Author Guidelines
Submissions to this journal are completely online and must be submitted at smkn1magelang.sch.id/jpm
When authors submit their manuscripts, authors are required to follow the terms and conditions set by JPM as described in the following sections:
CODE OF ETHICS
In order to maintain the authenticity of the manuscript, the author must ensure that:
1. The manuscript does not contain plagiarism, falsification and data creation
2. Must not be submitted to another publication and not being reviewed for publication elsewhere during the JPM review process
3. Should not be accepted for publication elsewhere
4. Must follow the terms, conditions and conditions determined by JPM
FORMAT
Manuscripts should be written as short as possible, consistent, and direct. The maximum length of the article is 15 pages on A4 size paper (approximately 3000-6000 words) including numbers, tables and appendices. The margins used are (left and right = 2.5cm, top = 2.5cm, and bottom = 3cm), while the font used is 11pt narrow Arial. Manuscripts must be written in English following the APA (The American Psychological Association) style.
JPM requires manuscripts to be presented in several sections: introduction; literature study or hypothesis development; Research methodology; find and discuss; conclusions, research implications, limitations and further studies; and references.
Title
The title should clearly summarize the main idea, typed in upper and lower case letters, centered between the left and right margins; and no more than 15 words.
Next, list the author's name and the name of the institution by following the example below: Author 1 (a) * Author 2 (b) (a) Department, Name of University / Institute (b) Department, Name of University / Institute * Author, address, and appropriate email address
Abstract
The abstract should be no more than 200 words, summarizing the research motivation, objectives, research methodology and general findings. Abstract must be written in good English and include 5 keywords.
introduction
This section describes the background of the research supported by information from the existing literature, outlines the problem and states the research objectives.
Literature study / hypothesis development
This section describes the literature related to this study. It can consist of main references (grand theories, concepts); journal articles (preferably published within the last 10 years); main idea of a textbook or electronic article. For empirical studies that use hypothesis development, the literature aims to strengthen the arguments for the selection of variables and each proposed hypothesis.
Method
This section describes the research approach used in this study, outlining the data collection process, the list of respondents (for empirical studies), and the analysis process.
Results
This section describes the results of the analysis process which can be presented in tabular, graphic, or descriptive format.
discussion
This section discusses the research results. In this section the authors are advised to synthesize the findings, relate the findings to the existing literature, and highlight the novelty of the research.
Conclusion
This section provides a brief conclusion of this study, also covering the managerial and theoretical implications, limitations, and directions for further study.
REFERENCE
This section contains all the references used in the article which should be between 15-40 references. We also emphasize authors to use current literature published in the last 10 years following the APA style (see example below).
JOURNAL
Primadona & Adhiutama, A. (2013). Application of Lean Manufacturing to Improve Operations: A Case Study of Black Cough Drug Production in Indonesia. The Asian Journal of Technology, 6(1), 56-64.
JOURNAL WITH DOI
Mulyono, N. B. (2013). Assessment of User Behavior in Household Electricity Use. The Asian Journal of Technology Management, 6(2), 65-71. doi:10.12695 / ajtm.2013.6.2.1
Book
Wibisono, D. (2006). Performance Management: Concepts, Designs and Techniques Improving Company Competitiveness. Jakarta: Erlangga Publisher. ISBN: 979 781 540 4.
THESIS / DISSERTATION
Hermawan, P. (2009). Dramatic Analysis of Negotiation Dilemma Theory and Its Application. [Dissertation]. Japan: Tokyo Institute of Technology.
ELECTRONIC ARTICLES
Howard, N. (1995). Confrontation Analysis: How to Win Operations Other Than War. CCRP publications. Washington DC: Department of Defense. Available at www.dodccrp.org. [accessed October 20, 2011].
TABLES AND FIGURES
Tables and Figures should be numbered separately, sequentially using Arabic numerals, and informatively titled. This should be presented on a separate page at the end of the manuscript. While in the manuscript, the author needs to determine the location of the tables and figures as follows:
'Insert image/table here'
Tables must be submitted as data - .doc, .rtf, Excel- files, while tables submitted as image data are not accepted as these cannot be edited for publication. Numbers provided electronically must be in a .tif or .gif file extension. All drawings and drawings must have good quality originals that allow clear image resolution in their print application.