The editor welcomes article submissions in accordance with the following guidelines:

  1. Articles have not been published or accepted for publication, or are being considered for publication elsewhere. In addition to the manuscript, a written statement should be attached which clarifies that the article is original and does not contain any elements of plagiarism.
  2. Types of articles suitable for publication include the following: research reports and conceptual ideas.
  3. Articles are written preferably in Indonesian and English using academic language along with standard academic writing structure and composition. Manuscripts are typed in Microsoft Word (*.doc/*.docx/*.rtf formats are acceptable, meanwhile *.pdf format is not acceptable), A4 paper size with default narrow margin, 11 pt of Calibri font, 1 pt of line spacing, and between 3000-7000 words in length including references, pictures, and tables.
  4. Articles should be in the form of an essay which includes:

Abstract
The abstract and keywords must be written in English between 120-150 words in length.

Introduction
The introduction outlines the background of the problem that leads to the focus of the issue presented by the author, and must place the research in the context of academic debate (with previous research), elaborating on theories, concepts, paradigms, perspectives, or trends in the field. Then, the author must present the research question/focus of the problem in the article. Emphasize the gap between similar research and present the state-of-the-art so that the article has novelty.

Method
The author must describe the methods used in detail and logically, along with their stages, in an effort to be involved in scientific debate, or in an effort to answer the questions posed. Primary and secondary data used along with their collection or processing/analysis techniques must be described here (not containing a collection of definitions).

Result and Discussion
In this section, the author discusses the research results further, either as a theoretical and/or methodological debate that is reflective, or field findings explained with clear, concise, scientific, and factual language. If the discussion consists of several sub-themes or parts, the author is advised to divide the discussion according to these sub-themes or parts by providing subheadings (each discussing one issue to be answered) in italics and bold without numbering. Results and discussion can be presented with a title that corresponds to the problem topic. The presentation of research results is accompanied by tables, graphs, photos, tables, or other forms. Subtitles that describe the results of the research are written by following some principles as follows.
1. Written in chronological and systematic that described from beginning to end.
2. The facts arranged systematically on the basis of causal (causal), the facts of events (processes), and facts as a result. A process usually has multi causality or conditions that create a situation for the occurrence of events.

Conclusion
Provide a statement or a concluding note, or implication, or a final comment/suggestion based on the overall substance of the article or a summary of the answer to the problem/research focus to conclude all the arguments presented in the discussion previously (conclusion not a summary).

Notes
The record contains an explanation of the source that cannot be included in the sidenote. In addition, this section also contains additional annotations from the content section.

Reference
List only the references used in the article in accordance with the APA 6th Edition style or APA 7th Edition style with a minimum of 18 references (80% from journal articles, 20% from books or others). The references listed are the references cited in the body note (not recommended to use footnotes or endnotes). It is mandatory to use a Reference Manager application such as Mendeley, Zotero, or EndNote. Citations should be copied or extracted from indexing websites such as Google Scholar, Garuda, Sinta, Dimensions, Moraref, Scilit, BASE, Web of Science, Science Direct, etc. or from the citation feature of the journal website.

  1. The citation is required to write down for the reference section. The citation is written in Bodynote and in APA Sixth Editionstyle. The text by means of the last of the author's name, year, and page number (i.e. Smelser, 1962, p. 22). Notes (Endnotes) are allowed to be written in annotations on archives and captions that may not be accommodated in the text.

The article or books with more than one author should be written with (&) punctuation (Johnson & Laura, 2009, p. 10), and two authors then it should be written by the first author's name followed by "dkk." or "et al." All referenced in the text must be registered in the reference section, and vice versa, all written in the references should be referred to in the text (Ritzer, et al., 2008, p. 110).

  1. The reference list format is according to the American Psychological Association (APA) Sixth Editionstyle. The reference list should appear at the end of the article and includes only literature actually cited in the manuscripts. References are ordered alphabetically and chronologically. We strongly recommend authors to use reference tools, such as Mendeley,etc. Herewith are some of the APA-based references format structure:
  • Printed book: Author, A.A. (Year of Publication). Title of work. Publisher City, State: Publisher.
  • Online book: Author, A.A. (Year of Publication). Title of work [E-Reader Version]. Retrieved from http://xxxx or DOI: xxxx
  • Journal article in print: Author, A.A. (Publication Year). Article title. Periodical TitleVolume (Issue), pp.-pp.
  • Journal article online: Author, A.A. (Publication Year). Article title. Periodical TitleVolume (Issue), pp.-pp. DOI: xx.xxxx or Retrieved from journal URL.
  • Website article: Author, A.A. (Date of Publication). Article title. Retrieved from URL; Article title. (Date of Publication). Retrieved from URL. For the article from the website that does not provide author, please directly use this format: Retrieve URL, Date of Retrieved.
  • Newspaper in print: "Article Title". Newspaper Title, pp. xx-xx.
  • Newspaper online: "Article Title". Newspaper Title, Retrieved from newspaper homepage URL.
  • Magazine article in print: Author, A.A. (Date of Publication). "Article Title". Magazine, pp.-pp.
  • Encyclopedia: Author, A.A. (Publication Year). Entry Title. In Encyclopedia Title. City, State of publication: Publisher.
  • Archive: please use Publication Title, No, Date of Issued.
  1. The editor appreciates if authors excerpt information from previously published articles in this journal.
  2. Articles should be submitted in soft files using Microsoft Word application to the Online Submission page.
  3. Manuscripts to be published must meet the requirements and eligibility through stages that have been determined by the editor, namely: an examination of articles entered by the editor, correspondence between editors and writers, review of articles by reviewers, editing by editors, and publication of articles.
  4. Manuscripts that are rejected will be returned to the author with written notice from the editor.
  5. During the process of sending the manuscript to publication, the author will receive: a statement has sent the manuscript, a form letter of willingness to publish the manuscript, and a letter of receipt has paid the cost of publication.
  6. The author may download the Template (ID) or Template (EN).