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Author Guidelines
INSTRUCTIONS TO AUTHORS
1. Title: The title should be concise, specific, keyword-rich, and contextually clear (use Times New Roman font size 16 and bold)
2. Author Information: The name is written in Times New Roman font size 12 and bolded; if it is more marked, it should be 1, 2, 3, etc, then marked by the corresponding author.
3. Affiliation Information: Study program and Affiliates are written without abbreviations and not in bold, followed by the state name, and are marked with numbers 1, 2, 3, etc., if there is more than one affiliate.
4. Email Information: Writing email addresses in the order of the author's name and not in bold
5. Abstract: Abstract in English, written in one paragraph (150-250 words), includes background, objectives, research methods, findings, and conclusions. If relevant, the abstract can also mention research limitations, practical implications, and social implications.
6. Keywords: Keywords should consist of 3 to 5 words that best reflect the concepts of the paper. They should be separated by semicolons.
7. Introduction: The introduction presents the fundamental assumptions as to why the research topic and title need to be addressed. It begins with a general background, followed by presenting data or theories either per sentence or paragraph. Then it moves on to a more specific discussion, providing relevant data or theories in line with it. Following this, the introduction highlights the topic's uniqueness and urgency, explaining why it warrants exploration. This section fills the gap by offering a new method, which can be viewed from various perspectives: theoretical, empirical, field conditions, and methodological (Anggraeni & Abdulatif, 2021). This section usincludes the motivation behind conducting the research or writing on the topic, often framed as the research objective, such as "to understand," "to provide recommendations," "to evaluate," etc. References (relevant literature or previous studies) should be included in this section, particularly in relation to justify the research's urgency, identify research problems, explore alternative solutions, and select the chosen solution. Then, the novelty of your research compared to other studies. The introduction can be written by citing sources within the text, with the author's name, publication year, and page number clearly indicated. For example: "The study found that more than 70% of students were unable to recognise authentic problems (Amaliyah & Rahmat, 2021)." The research problems, objectives, and significance are written in narrative form within paragraphs, without the need for special subheadings. Similarly, operational definitions (if necessary) should also be written narratively.
8. Research methods: This section outlines the type and approach of the research, research location, and provides details on the research subjects (for qualitative research) as well as the population and sample (for experimental and quantitative research). It also includes research procedures (for experimental and quantitative research), research instruments, data collection techniques, data analysis techniques, and data validity techniques, all of which must be clearly described. Formulas used in quantitative research need to be clearly explained.
9. Results and Discussion: Results and Discussion is the core section of the scientific article, where the analysis combines or compares the research data with relevant theories or previous studies. In this section, the author must clearly and thoroughly interpret the data, demonstrating how the findings contribute to understanding or advancing knowledge in the field under investigation. The author should also identify the implications of these findings and discuss any differences or consistencies between their results and those of other published studies. The results and discussion should be well-structured, logically organised, and supportive of the research objectives set earlier (Aripin, 2021). When writing a scientific article, it is crucial to follow established formatting guidelines, including a total length of 5,000–6,000 words, using Times New Roman font size 12 with 1.15 cm line spacing, and A4 paper size with 2.5 cm margins on all sides (Ma’ruf et al., 2024). All foreign words or terms should be written in italic to indicate they are not in the primary language of the article. Furthermore, references in the article should consist of 80% published journal articles, with the remaining 20% sourced from books, and should adhere to specific guidelines regarding publication dates. Citations within the text should follow the appropriate style, such as including the author's last name and the year of publication, and the formatting of tables and figures must adhere to the prescribed layout to ensure consistency and clarity in data presentation.
10. Conclusion: The conclusion is the final part of a scientific paper, with the following guidelines: it should not repeat the main theory; it should summarise the research results or writing, with the condition that it does not rewrite the discussion that has already been presented, but instead recounts the process and results in a different language. The conclusion should also be supported by relevant studies reinforcing the statements. Also, I would like to include the implications at the end of the conclusion.
11. Acknowledgements
This section contains the authors' acknowledgement of the contributions of specific colleagues, institutions, or agencies that assisted their efforts.
12. Author Contributions
Look at this example below:
Author 1: Conceptualisation; Project administration; Validation; Writing - review and editing.
Author 2: Conceptualisation; Data curation; Investigation.
Author 3: Data curation; Investigation.
Author 4: Formal analysis; Methodology; Writing - original draft.
Author 5: Supervision; Validation.
Author 6: Other contribution; Resources; Visualisation; Writing - original draft.
13. Literature:
References should be written in alphabetical order, with the following guidelines: 75% of the sources should be from the last 5 years, and 25% from the last 10 years. References should be written in the American Psychological Association 7th edition style (it is recommended to use citation tools such as Mendeley, Zotero, EndNote, etc.)
Book:
Ali, H. Z. (2008). Hukum Islam: Pengantar Ilmu Hukum Islam di Indonesia. Jakarta: Sinar Grafika.
Journal:
Baidowi, A., & Salehoddin, M. (2020). Strategi Dakwah di Era New Normal. Muttaqien, 2(1), 70–86. https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/3kby9














