Maria Sihotang
Pendidikan Bahasa Inggris, Keguruan dan Ilmu Pendidikan, Universitas Katolik Santo Thomas, Medan

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Teachers’ Roles in Implementing the Merdeka Curriculum for Students’ Character Formation: A Qualitative Study at an Elementary School in Medan Rima Purba; Destin Trimartin Ndraha; Maria Sihotang
Jurnal Pendidikan: Media, Strategi, dan Metode VOLUME 02 NO 03 DECEMBER 2025
Publisher : Pustaka Karya Mandiri

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Abstract

The Merdeka Curriculum emphasizes flexible, student-centered, contextual, and character-oriented learning. In elementary education, the success of this curriculum is strongly influenced by teachers’ ability to design meaningful learning, guide students’ behavior, integrate Pancasila values, and adapt learning strategies to students’ needs. This study aims to describe teachers’ roles in implementing the Merdeka Curriculum for students’ character formation at SD Negeri 065013 Medan. This study employed a descriptive qualitative design. Data were collected through observation and interviews with five teachers, supported by classroom observation involving Grade IV students. The data were analyzed thematically through data reduction, categorization, interpretation, and conclusion drawing. The findings show that teachers played several important roles in the implementation of the Merdeka Curriculum, namely as curriculum interpreters, learning facilitators, character models, learning designers, and student development guides. Teachers attempted to strengthen students’ discipline, responsibility, creativity, communication, collaboration, and respect through differentiated learning, classroom habituation, group work, worship routines, and Pancasila Student Profile-based activities. However, several challenges were found, including limited teacher readiness, low digital literacy, limited learning facilities, administrative workload, parental misunderstanding, and students’ difficulty in adapting to independent learning. The study concludes that the teacher’s role remains central in transforming the flexibility of the Merdeka Curriculum into meaningful classroom practice and character development.
Non-Conducive Classroom Environments and Students’ Learning-Related Traumatic Responses: A Qualitative Study among Grade VIII Students Sofiya Barus; Suzette Hating; Sifra Manalu; Asta Sembiring; Yannece Sihombing; Maria Sihotang
Jurnal Pendidikan: Media, Strategi, dan Metode VOLUME 02 NO 03 DECEMBER 2025
Publisher : Pustaka Karya Mandiri

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Abstract

A classroom environment is not only a physical space for instruction but also a psychological and social setting that shapes students’ learning experiences. When the classroom is noisy, crowded, poorly ventilated, emotionally unsafe, or marked by negative teacher and peer interaction, students may experience anxiety, avoidance, low motivation, and learning-related traumatic responses. This study aims to analyze how a non-conducive classroom environment contributes to students’ learning-related traumatic responses among Grade VIII students. This study employed a descriptive qualitative design. Data were collected through classroom observation, in-depth interview, and field notes. The findings show that students perceived the classroom as non-conducive when it was noisy, physically uncomfortable, poorly ventilated, poorly organized, and insufficiently managed by the teacher. Students also reported emotional pressure caused by authoritarian teacher behavior, repeated peer ridicule, lack of emotional support, and limited student voice in classroom decision-making. These conditions were associated with fear of participation, reluctance to ask questions, anxiety before certain lessons, physical complaints such as headache or stomach discomfort, withdrawal from peer interaction, declining motivation, and reduced academic engagement. The study concludes that learning-related traumatic responses are shaped by the interaction of physical, social, and emotional classroom factors. Therefore, schools should develop safer, more supportive, and trauma-informed classroom environments through positive teacher-student relationships, anti-bullying prevention, better classroom management, student counseling, and improvement of physical classroom conditions.