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Students' Learning Experiences With LMS Tes Teach In Flipped-Class Instruction Zainuddin, Zamzami; Hermawan, Hardika Dwi; Nuraini, Febritesna; Prayitno, Santo Mugi
Elinvo (Electronics, Informatics, and Vocational Education) Vol. 4 No. 1 (2019): May 2019
Publisher : Department of Electronic and Informatic Engineering Education, Faculty of Engineering, UNY

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (41.465 KB) | DOI: 10.21831/elinvo.v4i1.24405

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to identify the impact of implementing a Learning Management System (LMS) "˜TES Teach' on students' learning experiences in a computer-assisted language learning (CALL) course with flipped-class instruction. For the data collection procedure, an individual interview with ten undergraduate students from an Indonesian college was conducted to demonstrate the potential impacts of the LMS in students' meaningful learning activities. The observation of students' learning activities on the LMS was also recorded to support the interview data. The LMS was adopted to distribute and receive information, thus, the students were able to monitor learning activities, learn the contents before coming to class, evaluate learning process, and interact with others outside of class hours. The finding of this study suggests that the LMS TES Teach is recommended to be performed in teaching CALL for higher education in Indonesia. It offers students' occasion to practice and enhances their listening, writing, reading and vocabulary skills in and out-of-class times. It also prepares students to get ready for classroom activities in term of conversations and speaking skills. The further use of the LMSs should become often-visited sites by students for learning activities and replaced other non-educational favorite websites. Finally, this study recommends that the Ministry of Research, Technology and Higher education or policymakers in Indonesia, including instructors, students, and community members, must be actively involved in developing, supporting, and maintaining a transformed learning culture, from being traditional to a technology-based learning environment.
Beyond School Contact: Two-Way Teacher–Parent Communication and Parental Involvement in Islamic Early Childhood Education Nuraini, Febritesna; Saryono, Djoko; Latif, Abdul; Zain, Azizah Binti; Ishaq, M.; Sudarsono, Bambang; Supriyanto, Agus
Al-Athfal: Jurnal Pendidikan Anak Vol. 11 No. 2 (2025)
Publisher : Islamic Early Childhood Education Study Program, Faculty of Tarbiyah and Education, UIN Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.14421/al-athfal.2025.112-15

Abstract

Purpose – This study examines whether two-way teacher–parent communication is associated with parental involvement in Islamic early childhood education institutions. It addresses the limited empirical attention given to two-way communication as a distinct relational construct within faith-based early childhood education.Design/methods/approach – The study employed a quantitative correlational design. Data were collected from 175 valid parent responses drawn from Islamic early childhood education institutions in Yogyakarta City, most of which were part of the ’Aisyiyah Bustanul Athfal kindergarten network. The data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and simple linear regression.Findings – The results show a statistically significant positive association between two-way teacher–parent communication and parental involvement. higher levels of reciprocal and responsive communication were associated with higher reported parental involvement. The coefficient of determination (R² = 0.294) indicates that two-way teacher–parent communication explained a moderate proportion of the variance in parental involvement, while a substantial proportion remained attributable to factors outside the model.Research implications/limitations – The study contributes to the literature by treating two-way communication as a specific interactional construct rather than a general background dimension of school–family relations. However, the cross -sectional correlational design, reliance on self-reported data, and focus on a single urban context limit causal inference and broader generalizability.Practical implications – The findings highlight the need for early childhood institutions, particularly in culturally embedded and resource-constrained contexts, to shift from one-way information delivery to dialogic, responsive communication. In Islamic early childhood settings, culturally aligned and relational communication practices can strengthen sustained parental engagement through interactive and trust-based partnerships.Originality/value – This study contributes to Global South scholarship by providing empirical evidence from Islamic early childhood education in Indonesia, a context underrepresented in the literature. It advances the field by conceptualizing two-way communication as a distinct dialogic and relational construct, offering a context-sensitive perspective that challenges dominant Western-centric models of family–school partnerships.Paper type Research paper
Designing an Adaptive Curriculum Framework for Nonformal Education in the Era of Artificial Intelligence: A Digital Andragogy Approach Rosyanafi, Rofik; Lestari, Gunarti; Nugroho, Rivo; Krishnandya, Kharizha; Wasil, Mohammad; Nuraini, Febritesna; Villaflor, Edwin Jaimes
Journal of Pedagogy and Education Science Vol 5 No 02 (2026): Article in Press - Journal of Pedagogy and Education Science
Publisher : The Indonesian Institute of Science and Technology Research

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.56741/IISTR.jpes.001619

Abstract

The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) has redefined the dynamics of adult and community learning, calling for curriculum models that combine technological adaptability with human-centered pedagogy. This study designs and validates an Adaptive Curriculum Framework for Nonformal Education (ACF-NE) grounded in digital andragogy principles, AI-based adaptivity, and community contextualization. Employing a Design and Development Research (DDR) approach, data were collected through document analysis, focus group discussions, and expert validation across five community learning centers and two vocational institutions in East Java, Indonesia. The iterative design process produced three core dimensions—(1) learner autonomy and experiential relevance, (2) AI-driven personalization and feedback, and (3) socio-cultural integration of community learning. Quantitative validation involving four experts yielded high consensus scores across relevance (M = 4.68), clarity (M = 4.41), feasibility (M = 4.37), and innovation (M = 4.42). Thematically, results indicate that AI can enhance adult autonomy when positioned as a facilitative partner rather than an instructional replacement. The final ACF-NE model integrates adaptive scaffolding with human mediation, establishing a co-learning ecology that aligns digital personalization with cultural responsiveness. This study contributes theoretically by extending andragogy into the AI era through the construct of contextual adaptivity, and practically by offering a replicable framework for human-centered digital transformation in nonformal education.