Vera Angliani Juwita
Universitas Jenderal Achmad Yani

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KETERLIBATAN AYAH DALAM PENGASUHAN PADA REMAJA AKHIR DI KELUARGA BESAR ANGKATAN DARAT Vera Angliani Juwita; Prasetyo Adi Nugroho; Afini Freudwi Asri
Jurnal Psikologi Poseidon Volume 2 Nomor 1
Publisher : Fakultas Psikologi Universitas Hang Tuah

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.30649/jpp.v2i1.28

Abstract

This study aims to explain the role of father, who works as a soldier, in the care of his children who are in their late adolescence. Based on five components composing father involvement in parenting: positive engangement activities, warmth and responsiveness, control, indirect care, and process responsibility, then measurements were taken on 112 college students. This descriptive quantitative research carried out data processing using descriptive and inferential statistical analysis, especially for non-parametric statistics: Spearman correlation, Mann-Whitney Uand Kruskal-Wallis. The results showed that 50% of respondents rated the involvement of fathers in parenting as being moderate, 38% categorized high and 12% categorized as low. The highest component that composes father involvement is control.
The Relationship between The Quality of Performing Obligatory Prayers and Student Behavior in Daily Life Juwita, Vera Angliani; Purnama, Chandra Yudistira
Jurnal Psikologi Islam dan Budaya Vol 8 No 2 (2025): JPIB : Jurnal Psikologi Islam dan Budaya
Publisher : Faculty of Psychology, UIN Sunan Gunung Djati, Bandung Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.15575/jpib.v8i2.40237

Abstract

Prayer (salat) is a mandatory act of worship for Muslims and plays a key role in shaping daily behavior. This exploratory study aims to examine the relationship between the quality of obligatory prayer, measured through discipline and devotion, and college student behavior. A quantitative survey was conducted with 159 respondents (mean age = 19.7 years), selected using accidental sampling. Data were collected via printed questionnaires. The KMO value for the prayer quality scale was 0.505 (sig. 0.00), with component matrix values ranging from 0.573 to 0.809, and reliability α = 0.665. Results showed significant correlations ( = 0.001–0.018) between the quality of obligatory prayer and various behavioral aspects: self-attitude, relationships with parents, academic behavior, self-control, and social behavior. Parental reminders remain crucial, while higher education level of parents and reduced supervision tend to lower prayer quality. These findings highlight that the quality of obligatory prayer can strengthen self-management and adaptive behavior in college students.