Author Guidelines Peer Review Reviewers Aim and Scope Open Access Policy and Statement Indexing and Abstracting Publication Ethics and Malpractice Statement Copyright Notice Author(s) Fee Plagiarism Policy Archiving
Author Guidelines
The article presents its authenticity and importance in the field of multidisciplinary issues. The article structure is structured according to IMRAD (Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion), Conclusion and Reference. Maximum 20 pages.
Article Section
- TITLE
- Author Data: Author's full name, Affiliations, and Authors' email
- Abstract
- Keywords
- INTRODUCTION
- METHODS
- RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
- CONCLUSION
- REFERENCES
Detailed Description Articles
Title. The title is no more than 14 words, size 10pt.
Author data. Full name (not abbreviated and without academic titles) and author's address (complete with zip code). example: Iman Aulia Rahman, Halal Center, UIN Sunan Gunung Djati Bandung,. Each author must include an email address.
Abstract. Abstract is written in English, in a single paragraph of about 250 words maximum, and do not contain a bibliography, abbreviations, or abbreviations for measurement unless necessary. For research articles, abstracts should give a pertinent overview of the work. We strongly encourage authors to use the following style of structured abstracts, but without headings: (1) Background: Place the question addressed in a broad context and highlight the purpose of the study; (2) Methods: Describe briefly the main methods or treatments applied; (3) Results: Summarize the article's main findings; and (4) Conclusions: Indicate the main conclusions or interpretations. The abstract should be an objective representation of the article, it must not contain results that are not presented and substantiated in the main text and should not exaggerate the main conclusions.
Keywords. 3-5 keywords. Please, write your keywords alphabetically, Use simple keywords that can detect by search engines. Recommended using keywords which contain in the title.
INTRODUCTION. Introduction heading should be left justified, bold, with the first letter capitalized with the number. Convey the problem's context, the significance of the research, and the problem statement, backed up by facts/data, information, and phenomena. Remember to include previous research relevant to your research (recommended at least 5 previous studies). Based on the previous research presented in the previous paragraph, review your research position/research gap. Restate the purpose of your research and its contribution and significance.
METHODS. Methods heading should be left justified, bold, with the letter capitalized with the number (except ‘and’ word). Explain your method/ technique/ algorithm and how research is conducted. Fill this section with the Locus, Data Collection & Analysis. Respondent? Interviewee? Tools? What steps were taken to respond to the problem formulation? if available, please input Using human material must follow standard ethics and get approval from the authorities.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION. Results and Discussion heading should be left justified, bold, with the letter capitalized with the number (except ‘and’ word). Summarize your findings in text and illustrate them, if appropriate, with figures and tables. In the text, describe each of your results, pointing the reader to observations that are most relevant. Analyze your data, then prepare the analyzed (converted) data in the form of a figure (graph), table, or in text form.
CONCLUSION. Conclusion heading should be left justified, bold, with the first letter capitalized with the number. Conclusion is not a summary. Do not repeat the abstract! Explain the main finding of your research, contribution, and implication. Explain the lack of your research so that you also mention the recommendation for further work. Do not write in point but in paragraphs, around 300 – 500 words (What was learned? What remains to be learned? (Directions for future research?). The limitations of what was done (evaluation). The benefits, advantages, applications, etc. of the research (evaluation). Recommendations and contribution.)
REFERENCES. References heading should be left justified, bold, with the first letter capitalized without a number. American Psychological Association (APA) 6th Edition reference style is required in this journal. References should be written using standard citation applications. In writing Citations and References, the Enrichment: Journal uses the Mendeley Reference Management Software. At least 70% of references should be cited from up-to-date journals (international reputation journals) published in the last 8-10 years, but the rest of 30% of references can be cited from research reports, and or articles. The minimum number of reference lists is 40 references.
FIGURES. Place figure captions below the figures, center position if just single sentences, and left justified if more than one sentence or two lines. If your figure has two parts, include the labels “(a)” and “(b)” etc. Please verify that the figures you mention in the text actually exist. Do not put borders around the outside of your figures. Use the phrase “Figure. ...” even at the beginning of a sentence. Please use high-resolution pictures only. In the case of photos etc. a resolution of 300 dpi should be provided. Please make sure that all text in the Figures is readable - font size 10pt.
TABLES. All inserted tables should be numbered with Arabic numerals. Each table should have a specific caption. Place table captions above the tables, center position if just single sentences, and left justified if more than one sentence or two lines. Only horizontal lines should be used within a table, to distinguish the column headings from the body of the table, and immediately above and below the table. Tables must be embedded into the text and not supplied separately. Please make sure that all text in the tables is readable - font size 8pt.
EQUATIONS. Use either the Microsoft Equation Editor or the MathType add-on (http://www.mathtype.com) for equations in your paper. Formulae should be numbered consecutively throughout the manuscript as Equation 1 and Equation 2. Formulae should be numbered. Below is an example that the authors may find useful.
ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS. Define abbreviations and acronyms the first time they are used in the text, even after they have already been defined in the abstract. Abbreviations such as SI (International System of Units) do not have to be defined. Do not use abbreviations in the title unless they are unavoidable. Theorem-type environments (including propositions, lemmas, corollaries, etc.) can be formatted as follows: Example text of a Quote. Quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote. Proofs must be formatted as follows: quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote quote.