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Hybrid Learning: A Future Solution to Address Indonesia's Digital Education Divide M. Yoda Saputra; Anisa Pertiwi
Journal of Smart Pedagogy and Education Vol. 1 No. 1 (2025): Journal of Smart Pedagogy and Education
Publisher : Yayasan Cerdas Pedia Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.65101/spedu.v1i1.23

Abstract

Indonesia faces a significant digital education divide affecting 68 million students across 17,000 islands, with 67% of teachers experiencing difficulties operating digital devices and 4.4 million children aged 7-18 remaining out of school. The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2022 results revealed that 82% of 15-year-old students cannot understand mathematics at adequate levels, highlighting urgent educational challenges exacerbated by infrastructure disparities where only 15% of rural children have computer access compared to 25% in urban areas. This study employed a systematic literature review methodology examining publications on hybrid learning implementation in Indonesian educational contexts. The analysis focused on three principal themes: digital divide challenges in online education, implementation models and teacher competence in hybrid learning contexts, and impacts on student engagement and learning outcomes. Data synthesis encompassed empirical studies from various Indonesian universities and educational institutions. Well-implemented hybrid learning models achieved remarkable effectiveness rates of 86.44%, significantly outperforming traditional face-to-face (60-75%) and purely online learning modalities. The study demonstrated improvements in student motivation, cognitive abilities, and communication skills across diverse educational contexts. Teacher digital competency improved by 30% within a single academic year, with strong correlation (r = 0.72, p < 0.01) between teacher competency and student engagement indicators. Hybrid learning offers a pragmatic solution to Indonesia's digital education divide through flexible integration of synchronous and asynchronous elements, enabling educational continuity despite infrastructure constraints. Successful implementation requires coordinated policy support, infrastructure investment, and ongoing professional development programs to address both first-level access disparities and second-level digital competency gaps for sustainable educational equity.