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OPTIMIZING STUDENT REASONING THROUGH READING LITERACY WITH THE DEVELOPMENT OF E-LKPD IN THE TOURISM CONTEXT Oktarina, Detia Aulia; Alwi, Zahra; Saripudin, Agus
English Review: Journal of English Education Vol. 12 No. 1 (2024)
Publisher : University of Kuningan

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.25134/erjee.v12i1.9380

Abstract

This research aims to develop and evaluate the practicality of interactive Electronic Student Worksheet (E-LKPD) to support increasing students' reasoning competence toward reading literacy in a tourism context via the Blogspot platform. This research is development research that combines qualitative and quantitative approaches. The method used is the Jolly and Bolitho development method. Steps taken include the following: (1) identifying material needs, (2) exploring needs, (3) contextual realization, (4) pedagogical realization, (5) material products, and (6) evaluating material according to objectives. This research involved Indonesian language teachers and 62 seventh-grade students at SMPN 20 Palembang as the research subjects. Data collection methods use interviews, questionnaires, and tests. Qualitative data analysis uses a descriptive approach, while qualitative data is analyzed using Likert scale calculations. The results of distributing the needs analysis questionnaire to students indicated that 60.32% strongly agreed, while 33.44% agreed to develop E-LKPD. Product validation was carried out by three validators, namely content validators, content suitability, and language, with a total validation value of 86.67% (very valid). The product feasibility test scored 89.16% (very practical) in the small group test. The effectiveness test for E-LKPD relied on pretest results, which averaged 61.42, and posttest results, averaging 74.85. There was a significant increase in the 2-tailed results (0.000<0.5). The results indicate that the developed E-LKPD can enhance students' reading literacy skills. 
Emotional Analysis of the Main Character in Leiden by Dwi Nur Rahmawati: Implications for Literature Education in the Merdeka Curriculum Saripudin, Agus; Fikri, Fikri; Gunaika, Raka; Angelia, Tassya
Edukasi Vol 12 No 2 (2025): Edukasi: Jurnal Pendidikan dan Pengajaran | In Progress|
Publisher : Universitas Islam Negeri Raden Fatah Palembang, South Sumatra, Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.19109/ejpp.v12i2.32362

Abstract

This study examines the emotional dynamics of the main character in Dwi Nur Rahmawati's Leiden and analyzes how these emotions can inform literature teaching within the Merdeka Curriculum. Employing a descriptive mixed-methods design, the research integrates qualitative literary psychology analysis with quantitative frequency mapping. Data were collected through systematic reading, identification of emotional expressions, structured recording, and coding of 76 emotional quotations from the novel. Analysis followed Miles, Huberman, and Saldaña's interactive model to classify emotion types, examine narrative contexts, identify patterns, and interpret pedagogical relevance. The findings revealed three significant patterns. First, sadness emerged as the dominant emotion (18.4%), followed by love and fear (14.5% each) and guilt (11.8%), indicating the protagonist's psychological vulnerability characteristic of adolescent development. Second, nonverbal behavior (39.5%) and author narration (35.5%) appeared more frequently than dialogue (25%), demonstrating a "show, don't tell" characterization strategy requiring inferential reading. Third, complex emotions appeared in 10.5% of instances, exclusively through author narration, reflecting psychological nuance demanding higher-order interpretation. These emotional patterns are pedagogically relevant because they mirror adolescents' socioemotional experiences and provide opportunities for developing empathy, emotional literacy, and analytical reading skills. The findings demonstrate that emotional analysis can serve as a foundation for designing character-oriented literature activities aligned with Phase F learning outcomes in the Merdeka Curriculum. The study contributes empirical support for integrating literary psychology into Indonesian literature classrooms through structured emotional mapping and offers practical guidance for teachers seeking to enhance students' character formation and critical comprehension within curriculum frameworks emphasizing competency-based, analytical, and reflective learning.