Author Guidlines

Please prepare your manuscript before submission, using the following guide.

Title

Title Written with Arial Font 14 pt Bold, max 12 Words in Indonesian and use capital letters at the beginning of each word. 

Author1), Author2) [Arial 10 pt bold]

1)Department, faculty, institution, email [Arial 10 pt italic]

2)Department, faculty, institution, email [Arial 10 pt italic]

The title should be clear and concise. Only the initial letter of the word uses uppercase letters and bold titles. The name of the author and its affiliates as written above. The author's name is clearly written without a title. Heading numbering with Arabic system with maximum sub-headings up to 3 levels.

Abstract [Arial 9 pt bold]

Abstracts are written in two languages namely English and Indonesian, 200-300 words. The abstract is written with Arial 9, spaces 1, 1 paragraph, italics for abstract [English) and straight print (English) and with a one-column format.

Keywords

keywords are written in 5 words which should be a subset of the title of the paper, written in lowercase except for abbreviations, and separated by comma punctuation between words. example keywords: ground motion, site response, ERA, ground surface, acceleration [maximum 5 keywords]

Manuscript Structure (arial 10 pt)

The manuscript/paper should contain writings containing:

  1. Introduction. The content of the introduction contains the general background of the study (maximum one paragraph), state of the art (review of literature or previous research briefly), the problems studied/ hypotheses, goals and expectations about the application of research results and development plans)
  2. Research Methods (Research methods contain material or components, tools and objects that have been studied, how the research works, parameters observed, the design used, and the technical analysis used. The research method must be clearly stated (if the article is the result of the study).
  3. Results and Analysis (Contains the main results, according to the observed parameters as well as scientific discussions and supporting arguments)
  4. Conclusions and suggestions (Contains a brief statement of the results of the research obtained, attributed to the hypothesis that has been submitted (if any). Suggestion, if any proposal relates to the results of the research obtained, for further strengthening and development.

Sub Headings using 10 bold arial letters.

The manuscript is written in A4 paper size, the page margin is 25 mm up-down, left and right with a minimum number of pages 10 pages, maximum 12 pages, including tables and drawings, and with reference to writing procedures such as those that have been compiled on the template.

Table

Tables should be numbered in the order of presentation (Table 1, etc.). The title of the table is written on top of the table with a center-aligned position (center justified). The font used is 8 pt for the title and content of the table. The table should be referenced and referenced in text.

Image

Images are numbered in the order of presentation (Fig.1, etc.). The title of the image placed under the image in the center position (centre justified). The font used in the image title is 8pt. Images should be referenced and referenced in text.

References

Writing references using the IEEE Referencing Standard system. It is recommended to use the Mendeley/endnote/zotero tools. Everything listed in the bibliography/references should be referenced in writing or paper. A minimum of 10 primary and recent references and one of them is recommended to refer to articles that have been published in Jurnal Ilmiah Rekayasa Sipil.

Reference Writing Instructions

1. References derived from the book

    Writing rules:

    Author, Initials/First name., Year. Title of book. Edition. Place of publication: Publisher.

    Example: Redman, P., 2006. Good essay writing: a social sciences guide. 3rd ed. London: Open University in          assoc. with Sage.

 2. References coming from the journal

     Writing rules:

     Author, Initials., Year. Title of article. Full Title of Journal, Volume number (Issue/Part number), Page numbers.

     Example: Boughton, J.M., 2002. The Bretton Woods proposal: an in depth look. Political Science Quarterly, 42       (6),pp.564-78.

 3. References derived from seminar reports

     Writing rules: Authorship author, editor or organisation, Year. Full title of conference report. Location, Date,         Publisher: Place of publication.

     Example: UNDESA (United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs), 2005. 6th Global forum on           reinventing government: towards participatory and transparent governance. Seoul, Republic of Korea 24-27         May 2005. United Nations: New York.

 4. References derived from seminar papers/proceedings

     Writing rules: Authorship, Year. Full title of conference paper. In: followed by Editor or name of organisation,         Full title of conference. Location, Date, Publisher: Place of publication.

     Example: Brown, J., 2005. Evaluating surveys of transparent governance. In: UNDESA (United Nations                     Department of Economic and Social Affairs), 6th Global forum on reinventing government: towards                       participatory and transparent governance. Seoul, Republic of Korea 24-27 May 2005. United Nations: New             York.

 5. References derived from desertation

      Writing rules: Author, Year of publication. Title of dissertation. Level. Place of University (If not clear from the        name of the University): Name of University.

      Example: Richmond, J., 2005. Customer expectations in the world of electronic banking: a case study of the          Bank of Britain. Ph. D. Chelmsford: Anglia Ruskin University.

 6. References coming from the website

     Writing rules: Authorship or Source, Year. Title of web document or web page. [Medium] (date of update)             Available at: include web site address/URL(Uniform Resource Locator) and additional details such as access         or routing from the home page of the source. [Accessed date]. 

     Example: National electronic Library for Health, 2003. Can walking make you slimmer and healthier? (Hitting       the headlines article) [Online] (Updated 16 Jan 2005) Available at: http://www.nhs.uk.hth.walking. [Accessed         10 April 2005]