Author Guidelines

Authors should only submit papers that have been carefully proofread and polished. Manuscripts are accepted with the understanding that they are original or expanded versions of previously published papers at conferences and/or journals and that, if the work has official sponsorship, it has been released for open publication. Before submission, please ensure your paper is prepared using the journal paper template. Authors must refer to the Community Service Journal Article Template for format and writing style. Use tools such as EndNote, Mendeley, or Zotero for reference management and formatting, and choose IEEE style. This will ensure fast processing and publication. Any paper that does not meet the requirements under the author guidelines will not be processed.

The minimum standard requirements for the Indonesian Community Service and Empowerment Journal must be:

  1. Written in Indonesian or English.
  2. The length of the submitted paper is at least 8 pages.
  3. Write the research contribution in the introduction.
  4. Use a tool such as Zotero, Mendeley, or EndNote for reference management and formatting or manual citation, and choose IEEE style.
  5. Make sure that your paper is prepared using the IJRCS paper template
  6. Expect at least 30 references, primarily with 100% to journal papers. The references must be up-to-date references (5 years back). 

The structure of the paper is

  1. Title
  2. Abstract
  3. Introduction
  4. Methods
  5. Result and Discussion
  6. Conclusions
  7. References

Learn about the elements that make up a typical journal article and how to structure your work to help communicate your ideas more clearly.

Title

Article titles should be specific, concise, and descriptive to help readers decide whether they should read the full article. Use keywords and short phrases to describe the content of the article in as few words as possible.

Abstract

Your abstract should provide a brief summary of the research conducted. Conclusions reached and potential implications of those conclusions.

 

A strong abstract will also:

  • Consist of a single paragraph of up to 250 words, with correct grammar and unambiguous terminology
  • Be self-contained, without abbreviations, footnotes, references, or mathematical equations
  • Highlight what is novel in your work
  • Include 3-5 keywords or phrases that describe the research to help readers find your article

Most authors write the abstract last and edit it multiple times before article publication to ensure it accurately captures the entire article.

We recommend not including mathematical symbols in your article title or abstract because they may not display properly.

Keywords

Using the right keywords in your article can make your article more easily and reliably discoverable—which leads to a broader readership for your article.

Introduction

The introduction section includes a review of the existing literature to position your research within the broader scientific field and show your work's novelty. The introduction should also describe the question you’re trying to answer with your research and why that question is important to the field.

Methods

The methods section is a straightforward description of what you did in your research and how you did it. A detailed method section will make your article reproducible by other researchers, which helps others trust and build upon your work.

Equations

Ensure your mathematical equations and formulas display correctly in your published article. The equation can be made using the insert equation feature in Ms. Word feature.

Results and Discussion

The results section describes the results you obtained in your research. Include figures and tables as appropriate to illustrate your results. Figures can show data trends or other visual information. Tables are best to use when the exact values are important.

In the discussion section, please describe your results and how they contribute to the research field.

Conclusions

The conclusion section can highlight potential broader implications of your work and areas that need further study. Be careful not to inflate your findings.

References

The reference section is important because all scientific and technical research builds upon previous work. References help give proper credit and attribution to the preceding body of work. References also support and validate your hypothesis. Be sure to only cite references that directly support your work. Inflating citations by adding unnecessary references is considered a breach of publishing ethics.

Acknowledgments

You can recognize and thank those who have helped you publish this article in the acknowledgments section. Here you can thank your funder, someone who supported you during the research project, or the anonymous reviewers who evaluated the article.  The Acknowledgements section is optional but quite common.