Jurnal Teknologi Informasi dan Pendidikan
Volume 14, No. 1, Maret 2021
tip.ppj.unp.ac.id
MAXIMUM 15 WORDS ARTICLE TITLES
First Author1*, Second Author2, Last Author3
1Pendidikan Teknik Informatika, Universitas Negeri Padang,
Indonesia
2Pendidikan Teknik Informatika, Universitas Negeri Padang,
Indonesia
*Corresponding Author: email@address
No. Contact / WA
INTISARI
Abstrak harus faktual dan ringkas. Isinya masalah penelitian,
metode dan hasil. Gunakan font Times New Roman 10pt untuk badan
teks dengan satu spasi antar baris, dan spasi 6pt untuk judul
berikutnya. Jarak kiri dan kanan 1 cm. Panjang maksimal 250
kata.
Kata kunci: Kata kunci berjumlah 3-6 kata, pisahkan dengan koma
diantaranya.
ABSTRACT
Abstract should be factual and concise. It shall contain
research problems, methods and results. Use 10pt Times New Roman
font for body of the text with one spacing between lines, and 6pt
spacing for the next heading. Left and right indent 1 cm. Maximum
length 250 words.
Keywords: Keywords corresponding to numbered 3-6 words, separate
them with commas.
No. XXX | REC. 14 March 20XX | REV. 18 May 20XX | ACC. 20 August
20XX
P.ISSN: 2086 – 4981
E.ISSN: 2620 – 6390
tip.ppj.unp.ac.id
Jurnal Teknologi Informasi dan Pendidikan
Volume 14, No. 1, Maret 2021
PG. XX – XX | https://doi.org/10.24036/tip.v14i1
Jurnal Teknologi Informasi dan Pendidikan
Volume 14, No. 1, Maret 2021
tip.ppj.unp.ac.id
Jurnal Teknologi Informasi dan Pendidikan
JTIP©Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License
Volume 13, No. 1, Edisi Maret 2020
http://tip.ppj.unp.ac.id
P.ISSN: 2086 – 4981
E.ISSN: 2620 – 6390
2
3
INTRODUCTION
[ Maximum length of article is 6000-8000 words.]
The article in the JTIP Journal of Information Technology and
Education consists of about 5 - 10 pages in MS Word format. A
maximum of 15 words are used as article titles. Articles are
written in an arrangement consisting of an introduction, methods,
results and discussions, conclusions and suggestions, bibliography,
bio and endnotes (if needed).
The introduction contains the background to the problem,
literature review, namely by reviewing the scientific manuscripts
that give rise to ideas and the basis for the research, which are
described in a descriptive, explicit and clear manner about the
direction, purpose and purpose of the article so that the substance
of the article does not cause confusion in understanding,
understanding and interpretation of meaning. The author must ensure
that his writing does not contain elements of plagiarism. Articles
that have been published as proceedings are not accepted for
publication in the JTIP.
METHOD
JTIP strongly recommends using reference tools such as Mendeley
or EndNote. Mendeley is preferred because it does not require
additional fees for application licenses. The method part is to
describe how the research results can be obtained. Each reported
measurement result must be known about the method used to obtain
these results. The procedure and steps for how the results can be
obtained in the method section. The description of the method must
be accompanied by citations that refer to the Bibliography. The
method consists of a system design and or research procedure.
Reference
Reference or quotation must comply with the standard, namely by
writing the bibliography number in square brackets such as [1] [2]
etc .. and according to the list of references/references.
Picture
Writing the image is centered and numbered and the title of the
image (Cambria, 9 Points). Images are language/mentioned in the
text. The pseudocode or program portion (if any) is considered an
image, but is written in Cambria (maximum size of 10 points).
Figure 1. Image title is written in Sentence case (initially
capital letters)
Table
Tables should be left aligned and numbered and titled (Cambria,
8-9 Points). Fill in the table using Cambria letters, size 8-9
points, single spaced. The table doesn't use vertical lines to
create the table if the column headings line up horizontally.
Horizontal lines are only used to start a table, delineate column
headings with table content, and end the table. The table is
spoken/mentioned in the text.
Table 1. Example of Writing the Second Table
Column Titles
Column A (t)
Column B (t)
First line
1
2
Second line
3
4
Next line
5
6
Table 2. Table Title (capital letters initially).
No
This line
Italic
1
This is the contents of the table, if not enough, you can reduce
the font size to 8 points
Font of Regular table contents
Table 3. Table Title (capital letters initially).
No
Title
Title
Title
1
A-B
25
30
2
B-C
75.15
10
3
C-D
44.75
50
4
D-E
72.5
10
5
E-F
21.25
10
Mathematical Equations
Mathematical equations are written right-aligned and numbered in
regular brackets. Equations are written using Microsoft Equation
(size 14 points for variables, while for rank and index use font
size 6-8 points). Numbering is done sequentially.
Equations are spoken or mentioned in the text. As an
example:
(1)
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Describe the results in a clear and logical order. Narration
contains information that is extracted from the data, not
duplicated with text.
CONCLUSION
The conclusion serves to remind the reader of the important
arguments raised in the discussion, focusing on the objective or
research question. Pull all the details into a general statement of
all arguments.
SUGGESTION
Advice is written optional (if any). In accordance with the
conclusions and described descriptively the conclusions and
described descriptively descriptively.
REFERENCES
Journal articles:
[1] S.D. Anderson, “Project quality and project managers.
International”. Journal of Project Management, vol. 10, no.3, pp.
138–144, 1992.
[2] M.J. Benner, and M. L. Tushman, “Exploitation, exploration,
and process management: the productivity dilemma revisited”,
Academy of Management Review vol. 28, no. 2, pp. 238–256, 2003.
Book:
[3]C.M. Christensen, The Innovator’s Dilemma: When New
Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail, Harvard Business School
Press, Boston, MA, 1998.
Seminar proceedings:
[4]L.Clare, G. Pottie, and J. Agre, “Self-organizing distributed
sensor networks”, Proceedings SPIE Conference Unattended Ground
Sensor Technologies and Applications, vol. 3713, Orlando, pp.
229–237, April 8, 1999.
Thesis/thesis/dissertation:
[5]W. Heinzelman, “Application-specific protocol architectures
for wireless networks”, Ph.D. dissertation, Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, Cambridge, 2000.
Internet:
[8]Google, “What’s new in Classroom,” 2018. [Online]. Available:
https://support.google.com/edu/classroom#topic=6020277. [Accessed:
22-Jun-2019].