AUTHOR GUIDELINES

AUTHOR'S GUIDELINES

Articles sent to the Jurnal Mahasiswa Ilmu Komputer (JMIK) are the result of research using literature studies that meet scientific writing standards and focus on science:

Management Information System
Knowledge Management System
Project Management System
Geographic Information System
Supply Chain Management
Customer Relationship Management
Artificial Intelligence
Decision Support Systems
Software Engineering & Software Re-Engineering
Data Management
Data Mining
Cloud Computing
Internet of Things
Others are still relevant to topics in the field of computer science.

GENERAL FORMAT OF WRITING

Articles are typed with double spaces, unless direct quotations are typed one space. Each paragraph begins with five taps indented to

Articles are written in Indonesian or English with a font size of 12 points, Times New Roman typeface, and using size paper
Writing margin: Upper, lower, left and right sides 1
The length of the article ranges from 25-30 pages and does not include a list
Pages, including references and appendices must be numbered
The subtitles are written in left-aligned type in bold bold, Times new roman typeface, and size
Each table or figure is numbered sequentially. The title of the table must represent the contents of the table and the figure is written centered. Sources of Tables and Figures must be listed.


SYSTEMATIC WRITING FOR EMPIRICAL STUDY

1. TITLE

The title must reflect the contents of the article, which is written briefly and no more than 12 words for articles in Indonesian and no more than 10 words for articles in English. The author lists the name, institution of origin, and e-mail address under the title. Academic degrees do not need to be listed. If the article is written by more than one author, the name of the corresponding author must be stated clearly.

2. ABSTRACT AND KEYWORDS

The abstract contains a summary of the research problem, research objectives, methods used, and research results. Abstract written in Indonesian and English ± 200 words and followed by writing keywords. Abstracts in English are written in italics. Keywords consist of 3-5 syllables that reflect the important concepts used in the article.

3. INTRODUCTION

This section contains the background, purpose or motivation of research triggered by the existence of a phenomenon, research gap, conflicting results, and also contains research contributions.

4. REVIEW OF LITERATURE AND FORMULATION OF HYPOTHESES.

This section contains theoretical studies and the development of conceptual arguments that form the basis for formulating hypotheses. However, it should be emphasized that articles that are the result of critical thinking or literature studies do not need to formulate hypotheses.

5. RESEARCH METHOD

This section contains a research design or research design that includes the research model, sampling procedures, operational definitions and measurement of variables, data collection techniques, and analytical techniques used.

6. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

This section presents the characteristics of the sample and the results of data analysis consisting of descriptive statistics, hypothesis testing, discussion of results, and generalization of the findings.

7. CONCLUSION

This section contains research conclusions, implications and suggestions for further research.

8. REFERENCES

This section contains the reference sources used and only those used in the manuscript are included in the bibliography.

 

ANALYTICAL STUDY FORMAT

1. TITLE

The title must reflect the contents of the article, which is written briefly and no more than 12 words for articles in Indonesian and no more than 10 words for articles in English. The title is written in centered, capital letters, Times New Roman typeface, and font size 12. The author includes the name, institution of origin, and e-mail address under the title. Academic degrees are not listed. If the article is written by more than one author, the corresponding author must be clearly stated.

2. ABSTRACT AND KEYWORDS

Abstract contains a summary of the research problem and research objectives. Abstracts are written in Indonesian and English ranging from 100-200 words and are followed by writing keywords. Abstracts in English are written in italics. Keywords consist of 3-5 syllables that reflect the important concepts used in the article.

3. INTRODUCTION

This section contains the background, purpose or motivation of research and research contributions.

4. DISCUSSION

This section describes the issues that are of concern to the author along with arguments, critical analysis, opinions, and solutions to overcome the existing problems.

5. CONCLUSION

This section contains conclusions drawn from the author's critical view, implications for the perspective of accounting problems,

6. REFERENCES

This section contains the reference sources used and only those used in the manuscript are included in the bibliography.

QUOTATION PROCEDURE IN TEXT

The source referred to in the article must be stated between opening brackets and closing brackets by mentioning the author's last name and year separated by commas, and page numbers if needed. Here's an example of how citation applies:

To quote name

The quote comes from one author: (Hartono, 2012).
Quotes are from two authors: (Jane and John, 2015)
Citation comes from three or more authors: (DeChow et al., 2013)
More than one source from different authors: (Gul, 2010; Lako, 2015)
More one source from the same author: (Krishnan, 2003, 2005).
More than one source from the same author and the same year: (Klein, 2002a, 2002b)
Quotes accompanied by page numbers: (Lennox, 2005: 205).
Using the author's name in the text: “DeFond (2010) states ...”
Using the author's name at the end of the sentence: ... from auditor quality (Gul et al., 2010)
Sources of citations are from institutions: (IAI, 1994).


REFERENCES WRITING PROCEDURES

Each article must contain a bibliography (only the source of the citation) arranged alphabetically according to the author's last name or the name of the institution. The following is an example of writing a bibliography from various sources:

1. Quotes from books

One author:

Watts, R., and J. Zimmerman. 1986. Positive accounting theory. Engelwood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall

Two authors:

Supomo, B., and N. Indrianto. 2002. Research Methodology for Accounting and Management. First Edition. Yogyakarta: BPFE.

2. Quotations from e-books

Gujarati, D.N. 2001. Basic Econometrics. Downloaded from: http://tocs.ub.uni-mainz.de/pdfs/107610957.pdf

3. Quotes from the journal

Cohen D; M.N Darrough; R. Huang; and T. Zach. 2011. Warranty reserve: contingent liability, information signal, or earnings management tool?. The Accounting Review 86:569-604.

4. Quotations from seminar papers

Siregar, V. and S. Utama. 2005. The Influence of Ownership Structure, Company Size, and Corporate Governance Practices on Earnings Management, National Accounting Symposium VIII, Solo, 15-16 September 2005.

5. Quotation from Working Paper

Burgstahler, D. and M. Eames. 1998. Management of earnings and analyst forecasts. Working paper, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, and Santa Clara University, Santa Clara, CA.

6. Quotations from Thesis or Dissertation

Butar Butar, S. 2013. Implications of capital market regulation on earnings management motives. Unpublished dissertation, Gadjah Mada University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia

7. Quotation from an institution: Indonesian Institute of Accountants (1994), “Professional Standards of Public Accountants”, Jakarta, IAI Publishing Division.

8. Quotations from Internet sources

Putri, A.W. 2015. Avoid misguided regarding asset revaluation. Accessed on 27 October 2016, from http://swa.co.id/swa/trends/business-research/

9. Quotes from popular magazines

Siringoringo, L. and D. Putriadita. 2016. What's wrong with Kimia Farma's stock?

Cash, p. 13

10. Quotes from daily newspapers

Perdana, P. 2016. 27 October. So that the signature is not easily forged. Compass, p. 2.

TABLES AND FIGURES

The tables generated by statistical software must be modified in advance to suit the intent and purpose

Tables or figures are given the appropriate serial number and given an explanation by referring to the number of the table or figure
Tables or figures that are quotes must include

REVIEW PROCESS

The first stage of the review process is carried out by the JMIK editor and if it is passed, it will be continued to the board

The second stage of the review process is carried out by the editorial board in a blind review with the following possible outcomes: Accepted without improvement, Accepted with improvement (minor or major), or Rejected.