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Author Guideline
Author Guideline
English is the language of the manuscripts. The editorial board will review the manuscript first. The manuscript's main text must be submitted in either Word (.doc) or Rich Text Format (.rtf) format. The manuscript should contain a minimum of 5000 words, typed correctly in one column on A4-size paper in Times New Roman 12 pt. The manuscript contains original work and has a high potential for scientific advancement in English language education.
The manuscript must include the following sections in the following sequence:
a. the title
The English title of the article must accurately describe the manuscript's primary content, be informative, succinct, and not overly wordy (12-15 words maximum), and not contain formulas.
B. The Author's Surname
In capital letters, a full name without an academic degree and degree. Manuscripts submitted by the group must include complete contact information.
C. Authors' surnames
The author's name must be followed by the institution or college's name and an email address.
D. Summary
Written succinctly in English in a single paragraph of 150–200 words, this section contains your background, research objectives, methodology, findings, research conclusions, and contribution to science from your research.
e. key phrases
3-5 words or groups of words written in English alphabetically.
F.Introduction
Background, problem, the significance of the research, a brief literature review directly related to previous research or undeveloped findings, and concludes with a paragraph outlining the research objectives. A balance between the pure and applied aspects of the subject must be maintained. The introduction is divided into paragraphs of approximately 1000 words each.
G. Review of Literature
Contains information about research variables about previous research conducted by researchers. Contains unambiguous and well-documented divisions.
H. technique/Method
Ascertain that the work can be replicated using the provided details. It contains well-presented technical research information. As a result, readers can conduct research using the techniques presented—specification of required materials and equipment. The study's methodology or procedures, as well as data analysis techniques, should be presented.
I. Results and Discussion
The well-prepared tables and figures should be a prominent feature of this section, as they attract the primary reader's attention. Tables and figures should not be repeated in the text; instead, the text should emphasize the significance of the significant research findings. A journal article will typically contain three to seven figures and a table. The same data cannot be presented in table or figure form. The research findings are discussed to address the formulation of the problem, the objectives, and the research hypotheses. It is not very easy to discuss why and how the findings occurred and the extent to which they can be applied to other relevant findings.
J.Conclusion
Conclusions should be drawn based on the research findings, the formulation of problems, and the research objectives. Conclusions are contained in a single paragraph and do not include numerical expressions. Describe your contribution to science through research.
k. Bibliography
The manuscripts were created using industry-standard citation management software (Mendeley/Endnote/Zotero). The American Psychological Association's (APA) style of referencing is required. When citing articles with two authors, the second author should be acknowledged; however, when citing articles with three or more authors, only the first author should be acknowledged, followed by et al., for example: Rahayu & Sudarsono (2015), Subekti et al. (2014). A chronological list of references should be included (Retnoningsih et al., 2005; Indriyanti et al., 2007; Rahayuningsih, 2010). Separate publications by the same author and year will be presented in the following order: 2013a, 2013b. Non-existent data references and personal communications should be omitted from the list and cited only in the text (e.g., Rifai MA 2015, pers.com. (personal communication); Indriyanti DR 2014, data not disclosed). References must be listed alphabetically in the reference list. Around 80% of references for literature reviews must be current in journals published within the last decade, but 20% may be cited from research reports and or articles.
The publication process is shown below: