In ResearchGate, all citations are identified by automated algorithms, and there is no way to influence this process manually. You just have to wait until the algorithms will find citations. And very often, for various reasons the list of citations is incomplete. See also: https://www.researchgate.net/post/Why_citation_score_for_author_publications_looks_different_on_Scopus_research_gate_google_scholar
Dear Ryan Dangcolis In addition to what is already indicated by Wolfgang R. Dick In your case it is because the citation to your paper is a publication that is not present here on RG:
Wulandari, I, G, A,. Esaputra, I, N, T,. Yudiana, I, K, E. 2024. Effectiveness of Self-Instructional Modules: Enhancing Student Independence with Clear Guides, Interactive Materials, and Continuous Evaluation. International Journal of Research in Counseling and Education , 8 (2): pp. 119-127, DOI: 10.24036/00663za0002
item has complete and accurate metadata (e.g., publication date, journal, abstract) Make sure any full-text PDFs were not created by scanning a hard copy, as we can't extract citations from scanned copies.How DOI turn on citations in Google Scholar?
Click on the Cite link next to your item.
Select your citation style.
Paste the citation into your working document.
Double check and adjust formatting as needed to match your selected citation style.
Once the data is corrected on their website, it usually takes 6-9 months to a year or longer for it to be updated in Google Scholar.