AUTHOR GUIDELINES

Papers:

  1. Must be non-plagiarized. 
  2. Should not have been published in other journals. 
  3. Written in English and Indonesian (using Garamond 12, 1.5 spacing, A4) 
  4. Submit to Link:
  5. The identity section of the paper should include: Title: The title of the article should contain as few words as feasible while still accurately summarizing its substance (Garamond, Center, Bold, 14pt), full name(s) of the author(s), affiliation, email, abstract (200 words, which includes purpose, method, research results, conclusion, and impact), and keywords (3-5 words).   
  6. The content structure for research papers should consist of: Introduction, Method, Results and Discussion, Conclusion, and Bibliography.
  7. Introduction: This should consist of background, literature review (to establish the state of the art), purpose, and problem formulation, written in one section without subtitles.  
  8. Method: Describes the type of research, data collection methods, data sources, data types, and data analysis. It should be written in paragraph form.  
  9. Results and Discussion: Should present significant original data gathered from questionnaires, surveys, documents, interviews, observations, and other data collection techniques. It can include tables or graphics to clarify the results. All figures and tables should be centered and numbered consecutively. Tables (e.g., Table 1, Table 2) should be presented with their titles centered above them. A descriptive title should be placed above each table. The source of the table should be aligned to the right below the table. Figures and tables must be referenced in the relevant text. 
  10. Conclusion: Write the research results succinctly and clearly, then describe the logical implications for the development of science and Islamic education practices. The conclusion is not indented and should use bold Garamond 12 font.  
  11. Bibliography: References and citations should follow the APA style, seventh edition, using reference management software (e.g., Mendeley).   
  12. Transliteration of Arabic to Latin should follow the Library of Congress model.