoretical issues under investigation
and the relation between them. The recommendated length for a title is 8 to 10 words. A title should be fully explanatory
when standing alone.
- Author's name and affiliation
-
- Abstract (p. 2). An abstract is brief, comprehensive summary of the contents of the article.
A good abstract is accurate, self-contained, concise and specific, nonevaluative, coherent and readable. An abstract
of a report of an empirical study should describe in 150 to 200 words
- the problem under investigation, in one sentence if possible;
- the subjects, specifying pertinent characteristics, such as number, type, age, sex, and species;
- the experimental method, including the apparatus, data-gathering, and complete test names, etc.
- the findings, including statistical significant levels, and
- the conclusions, and the implications or applications.
- Key words (p.2), not more than 5.
Introduction (p.3). The body, the paper body of a paper opens with an introduction that presents the specific
problem under study and describes the research strategy. Definition of variables and formal statement of your hypotheses
give clarity. Because the introduction is clearly identified by its position in article, it is not labeled.
- Method. The Method section describes in detail how the study was conducted. Such a description enables
the reader to evaluate the appropriateness of your method and the reliability and the validity of your results. It also
permits experienced investigators to replicate the study if they so desire. Method section is devided into labeled
subsections. These usually include description of subject, the apparatus (measures or materials), and the procedure.
If the design of the experiment is complex or the stimuli require detailed description, additional subsections or
subheadings to devide the subsections may be waranted to help readers find specific information, include in this
subsections only the information essential to comprehend and replicate the study. Given insufficient detail, the reader
is left with questions, given to much detail, the reader is burneded with irrelevant information. Method section is
usually devided into: Subject; Measures (Apparatus or Materials) and Procedure.
- Results. This section summarizes the data collected and the statistical treatment of them. First,
briefly state the main results or findings. Then report the data in sufficient detail to justify the conclusions.
Mention all relevant results, including those that run counter the hypothesis. Do not include individual scores or
raw data, with the exception, e.g. of single-subject designs or illustrative samples.
Tables and figures. To report data, choose the medium that presents them clearly and economically. Tables
provide exact values and can efficiently illustrate main effects. Figures of professional quality attract the reader's eye
and best illustrate interactions and general comparisons. Although summarizing the results and the analysis in tables
or figures may be helpful, avoid repeating the same data in several places and using tables for data that can be easily
presented in the text. Refer to all tables as tables, and to all graphs, pictures, or drawings as figures. Tables and
figures supplemented the text; they cannot do the entire job of communication. Always tell the reader what to look for
in tables and figures and provide sufficient explanation to make them readily intelligible.
- Discussion. After presenting the results, you are in a position to evaluate and interpret their
implications, especially with respect to examine, interpret, and qualify the results, as well as to draw inferences
from them. Emphasize any theoretical consequences of the results and the validity of your conclusions. When the
discussion is relatively brief and straightforward, some authors prefere to combine it with the previous Result section,
yielding Results and Conclusion or Results and Discussion).
Conclusion part contrary to Abstract is not obligatory. This part could also be in section Results and Conclusions.
- References. Just as data in the paper support interpretations and conclusions, so reference citation
document statements made about the literature. All citations in the ms. must appear in the reference list, and all
references must be cited in text. Choose refferences judiciously and cite them accuratly. The standard procedur
for citations ensure that refferences are accurate, complete, and useful to investigators and readers. In references
section follow the APA-Publication Manual (6th edition, 2010).
- Appendix is although seldom used, is helpful if the detailed description of certain material is distracting
in, or inappropriate to the body of this paper. Some examples of material suitable for an appendix are (a) new computer
program specifically designed for your research and unvalaible elsewhere, (b) an unpublished test and its validation,
(c) a completed mathematical proof, (d) list of stimulus material (e.g. those used in psycholinguistic research), or
(e) detailed description of a complexe piece of equipment. Include an appendix only if it helps readers to understand,
evaluate, or replicate the study.
Author's address (contact address) – the author presents his/her address and address of his/her co-workers as the
last information in the article. He/she presents family name, first name, degrees, complete address, City Code,
telephon number and mainly e-mail.
Technical form of (hand) writing
Articles are basically accepted in the form of text editor, Microsoft Word or by editoring, keeping following
setting and arrangements:
- form A4
- all outsides 2.5 cm
- size of letters 11, for the name of work a 10 for the other text,
- single lines,
- letters Times New Roman CE,
- distance from the first line of the column – 0.5 cm
- gaps behind the headlines – 6 points
- all headlines extra bald and situated in the centre, Tables can be presented direct in the manuscript or mostly
are presented as supplement enclosures of the article.
Dimensions of the tables (including title) can´t be over width and height of the page limited by above mentioned
page's appearence. The name of the Table and all languages, in English and in Czech, it is possible to use English
text in the Table and the list of Czech translations is presented under the table (or contrary).
Figures (graphs, pictures, drawings, etc.) are regularly sheets in the quality replying to the requirements of
the sample for print. The Figure´s dimension including all descriptions can´t be bigger than above mentioned page's dimension.
The name of figure and all descriptions used in figure are also in 2 languages – in English and Czech.
To the authors, whose articles are connected with the project of some Grant Agency, is recommended to emphasize
this fact (i.e. name of the project and its number).
The autors mail the manuscripts in 1 copy together with disc to the address of journal editor office (or to the
hands of journal's presented editor):
e-mail: malatova@pf.jcu.cz
www.pf.jcu.cz
Starting in 2011, a handling fee will be charged as a contribution to the magazine Studia Kinanthropologica - 500 CZK or 20 €
Account number: 104725778/0300
Specific symbol: 430 - 1214
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