Author Guidelines

Manuscript Format    
Article Manuscript should at least consist of the following sections: Introduction, Literature Review and Hypothesis Development (only literature review for qualitative research), Research Methods, Results and Analysis, Conclusions and References. Acknowledgments (if any) must be placed after the Conclusion and before the Reference. Articles must be written on A4 paper size with a font size of 10pt and a single space. The margin of the page should be 2 cm for all sides (top, bottom, left and right). Articles should be written efficiently in about 13-15 pages. All pages must be numbered, including references. Authors are encouraged to use Mendeley's app for citations and references. The first manuscript follows the JESSB template of the manuscript.


Title Manuscript       
Title, written in Indonesian and English. Titles in Indonesian should not consist of no more than 13 words, while titles in English should not consist of no more than 10 words. The name must not bear any title (Dr., Prof., etc.). The author's name must be written with the full mailing address that must be provided. Also, please include the email address for the related author. 

Abstract
Abstract appears after the title page in the text. The abstract should be integrated and independent consisting of an introduction and objectives, methods, results, conclusions, and suggestions. But the abstract should be written as a single paragraph. References should be avoided. Also, non-standard or unusual abbreviations should be avoided, but if necessary, abbreviations should be defined in their first mention in the abstract itself. The abstract should be written using 100 to 200 words that have no references and should also be followed by 3-5 word keywords.   

Introduction
A brief introduction to the general study should begin (try a maximum of one paragraph). State of the art (a brief review of previous literature or research) to justify a statement of novelty or significance or a new contribution or originality of this article. Try to have reference articles from journals of the last 5 years that reinforce the justification of originality. Gap analysis or statement of gap (originality) or novelty (statement of novelty) or unique differences in this research compared to previous research, also from the important side of whether the research was conducted. The problems and/or hypotheses (if any) and/or research objectives in this article.  

Research Methods
The methodology section contains the approach used in producing scientific articles. Specifically for scientific research articles, the methodology section covers research methods, population and samples, and data analysis steps.  

Results and Discussion    
(what/how) has the data presented been processed (not raw data), stated in a table or figure (choose one), and provided with easy-to-understand information? Write down findings or findings, but don't discuss them here; (Why) In the discussion section, there is a relationship between the results obtained and the basic concept and/or hypothesis. The discussion must be supported by real and clear facts. (What's more) is there any compatibility or conflict with the results of other people's research? (Therefore, there should be references to other literature, especially literature mentioned in the previous state of the art of research). It can also be written about the implications of research results, both theoretical and application.  

Conclusion
Explain the research conclusions, research limitations, and suggestions for conducting future research.           

References
References are written in the style of the American Psychological Association (APA). Applies to references in text, tables, and images. The process of writing articles should use a reference management program (Mendeley, etc.). Updated reference libraries, especially those used to justify originality or novelty (last 5 years). Primary reference literature, try at least 80% of primary literature). If literature in the form of a book should be a primary book (which contains the results of direct research, not a compilation of other people's research); Books containing theoretical (secondary) concepts can be used as references, but try only a maximum of 20% of       

 Tables and Figures           
Tables and Figures should be titled and numbered, while the sources of tables and figures are clearly and explicitly stated. Table titles and images are typed in the middle. Table titles and images should be written in bold. The source of the table and image should be placed below the table and figure, typed from the left margin. The table format should only use horizontal lines and omit any vertical lines.  

Common Citation Formats in References by APA Style:

Journal article by one author:        
Thompson, L. (1990). Negotiation behavior and outcomes: Empirical evidence and theoretical problems. Psychological Bulletin, 108, 515-332. doi:10.1048/9385-0920.58.2.193

Journal article by two authors:      
 Loesche, LS, & Tsai, SD (1998). More organization, less espresso: The effect of caffeine on manuscript length. Human Behavior, 5, 1-43. Taken from

http://journals.elsevierhealth.com/periodicals/ens Journal article, three to seven authors:
 Saywitz, K.J., Mannarino, A.P., Berliner, L., & Cohen, J.A. (2000). Treatment for sexually abused children and adolescents. American Psychologists, 55, 1040-1049. doi:10.5497/4578-2587.456.2.548

Journal articles, more than seven authors:           
Wolchik, S. A. S., West, S. G., Sandler, I. N., Tein, J., Coatsworth, D., Lengua, L., . . . Griffin, WA (2000). Experimental evaluation of theory-based mother-child programs for children of divorce. Journal of Consultation and Clinical Psychology, 68, 843-856. Taken from http://www.apa.org/journals/ccp.html

Book chapter (electronic version):
Booth, D.A. (1980). Reactions are conditioned in motivation. In F. M. Toates & T. R. Hall (Eds.), Analysis of motivational processes (pp. 77-102). New York: Academic Press. Retrieved from http://www.ebookstore.tandf.co.uk/html/index.asp

Note: See the APA manual (6th edition), pages 202-205, for more advanced versions of e-book sources.

Books (printed version):     
Toates, F. M. & Hall, T. R. (Eds.). (1980). Analysis of motivational processes. New York: Academic Press.

Note: If more than one city is given to a book publisher, mention the city that is most convenient to find the book (for example, if Academic Press is published in New York and London, list only New York for American audiences or only London for European audiences).

           
Parker-Pope, T. (2008, May 6). Psychiatric handbooks are related to the drug industry. The New York Times. Taken from http://well.blogs.nytimes.com

Abstract
If you are only quoting the abstract but the full text of the article is also available, cite the abstract online like any other online citation, add "[Abstract]" after the article or the name of the source. However, if the full text is not available, you can use the abstract available through the abstract database as a secondary source.

Paterson, P. (2008). How well do young offenders with Asperger's Syndrome cope with incarceration?: Two prison case studies [Abstract]. Journal of English Learning Disabilities, 36(1), 54-58.

Datasets        
Direct readers to raw data by providing a Web address (use "Retrieved from") or a public place that hosts the dataset on the site (use "Available from").

United States Department of Housing and Urban Development. (2008). Indiana revenue limits [Data file]. Taken from http://www.huduser.org/Datasets/IL/IL08/in_fy2008.pdf

Graphical Data (e.g. Interactive Maps and Other Graphical Representations of Data)
Provide the name of the research organization followed by the date. In parentheses, provide a brief explanation of what type of data exists and in what form it appears. Finally, provide a project name and retrieval information.

Solar Radiation and Climate Experiments. (2007). [Illustration of SORCE Spectral Plot graph May 8, 2008]. Access Solar Spectral Data from SIM, SOLSTICE, and XPS Instruments. Taken from http://lasp.colorado.edu/cgi-bin/ion-p? page=input_data_for_ spectrum.ion

Qualitative Data and Online Interviews    
If the interview cannot be captured in audio or print form, cite the interview only in text (not in the reference list) and provide the month, day, and year in the text. If the audio file or transcript is available online, use the following model, specify the media in parentheses (e.g. [Interview transcript, Interview audio file]):

Butler, C. (Interviewer) & Stevenson, R. (Interview). (1999). Oral History 2 [Transcript of interview]. Retrieved from the Johnson Space Center's Oral History Project website: http:// www11.jsc.nasa.gov/history/oral_histories/oral_histories.htm

Footnotes Footnotes
cannot be used as a reference. Footnotes should be used only for the expansion of information that may distract from the continuity of the reading if it is included in the text. Footnotes must be typed single-spaced and numerically numbered with Arabic superscript numerics. Footnotes should be placed at the end of the text.