Author Guidelines

Please prepare your manuscript before sending it, using the following guide and clicking this link to download the manuscript template

Title

Title Written in Cambria 14 Font, (Max 14 Words: Indonesian)

Author1, Author2
1Departments, faculty, institution
2Departments, faculties, institutions
1Author name@institution.org, 2Author name@institution.org

The title must be clear and concise. Only the first letter of the title is capitalized and bold. Author's name and affiliation as written above. The author's name is written clearly without a title. Numbering of headings with the Arabic system with sub-headings up to 3 levels maximum.

Abstract [Use Cambria 10 Font]

Abstract [use Cambria 10 font]
Abstracts are written in two languages, namely English and Indonesian, a maximum of 200 words in English and 250 words in Indonesian. Abstract written in Cambria 10, 1 space, 1 paragraph, italicized for abstract [english] and straight print (Indonesian) and with one column format

Keywords

keywords are written in 3-5 words which should be a subset of the paper title, written in lower case except for abbreviations, and separated by commas between words.

example : Keywords: Information Systems, Computing Technology, Data Mining, [maximum 5 keywords]

 

Manuscript Structure

Articles should contain writing that contains 1. Introduction, 2. Materials and Methods (can include analysis, architecture, methods used to solve problems, implementation), 3. Results and Discussion, 4. Conclusions, References. Subtitles use Cambrian font 10 in bold.

Introduction

The contents of the introduction are the answers to the questions:

Background
Reasons for conducting this research
Research purpose questions
Research Methodology

Describe the preparation method and characterization techniques used. Describe briefly, but remain accurate such as size, volume, replication, and machining techniques. For new methods, it should be explained in detail so that other researchers can reproduce the experiment. Meanwhile, established methods can be explained by picking references.

 

Script Length

Manuscripts are written on A4 paper size with a minimum number of pages of 8 pages, and a maximum of 10 pages, including tables and figures, and with reference to the writing procedures as compiled in this paper.

Table

Tables should be numbered in the order of presentation (Table 1, etc.). The table title is written above the table with a center-justified position. The font size used is 8pt for both table titles and table contents. Tables must be referred to and referred to in the text. The table does not use vertical lines

Picture
Figures are numbered in the order of presentation (Fig. 1, etc.). The image title is placed below the image in the center position (center justified). The font used in the image title is 8pt. Images must be referenced and referenced in the text.

Page Specifications

Use the Cambria typeface throughout the manuscript, with the font size as exemplified in this writing guide. The spacing is single and the contents of the text or manuscript use left-right alignment (justified).

Page size is A4 (210 mm x 297 mm). Page margins are 25 mm top-down, left and right.

An easy way to write a manuscript is to write directly in the Journal template.

Reference

Writing references/libraries using the APA editor system 6. Required to use Mendeley tools. Everything listed in the bibliography/references must be referred to in writing or on paper. Minimum 10 primary and recent references.

 

REFERENCES WRITING INSTRUCTIONS

References from books
Writing rules: Author, Initials/First name., (Year). Title of book. Editions. Place of publication: Publisher.

Example:
Redman, P., 2006. Good essay writing: a social sciences guide. 3rd ed. London: Open University in assoc. with Sage.

References from journals
Writing rules: Author, Initials., (Year). Title of article. Full Title of Journal, Volume number (Issue/Part number), Page number.

Example:
Boughton, J.M., (2002). The Bretton Woods proposal: an in-depth look. Political Science Quarterly, 42 (6), pp.564-78.

References derived from seminar reports
Writing rules: Authorship author, editor or organization, (Year). Full title of conference report. Location, Date, Publisher: Place of publication.

Example:
UNDESA (United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs), (2005). 6th Global forum on reinventing government: towards participatory and transparent governance. Seoul, Republic of Korea 24-27 May 2005. United Nations: New York.

References derived from seminar papers/proceedings
Writing rules: Authorship, Year. The full title of the conference paper. In: followed by Editor or name of the organization, Full title of the conference. Location, Date, Publisher: Place of publication.

Example:
Brown, J., (2005). Evaluating surveys of transparent governance. In: UNDESA (United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs), 6th Global forum on reinventing government: towards participatory and transparent governance. Seoul, Republic of Korea 24-27 May 2005. United Nations: New York.

References from dissertations
Writing rules: Author, (Year of publication). Title of dissertation. Levels. Place of University (If not clear from the name of the University): Name of University.

Example:

Richmond, J., (2005). Customer expectations in the world of electronic banking: a case study of the Bank of Britain. Ph. D. Chelmsford: Anglia Ruskin University.

References that come from websites
Writing rules: Authorship or Source, (Year). Title of web document or web page. [Medium] (date of update)

Example:
Webpage with an author
Welch, N. (2000, February 21). Toward an understanding of the determinants of rural health. Retrieved from http://www.ruralhealth.org.au/welch.htm

Webpage with no author
ANCI national competency standards for the registered nurse and the enrolled nurse. (2000). Retrieved from http://www.anci.org.au/competencystandards.htm