Miranu Triantoro
UNISBA Blitar (Prodi PPKn)

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REVITALISING MORAL EDUCATION IN THE DIGITAL AGE: STRATEGIES FOR CHARACTER BUILDING AMONG GENERATION Z AMIDST THE TIDE OF DISINFORMATION AND THE DECLINE OF ETHICAL SOCIAL MEDIA USE Miranu Triantoro; Rahmat Shodiqin
Indonesian Journal of Education (INJOE) Vol. 5 No. 2 (2026): Indonesian Journal of Education (INJOE)
Publisher : CV. ADIBA AISHA AMIRA

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19494738

Abstract

This study aims to analyse the revitalisation of moral education in the digital age as a strategy for character building among Generation Z amidst the tide of disinformation and the erosion of social media ethics. The method employed is a literature review (library research) using a descriptive-analytical qualitative approach. The findings indicate that traditional moral education, which is instructional and abstract in nature, is no longer effective in addressing the complex moral challenges of the digital space; consequently, a paradigm shift is required towards an approach that is contextual, participatory, and grounded in authentic digital experiences. Twelve character-building strategies were identified as a synergistic supporting ecosystem: (1) strengthening critical digital literacy, (2) internalising the values of Pancasila through creative content, (3) digital project-based learning, (4) simulations of digital moral dilemmas, (5) intergenerational digital parenting, (6) transforming schools into value ecosystems, (7) utilising AI for educational interventions, (8) strategic partnerships with social media platforms, (9) authentic assessment based on digital portfolios, (10) social and cultural movements for digital ethics, (11) integration of counselling and mental health services, and (12) national and international collaborative networks. The success of this strategy is not measured solely by a reduction in the statistics of ethical violations, but rather by the emergence of Generation Z possessing moral resilience—the moral fortitude to navigate the digital space critically, ethically, and autonomously. This study concludes that the revitalisation of moral education is an existential imperative to ensure that Indonesia’s digital transformation produces a generation that is not only technologically proficient but also possesses strong character, is critical of manipulation, empathetic, and committed to digital justice as the foundation of 21st-century democracy.
THE DYNAMICS OF MORAL EDUCATION IN THE FAMILY AND SCHOOL: SYNERGY OR CONFLICT OF VALUES AMIDST THE PLURALISM OF CONTEMPORARY INDONESIAN SOCIETY Aslan Aslan; Miranu Triantoro
Indonesian Journal of Education (INJOE) Vol. 5 No. 2 (2026): Indonesian Journal of Education (INJOE)
Publisher : CV. ADIBA AISHA AMIRA

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19494760

Abstract

This study aims to analyse the dynamics of moral education within the family and school amidst the pluralism of contemporary Indonesian society, focusing on whether there is synergy or conflict of values in the character formation of students. It employs a literature review (library research) using a qualitative-descriptive approach. The findings indicate that the dynamics of moral education are dialectical: on the one hand, value synergy can be achieved when families and schools build authentic collaboration through open communication, shared role modelling, coordinated value instillation, and inclusive normative agreements that result in the consistent and profound internalisation of character in children. On the other hand, value conflicts remain a significant structural challenge, stemming from a clash of paradigms between the family’s religious-traditional values and the school’s secular-universal values, generational dissonance between parents and Generation Z, as well as the influence of moral relativism from social media and globalisation, which has the potential to trigger a moral identity crisis and deviant behaviour. This study concludes that pluralism can serve as social capital or a source of moral fragmentation, depending on the institutional and cultural capacity to bridge value differences through dialogue and transformation. Strategic recommendations include the reformulation of policies supporting tripartite collaboration (family-school-community), strengthening teachers’ capacity in multicultural education, and empowering parents as strategic partners in shaping the character of a Generation Z that is adaptive yet principled.