cover
Contact Name
Paul Arjanto
Contact Email
paul.arjanto@gmail.com
Phone
+628114738333
Journal Mail Official
educatione@iiesecore.com
Editorial Address
CV. TOTUS TUUS Jl. Mangga Dua, Desa Waenono, Kec. Namrole, Kab. Buru Selatan, Maluku 97544
Location
Kab. buru selatan,
Maluku
INDONESIA
EDUCATIONE: Journal of Education Research and Review
Published by CV Totus Tuus
ISSN : -     EISSN : 29862183     DOI : https://doi.org/10.59397/edu.v2i1
Core Subject : Education, Social,
EDUCATIONE: Journal of Education Research and Review publishes critical, integrative reviews of research literature bearing on education. Such reviews should include conceptualizations, interpretations, and syntheses of literature and scholarly work in a field broadly relevant to education and educational research. EDUCATIONE: Journal of Education Research and Review encourages the submission of research relevant to education from any discipline, such as reviews of research in psychology, sociology, history, philosophy, political science, economics, computer science, statistics, anthropology, and biology, provided that the review bears on educational issues. EDUCATIONE: Journal of Education Research and Review does not publish original empirical research unless it is incorporated in a broader integrative review. EDUCATIONE: Journal of Education Research and Review will occasionally publish solicited, but carefully refereed, analytic reviews of special topics, particularly from disciplines infrequently represented.
Articles 48 Documents
Search results for , issue "Volume 3, Issue 2, July 2025" : 48 Documents clear
RETHINKING URBAN POVERTY: THE EDUCATIONAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL DIMENSIONS OF BEGGING Dinillah, Pangeran; Effendi, Nursyirwan; Delfi, Maskota
EDUCATIONE Volume 3, Issue 2, July 2025
Publisher : CV. TOTUS TUUS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59397/edu.v3i2.118

Abstract

Urban beggary in Indonesian cities such as Pekanbaru persists as a complex social issue driven by intertwined economic, cultural, and structural factors. Rapid urbanization and economic growth have failed to alleviate deep-rooted social inequalities, resulting in a visible increase in street beggars despite government interventions. This study aims to explore the underlying factors contributing to the persistence of urban begging in Pekanbaru, understand beggars’ lived experiences, evaluate policy effectiveness, and identify barriers to sustainable solutions. Employing a qualitative phenomenological approach, data were gathered through purposive and snowball sampling, in-depth interviews, observation, and documentation in major begging hotspots across Pekanbaru. The findings reveal a heterogeneous population of beggars, including children, adults, and the elderly, often trapped in cycles of poverty, low education, and intergenerational transmission. While economic deprivation is a significant driver, agency, adaptation, and “innovative” strategies—such as performative begging—were also observed. The study highlights the limited success of punitive or charitable policies, underscoring the need for holistic, participatory interventions that address both structural constraints and socio-cultural stigmas. In conclusion, urban beggary in Pekanbaru is shaped by a complex interplay of poverty, social exclusion, and adaptive survival strategies. The research is beneficial for policymakers and social practitioners seeking context-sensitive, multi-dimensional solutions. Future studies should examine the dynamics of organized begging syndicates and evaluate long-term impacts of inclusive social programs.
DO PRINCIPALS’ LEADERSHIP STYLES MATTER? LINKS TO TEACHERS’ WORK MOTIVATION UNDER JOB STRESS Suailo, Amir; Kempa, Rudolf; Rumfot, Sumarni
EDUCATIONE Volume 3, Issue 2, July 2025
Publisher : CV. TOTUS TUUS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59397/edu.v3i2.126

Abstract

Principal leadership is the second-strongest in-school influence on learning after classroom teaching and shapes teachers’ resources, stress, and motivation; in Indonesia’s island contexts these leadership routines are pivotal. To estimate the associations of principal leadership practices and teacher work stress with teachers’ work motivation in SD Gugus 3, Kecamatan Nusaniwe (Ambon). Quantitative, cross-sectional survey of n = 87 teachers, proportionate stratified sampling; validated scales for learning-centered leadership, teacher stress, and work motivation (Likert 0–4); assumption checks (P–P plot, VIF); Pearson correlations and multiple regression with α = .05. The model was significant (R² = 0.241; F(2,84) ≈ 13.34, p < .001). Leadership showed a positive, significant effect on motivation (b = 0.287, p < .05), while stress had a near-zero, non-significant partial effect (b = 0.005). Diagnostics indicated no harmful multicollinearity and approximately normal, homoscedastic residuals. Learning-centered leadership—clear academic goals, observation-feedback, and principals’ participation in teacher learning—is the most actionable lever to strengthen teacher motivation; stress likely operates indirectly via job demands/resources. Provides practice-ready guidance for island schools: expand teachers’ job resources (autonomy, collaboration, feedback) and streamline demands (paperwork, behavior routines) through principal routines. Employ longitudinal or quasi-experimental designs, incorporate multi-source measures (e.g., observation-based leadership, objective workload), test JD-R mediation and motivation moderation, and link teacher motivation changes to student outcomes.
EDUCATIONAL IMPLICATIONS OF SOCIAL MEDIA INTENSITY ON UNIVERSITY STUDENTS’ PSYCHOLOGICAL WELL-BEING: A CORRELATIONAL STUDY Agustin, Maria Retno; Tyas, Prias Hayu Purbaning
EDUCATIONE Volume 3, Issue 2, July 2025
Publisher : CV. TOTUS TUUS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59397/edu.v3i2.133

Abstract

University students in Indonesia are experiencing emerging adulthood, a period marked by identity exploration, instability, and heightened sensitivity to social feedback, making psychological well-being (PWB) a critical resource for adaptive functioning. Social media has become central to students’ academic coordination, social connection, and identity work, yet its effects on well-being remain debated internationally and locally. This study aimed to examine the relationship between social media usage intensity and PWB among undergraduate students of the Faculty of Teacher Training and Education (FKIP), Universitas Sanata Dharma, cohort 2021. A quantitative correlational design was employed, using proportionally distributed samples (N = 278) from the faculty. Social media intensity was operationalized across four dimensions—attention, immersion, duration, and frequency—while PWB was assessed using Ryff’s six dimensions. Data were collected through validated Likert-scale questionnaires (reliability: α = 0.993 for intensity; α = 0.907 for PWB) and analyzed using Spearman’s rho correlation. Results showed that most students reported high to very high intensity (73.7%) and high to very high PWB (66.2%). A small but significant negative correlation emerged between intensity and PWB (ρ = –0.134, p = .026), indicating that heavier use is modestly associated with lower well-being. The study concludes that while social media engagement is pervasive, its negative impact on PWB is minimal at the cohort level, suggesting that individual usage patterns and regulatory skills moderate outcomes. Findings are beneficial for guiding digital literacy programs, well-being modules, and nuanced policies focusing on purposeful, active engagement. Future research should employ longitudinal or experimental designs and differentiate between active and passive use.
THE ROLE OF FAMILY SUPPORT IN ENHANCING PSYCHOLOGICAL WELL-BEING AMONG FINAL-YEAR EDUCATION STUDENTS Pratiwi, Fransiska Citra; Tyas, Prias Hayu Purbaning
EDUCATIONE Volume 3, Issue 2, July 2025
Publisher : CV. TOTUS TUUS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59397/edu.v3i2.134

Abstract

Final-year undergraduates face intense academic pressures, supervisory dynamics, and career uncertainty that can erode psychological well-being (PWB), while family support often serves as a primary resource in collectivist contexts. Objective: to assess the association between family support (emotional, informational, instrumental, appraisal) and Ryff-based PWB among final-year students. Quantitative correlational design at FKIP–Sanata Dharma University; sample n = 278 (Cohort 2021); 42-item family support scale (α = 0.969) and 39-item PWB scale (α = 0.918) using a 4-point Likert format; two-tailed Spearman’s ρ employed due to non-normality. Results: a strong positive association emerged between family support and PWB (ρ = 0.782; p < .001); family support levels were predominantly High/Very High (71.6%), as was PWB (70.5%), with only a small minority in lower categories. Higher perceived family support corresponds to better eudaimonic functioning (self-acceptance, autonomy, environmental mastery, positive relations, purpose in life, personal growth) during the thesis phase. Findings guide student services to screen for low family support and provide compensatory scaffolds (peer mentoring, writing/financial clinics) alongside autonomy-supportive family psychoeducation; at the policy level, they support enhancing advising capacity and structured family touchpoints at thesis milestones. Suggestions: future longitudinal, multivariate studies should test mediators (resilience, self-efficacy) and moderators (gender, SES, living arrangement), and differentiate support quality (autonomy support vs. control) in relation to specific PWB dimensions.
PHILOSOPHY IN MOTION: HARNESSING JAIPONG DANCE FOR SELF-CONFIDENCE DEVELOPMENT Nasywa, Luthfiyyah Jihan; Isriyah, Mudafiatun; Rahmawati, Weni Kurnia
EDUCATIONE Volume 3, Issue 2, July 2025
Publisher : CV. TOTUS TUUS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59397/edu.v3i2.139

Abstract

This study addresses the persistent problem of adolescent self-doubt in school settings and the need for culturally responsive, evidence-informed interventions; in Indonesia, the values embedded in Jaipong dance offer a locally meaningful pathway to nurture confidence and courage. The objective was to design, validate, and pilot a counseling–learning module grounded in Jaipong philosophical values to reduce self-doubt among Grade-9 boarding students at SMP ADH DHUHA Jember. Using an R&D framework with the ADDIE model, we conducted needs analysis, blueprinting, iterative development, expert validation (content, language, design, practitioner usability; 5-point scale), and a small pre–post pilot with total sampling of the cohort. Data sources included observations, semi-structured interviews, student questionnaires (Likert 1–5), and expert rating sheets; analyses comprised percentage feasibility (Akbar–Sriwiyana thresholds), Aiken’s V/CVI for content validity, Cronbach’s alpha for reliability, paired t-tests/Wilcoxon (effect sizes), and thematic analysis with triangulation and member checking. Experts judged the module feasible to very feasible, reliability indices were acceptable, and validity indices met conventional cutoffs; the pilot suggested a downward trend in self-doubt and positive acceptability, while acknowledging small-sample limitations. We conclude that the module is context-appropriate, culturally resonant, and preliminarily effective, warranting a larger controlled evaluation. Practically, the study delivers a replicable procedure for schools to co-develop arts-informed counseling modules. Future work should expand sample size, include control groups, extend follow-up, and test mediators/moderators (e.g., confidence, courage, engagement).
CULTURAL EDUCATION AS A SOLUTION TO IDENTITY CRISIS: DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF JARAN BODHAG-BASED LEARNING MODULES Salia, Rizqi Nur; Isriyah, Mudafiatun; Rahmawati, Weni Kurnia
EDUCATIONE Volume 3, Issue 2, July 2025
Publisher : CV. TOTUS TUUS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59397/edu.v3i2.140

Abstract

Identity confusion among university-age students is linked to anxiety, motivational decline, and reduced academic responsibility. In pesantren contexts, mahasantri must reconcile academic rigor with spiritual–communal norms, making culturally grounded interventions necessary. Objective: To develop and validate a counselor-ready module that uses the East Javanese folk performance Jaran Bodhag to strengthen identity clarification (discipline, resilience, simplicity, responsibility) among mahasantri at PPA Ibnu Katsir Putri, Jember. Methods: A Research & Development design following ADDIE guided needs analysis, co-design, expert content validation (CVI/Aiken’s V framework), prototype refinement, and a small-scale field tryout. Participants were 25 female mahasantri selected purposively. Data sources included expert ratings, fidelity checklists, learner acceptability questionnaires, and brief reflections. Results: Expert appraisal yielded an overall validity score of 80%, classifying the product as “valid/feasible with minor revision.” The tryout showed high acceptability and contextual fit; fidelity logs indicated deliverability within regular guidance sessions. Priority revisions were to (a) sharpen the service-plan sequencing and (b) add a concise glossary. Conclusion: A culturally grounded, arts-integrated module is feasible and acceptable for addressing identity-crisis indicators among mahasantri and is ready for broader piloting. Usefulness: The product offers a practical, counselor-facing package aligned with school guidance routines, enhancing cultural resonance and implementation fidelity. Suggestions: Future studies should employ multi-expert CVI/CR procedures, report item-level indices, use validated pre–post measures with comparator groups, document implementation fidelity systematically, and examine mediators (e.g., self-efficacy) across diverse pesantren settings.
WAYANG KRUCIL FOR CHARACTER BUILDING: A CULTURE-BASED APPROACH TO SEXUAL RISK PREVENTION AMONG HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS Abdan, Ita Hamidah; Isriyah, Mudafiatun; Rahmawati, Weni Kurnia
EDUCATIONE Volume 3, Issue 2, July 2025
Publisher : CV. TOTUS TUUS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59397/edu.v3i2.141

Abstract

Risky sexual behavior among adolescents remains a persistent public-health and educational concern, often driven by uneven sexuality education, peer/media pressures, and limited self-regulation. Indonesia’s cultural heritage offers a context-sensitive prevention pathway. To design, validate, and field-test a counselor-ready school module that integrates Wayang Krucil values to prevent risky sexual behavior among SMK students in an Islamic school context. Using a Research & Development approach operationalized through ADDIE, the study was conducted at SMKIT Ibnu Katsir Jember (population = 37). A purposive limited try-out involved Grade 12 students (n = 11). Data sources included observations, stakeholder interviews, expert validator ratings (content, design, language, practitioner usability), feasibility/acceptability checklists, and brief student reflections. Quantitative summaries (Aiken’s V/CVI, descriptive statistics) informed revisions; qualitative data underwent reflexive thematic analysis. Expert review yielded an overall content-validity judgment of 80% (valid with minor revisions). Try-out evidence indicated high acceptability, perceived relevance, and clear deliverability under counselor facilitation. Key improvement cues were sharper, step-by-step session scripts and a concise glossary to reduce terminological load. The module is feasible, contextually resonant, and ready for broader piloting, while claims about effectiveness remain preliminary. Provides a culturally grounded, counselor-deployable package that aligns moral narratives with sexual-health learning goals, offering a replicable ADDIE pathway for schools. Future studies should employ larger, multi-site samples; multiple expert validators with item-level indices; standardized pre–post measures (knowledge, norms, self-efficacy, intentions/behavior); and longer follow-up or controlled designs.
GUIDANCE AND COUNSELING SERVICES IN THE DIGITAL AGE: ENHANCING ADOLESCENTS’ SPIRITUAL AWARENESS THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA Novyani, Trisna Cita Eka; Sutoyo, Anwar; Muslikah
EDUCATIONE Volume 3, Issue 2, July 2025
Publisher : CV. TOTUS TUUS

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.59397/edu.v3i2.144

Abstract

Adolescents are in a critical phase of personal and spiritual development, yet their increasing exposure to social media trends often creates challenges such as reduced self-awareness, weakened moral grounding, and decreased spiritual sensitivity. This research aims to explore the role of Guidance and Counseling (BK) services in enhancing adolescents’ spiritual awareness through the utilization of social media platforms. Employing a qualitative approach with the Systematic Literature Review (SLR) method, the study synthesizes findings from various peer-reviewed articles published between 2015–2024 that address the intersection of counseling, spiritual growth, and digital media. The results reveal that BK services conducted through social media enable counselors to deliver spiritual education, foster reflective group discussions, and provide personalized online counseling while simultaneously disseminating inspirational content. These practices have been shown to promote adolescents’ ability to manage stress, recognize the impact of online behavior, and internalize spiritual values. The findings also emphasize the significance of BK teachers adopting holistic and psychologically grounded approaches in addressing spiritual challenges in digital contexts. The study concludes that integrating BK services with social media can effectively strengthen spiritual awareness among adolescents when supported by appropriate supervision and structured program design. This research contributes practical insights for educational institutions in optimizing digital platforms for character and spiritual development. Future research should focus on testing specific BK models that integrate spirituality and digital literacy across diverse educational settings.