Mozes M. Wullur
Doctoral Program in Educational Management, Graduate School, Universitas Negeri Manado, Indonesia

Published : 4 Documents Claim Missing Document
Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 4 Documents
Search

Human Resource Development Strategies of the Social Affairs Office in Handling Abandoned Children in Minahasa Regency Maya C. Rambitan; Deitje A. Katuuk; Jeffry Sony Junus Lengkong; Mozes M. Wullur; Ruth Umbase
International Journal of Information Technology and Education Vol. 5 No. 2S (2026): Special Issue, April 2026
Publisher : JR Education

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

Abandoned children represent a persistent social problem with long-term implications for educational attainment, psychosocial wellbeing, and the quality of future human resources. This article reformulates a doctoral dissertation into a journal-style paper and examines how the Social Affairs Office of Minahasa Regency designs, implements, and evaluates human resource development strategies for abandoned children from an educational management perspective. The study employed a qualitative descriptive design. Data were generated through in-depth interviews, field observations, and document analysis, then analyzed using the interactive model of Miles and Huberman through data reduction, data display, and conclusion drawing. The findings indicate that the strategy has been organized through planning, organizing, actuating, and controlling (POAC), supported by legal mandates and cross-sector coordination with police, women and child protection agencies, local communities, and child welfare institutions. In practice, however, the strategy shows uneven effectiveness. It is relatively strong in basic-needs fulfillment, emergency response, administrative verification, and short-course skills training, but remains weaker in formal education reintegration, sustained psychosocial recovery, family reunification quality, and long-term social integration. Key enabling factors include regulatory support, institutional collaboration, and the existence of non-formal training initiatives, while key barriers include inadequate budget allocation, insufficient qualified social workers, limited facilities, weak outcome-based evaluation, low public participation, and low motivation among many children to re-enter school. The article argues that abandoned children's development should not be treated merely as a welfare intervention but as a long-horizon educational management process. Based on the findings, a strengthened educational management strategy is proposed, integrating measurable educational indicators, competency development for social workers, stronger community participation, digitalized case management, and continuous CIPP-based evaluation. Such a strategy is necessary to transform short-term rescue efforts into sustainable human resource development outcomes.
Managing Education and Training for Electronic Medical Records to Improve Medical Service Quality at Gunung Maria General Hospital, Tomohon Rizki R. Najoan; Mozes M. Wullur; Rolles N. Palilingan; Ruth Umbase
International Journal of Information Technology and Education Vol. 5 No. 2S (2026): Special Issue, April 2026
Publisher : JR Education

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

The digitalization of health services has shifted hospital management toward integrated information systems, more accurate data governance, and stronger human resource capability. One of the most consequential changes in this transition is the adoption of Electronic Medical Records (EMR), which replaces fragmented paper-based documentation with digital records that can support continuity of care, patient safety, and managerial efficiency. Yet the success of EMR implementation depends not only on software and infrastructure but also on how hospitals manage education and training for the personnel who use the system. This article develops a journal-style synthesis of a qualitative dissertation on the management of EMR training at Gunung Maria General Hospital, Tomohon, Indonesia. The study focused on four managerial dimensions: planning, organizing, implementation, and evaluation of training. Using a qualitative descriptive design, data were gathered through in-depth interviews, observations, and document analysis involving hospital management, medical personnel, and administrative staff. The findings show that EMR utilization has been constrained by high rates of input error, uneven user competence, inadequate needs analysis, limited continuity in post-training support, and weak supervision and evaluation mechanisms. Although EMR training has been implemented, it has not yet been managed as a systematic competency-based program grounded in continuous improvement. The study further shows that effective EMR utilization requires alignment between training design, organizational support, workflow integration, supervision, and evaluation. Based on these findings, the article proposes an integrated education and training management model that emphasizes competency mapping, adaptive instructional strategies, structured mentoring, ongoing supervision, and periodic evaluation linked to service quality outcomes. The model is expected to reduce human error, improve the accuracy of medical data, strengthen user confidence, and enhance the quality of care. This article contributes to educational management and health information systems literature by demonstrating that digital transformation in hospitals must be supported by a human-centered training system rather than by technology adoption alone.
Healthcare Team Education Management for Improving Antihypertensive Medication Adherence Among Older Adults in Manado City, Indonesia Jimmy F. Rumampuk; Mozes M. Wullur; Rolles N. Palilingan; Viktory N. J. Rotty
International Journal of Information Technology and Education Vol. 5 No. 2S (2026): Special Issue, April 2026
Publisher : JR Education

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

This article analyzes the implementation of stunting management policies in Minahasa Regency. The study uses a descriptive qualitative approach to examine the policy process, the delivery of health services, community empowerment, health-supporting infrastructure, and determinant factors influencing policy performance. Data were obtained through observation, in-depth interviews, and documentation involving local government actors, district and village officials, health workers, community cadres, and community representatives. The analysis follows an interactive qualitative model consisting of data condensation, data display, and conclusion drawing. The findings show that stunting management has been implemented through structured planning, primary-health-service mechanisms based on puskesmas and posyandu, food supplementation, maternal and child health monitoring, community education, and village-level support. However, the implementation has not yet achieved full effectiveness because cross-sector integration remains weak, community participation is uneven, infrastructure and data quality are still limited, and program execution often depends on the capacity and commitment of local implementers. Determinant factors include policy communication, human and financial resources, bureaucratic coordination, implementer disposition, and socio-economic conditions. The article argues that stunting policy implementation requires stronger convergence governance, integrated local data, continuous cadre capacity building, culturally grounded health communication, and a family-centered service model that links specific nutrition interventions with sensitive interventions in sanitation, poverty reduction, education, and local economic empowerment.
Development of an Educational Management Model for Antimicrobial Stewardship among Medical Students Olivia A Waworuntu; Herry Sumual; Mozes M. Wullur; Ruth Umbase
International Journal of Information Technology and Education Vol. 5 No. 3 (2026): June 2026
Publisher : JR Education

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

Antimicrobial resistance is one of the most urgent public health challenges in contemporary medical practice. Medical education has a strategic role in preparing future physicians to use antimicrobials rationally; however, antimicrobial stewardship is often taught in a fragmented manner, with limited integration between theoretical pharmacology, clinical reasoning, simulation, and digital self-directed learning. This article presents the development, feasibility assessment, and effectiveness evaluation of an educational management model for antimicrobial stewardship among medical students. The study applied a research and development approach using the ADDIE framework, consisting of analysis, design, development, implementation, and evaluation, while program evaluation was strengthened through the CIPP logic of context, input, process, and product evaluation. Data were obtained through curriculum review, observation, expert validation, learning trials, pre-test and post-test assessment, clinical simulation observation, and student feedback. The findings show that the developed model integrates problem-based learning, simulation-based learning, project-based learning, OSCE-oriented assessment, and digital online self-directed learning. Expert validation indicated that the module was highly feasible in terms of content, language, technology, and implementation. Implementation involving 40 medical students showed improvement in mean knowledge scores from 64.75 before intervention to 87.75 after intervention, with a significant Wilcoxon test result and very large effect size. Students also demonstrated improved clinical decision-making in indication, antimicrobial selection, dosing, duration, culture interpretation, and professional attitude. The model provides a structured, adaptive, and sustainable educational management framework for strengthening rational antimicrobial use in medical education.