cover
Contact Name
Ali Murfi
Contact Email
multiartha.jatmika@gmail.com
Phone
+6281326580276
Journal Mail Official
gerr@myresearch.id
Editorial Address
Karangasem RT. 004 RW. 000 Nglengis Sitimulyo Piyungan, Bantul Yogyakarta Indonesia 55792
Location
Kab. bantul,
Daerah istimewa yogyakarta
INDONESIA
Global Educational Research Review
Published by CV Multiartha Jatmika
ISSN : -     EISSN : 30645093     DOI : https://doi.org/10.71380/GERR
Aims GERR aims to advance the fields of education and religious education by providing a platform for rigorous and innovative research in Integrative Education. While maintaining distinct focuses on education and religious education as separate disciplines, GERR also explores their intersections. Specific aims include: - Investigating the integration of values education in shaping character development, fostering citizenship, and promoting interfaith understanding across diverse educational systems. - Exploring innovative practices and addressing shared challenges to create opportunities for holistic human development, emphasizing harmony between intellectual moral, and social growth through Integrative Education. - Contributing to global educational discourse by examining comparative and cross-cultural approaches to Integrative Education within diverse cultural and spiritual contexts. Scope GERR publishes research under the following thematic areas: 1. Education and Educational Innovation - Curriculum and pedagogical development. - Educational technology and digital transformation. - Policy and institutional reforms in secular education systems. 2. Religious Education and Faith-Based Practices - Faith-based pedagogies and moral education. - Interfaith education initiatives. - The role of religion in shaping educational outcomes and systems. 3. Intersections of Education, Religious Education, and Values Education - The integration of values education in character and citizenship development. - Comparative studies of secular and faith-based educational systems. - The role of values education in promoting interfaith understanding and coexistence in multicultural societies.
Articles 21 Documents
Integrating Problem-Based Learning with Ulul Albab Values to Enhance Cognitive and Character Outcomes in Introductory Accounting: A Mixed-Methods Study Karim Amrullah, Abdul Malik; Kholilah, Kholilah; Wahidmurni, Wahidmurni; Putri, Sheila Febriani
Global Educational Research Review Vol. 2 No. 1 (2025)
Publisher : MyResearch ID Publishing

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.71380/GERR-08-2025-50

Abstract

Purpose –  This study tests whether Problem-Based Learning integrated with Ulul Albab values (PBL-UA) improves cognitive attainment in Introductory Accounting 2 and explicates how character values are internalized across PBL cycles—evidence relevant to Indonesia’s human-capital agenda toward Golden Indonesia 2045. Methods/Design/Approach – Sequential explanatory mixed-methods (QUAN→qual) with a quasi-experimental, non-equivalent control pretest–posttest in two intact classes at UIN Maulana Malik Ibrahim (n = 52; 26/26). The experimental class completed five PBL cycles over eight meetings using MSME rading-company cases; the control received conventional instruction. Cognitive performance came from an authentic accounting-cycle task scored by two independent raters (analytic rubric). Assumptions were checked; an independent-samples t-test examined group differences. Qualitative data (artifacts, reflections, interviews) were analyzed via directed content analysis aligned to the four Ulul Albab pillars and integrated through joint displays.. Findings – The experimental class outperformed the control on the posttest (M = 83.65 vs 76.42; mean difference = 7.23). The t-test indicated a significant advantage for PBL-UA with assumptions satisfied (Shapiro–Wilk p > .05; Levene’s F = 3.415, p = .071). Qualitative evidence showed consistent internalization of discipline, cooperation, ethical accountability in recording “every rupiah,” communication ethics, tolerance, emotion regulation, and reflective decision-making across the five cycles. Originality/Value – Adds comparative evidence in Indonesian accounting education and explicates a value → process → artifact → outcome mechanism linking Ulul Albab to attainment; findings are bounded by non-random class assignment ad online delivery during the pandemic. Practical Implications – Adopt five-cycle PBL with MSME cases, analytic rubrics and staged feedback, just-in-time Excel micro-tutorials (e.g., SUMIF, VLOOKUP), rotating roles with equitable presentations, and simple spreadsheet audit trails to strengthen accountability and accuracy. Keywords Problem-based learning, accounting education, cognitive achievement, ulul albab, mixed-methods. Paper type Research paper

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