Andri Estining Sejati
Universitas Sembilanbelas November Kolaka, Kolaka, Indonesia

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NEEDS AND CONCEPT ANALYSIS OF ENVIRONMENTAL MONOGRAPH DEVELOPMENT BASED LOCAL WISDOM IN PROBOLINGGO Andri Estining Sejati; Sumarmi Sumarmi; I Komang Astina; Singgih Susilo; Putri Tipa Anasi; Fahrudi Ahwan ikhsan; Hendra Hendra; Resti Karmila
Prima Magistra: Jurnal Ilmiah Kependidikan Vol. 6 No. 4 (2025): Volume 6 Number 4 (October 2025)
Publisher : Program Studi PGSD Universitas Flores

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37478/jpm.v6i4.5619

Abstract

The problem in the field is that there is a lack of integration between the local wisdom of the Tengger community and environmental conservation efforts in the highland, middle and lowland areas of Probolinggo Regency, so a monograph is needed as a medium for developing learning and preserving culture and the environment. This study aimed to determine the needs and concept analysis for developing an environmental monograph based on local wisdom in the Probolinggo. This study used a qualitative descriptive method. The research subject needs to be analyzed by environmental geography lecturers, students, the Bromo Tengger Semeru National Park Center (BBTNBTS), and the local government of the Probolinggo Regency. The research subjects in the concept analysis were key informants from six villages in the Probolinggo Regency. Qualitative data were obtained through observations, in-depth interviews, and documentation. The data analysis was qualitative, using information from qualitative data to analyze the needs and local wisdom in the upland, middleland, and lowland areas of the Probolinggo. The data analysis was then discussed using the monograph challenge and spatial ethnography. The need for environmental monographs based on local wisdom in the Probolinggo Regency was based on the need to enrich learning resources in the Geography Study Program, State University of Malang, the interests of BBTNBTS, and the Probolinggo Regency Government. The concept that emerged from local wisdom was the preservation of land and forests. Sea and water are sourced from local wisdom in gardening, farming, and fishing.
THE DESCRIPTION OF WRITING STRATEGY, SELF-EFFICACY, AND WRITING ANXIETY RELATING TO WRITING PERFORMANCE Lelly Suhartini; Samdin Samdin; La Ode Nggawu; Aris Badara; Putri Tipa Anasi; Andri Estining Sejati
Prima Magistra: Jurnal Ilmiah Kependidikan Vol. 7 No. 2 (2026): Volume 7 Number 2 (April 2026)
Publisher : Program Studi PGSD Universitas Flores

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.37478/jpm.v7i2.7497

Abstract

Academic writing in English remains a persistent challenge for English as a Foreign Language (EFL) students, whose written work often fails to meet disciplinary expectations due to complex interactions among linguistic competence, psychological states, and strategic behavior. While previous quantitative research, particularly studies employing Structural Equation Modeling (SEM), has examined causal and mediating relationships among writing self-efficacy, anxiety, strategy use, and performance, these approaches offer limited insight into how these constructs manifest in students' lived experiences and writing processes. To address this gap, the present study adopts a descriptive qualitative approach to portray the characteristics, expressions, and interconnections of writing strategy use, self-efficacy beliefs, and writing anxiety as experienced by EFL learners in relation to their academic writing performance. In-depth semi-structured interviews and analysis of writing artifacts were conducted with 18 purposively selected students from the 4th, 6th, and 8th semesters of the English Language Education Study Program at Halu Oleo University. Data were analyzed through iterative thematic analysis to generate rich descriptions of participants' strategic behaviors, confidence levels, emotional responses, and perceived writing outcomes. The findings depict self-efficacious students as actively employing planning, drafting, and revising strategies with metacognitive awareness, which they associate with improved text quality and fluency. In contrast, students with low self-efficacy frequently reported strategy avoidance or mechanical application of techniques without adaptation to task demands. Writing anxiety emerged not as a uniform barrier but as a context-dependent experience, sometimes coexisting with strategic effort yet often disrupting cognitive resources during high-stakes writing tasks. Notably, the descriptive accounts reveal that strategy use appears closely intertwined with self-efficacy beliefs, while anxiety manifests more independently without consistent patterns of strategic compensation. These qualitative descriptions complement prior SEM-based findings by illuminating the experiential dimensions underlying statistical relationships, highlighting the need for pedagogy that nurtures self-efficacy through mastery experiences, cultivates flexible strategy repertoires with explicit modeling, and addresses anxiety through supportive writing environments. The study contributes a nuanced understanding of the psychological and strategic landscape of EFL academic writing beyond what variable-centered quantitative approaches alone can capture.