INTEGRASI PENDIDIKAN DAN IMPLIKASINYA TERHADAP LEMBAGA PENDIDIKAN DI INDONESIA

Edupedia ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-97
Author(s):  
Moh Kamilus Zaman

Integration has the meaning of merging or assimilating into one unified whole. In Indonesia, the concept of scientific integration has implications for the management of educational institutions. The release of SKB of three Ministers (Department of Education and Culture, Ministry of Home Affairs, and Ministry of Religion Affairs) which sets out the provision of curriculum in madrasah (Islamic school) which balancing between general curriculum and religious curriculum (70%: 30%) is a manifestation of this integration. SMA Nurul Jadid Probolinggo and MAN 3 Malang are able to apply an integrated learning. This is because those schools have facilitated dormitories for students with a series of Islamic-based activities outside learningtimes in kaffah. UIN Malang as the pioneer of establishment of ma’had or student’s dormitorieswhich used culture of education adapted from the culture of the university.UIN Malang and UIN Jakarta prefer to use approach of Imam Al-Ghazali which classify the sciences into fardlu ‘ain and fardlu kifayah by takwil method taken from social sciences. But UIN Jakarta used a paradigm of integration of dialogical science.

Author(s):  
Yu Zhonggen

The 21st century has witnessed vast amounts of research into blended learning since the conception of online learning formed the possibility of blended learning in the early 1990s. The theme of this paper is blended learning in mainstream disciplinary communities. In particular, the paper reports on findings from the last two decades which looked at origination, development and future of blended learning through articles and other research publications. Based on over thirty journal articles indexed in Social Sciences Citation Index and other important databases, coupled with other related publications, this study explored the definition, advantages and problems of blended learning, arriving at the conclusion that more deficits may exist in either sole online or classroom learning compared with blended learning which combines both approaches although there may still be a certain number of disputes over blended learning. Educational and non-educational institutions may be wise to innovate their pedagogy towards a blended mode despite economic costs and other possible losses.


Author(s):  
Mohammed Hassan Bashir

The aim of this paper is to identify the theoretical bases of governance and its importance، to identify the reality of implementing the principles of governance in education in Sudan، and to learn about the most important requirements of applying the principles of governance in education. The researcher used the descriptive analytical descriptive approach in the study by listing and tracking information about governance and its applicability in Sudanese educational institutions. The paper reached a number of results، the most important of which are: The reality of the implementation of the principles of government in education is weak; especially the principle of transparency، participation and accountability is less applicable. "In the light of these results، the researcher recommended a number of recommendations، the direction of officials in the Ministry of Education and the development of the organizational structures of the Department of Education to accommodate the new management trends including governance، and to promote transparency، accountability and participation.  


MADRASAH ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 22
Author(s):  
M. Syahran Jailani

<span><em>This research is intended to look into the existence of Province Acreditation </em><span><em>for School and Islamic School in Jambi through the policies and programs </em><span><em>executed, include the result of acreditation for islamic school at Ministry </em><span><em>of Religious Affairs in Jambi. The data from Jambi Ministry of Religious </em><span><em>Affairs in 2012 showed that from 538 islamic schools which have been </em><span><em>acreditated, ie:(a) 244 Islamic Kindergarten, 169 (7,63%) kindergartens </em><span><em>were acreditated, 75 (28,37%) kindergartens were not acreditated, (b). </em><span><em>263 Islamic Elementary School, 171 (61%) schools were acreditated, 98 </em><span><em>(38,20%) schools were not acreditated, (c) 345 Islamic Junior High School, </em><span><em>158 (44,99 %) schools were acreditated, 187 (55,01%) schools were not </em><span><em>acreditated and (d) 184 Islamic Senior High School, 88 (47,01%) schools</em><br /><span><em>were acreditated and 96 (52,99%) schools were not acreditated. From 1036 </em><span><em>educational institutions, there have been 450 (43,44%) islamic schools </em><span><em>which were acreditated while there were 586 (56,56%) isclamic schools </em><span><em>which were not acreditated. The main problem which happenned was there </em><span><em>were many islamic schools got C in acreditation and even some schools were </em><span><em>not acreditated. It was caused by: (a) socialization, (b) limitted fund, (c) </em><span><em>geographical condition, (d) the low network among islamic schools and (e) </em><span><em>there were many policies which have not been accompanied by commitment </em><span><em>fully.</em><br /><span><strong>Keywords : </strong><span><em>Madrasah/School Acreditation Board, The Quality Of Madrasah Education.</em></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /><br class="Apple-interchange-newline" /></span></span>


2016 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahfud Junaedi

<p><em>Imam Hatip schools have been a crucial and controversial Islamic education in a secular Turkey. The majority of Imam Hatip School students come from families who live and conduct their relations in accordance with Islamic norms and principles. Many conservative, religious-minded parents in rural and small town (in central and eastern Turkey)  sent their children after primary school to an Imam Hatip  High school, because this is the only school type where  they would study Islamic subjects besides the general curriculum and where the teachers  were believed to impart traditional moral values. Many of those parents would, however, wish their children to pursue modern careers and find more prestigious and better paid jobs than that of a modest preacher.</em><em> </em><em>Today Imam Hatip schools do not only produce Imams (leaders of prayer) and hatips (deliver khutba at every Friday sermon), but also designed to cultivate religious sensibilities (dini hassasiyetler) in their students. The schools aim to heighten their students awareness of faith and promote the notion  that religion  should play a substantial role in the life of individuals and society. The most important is that Imam Hatip schools play an important role in Turkey’s pious community  and making the country more Islamic. </em><em></em></p>


Author(s):  
MA Ramón Salcido Moreno

Until now, a statistical study had not been carried out on graduates who have a job within months of having completed their studies at the School of Political and Social Sciences of Ciudad Juarez. There is a diverse literature on the difficulties faced by people who finish university careers in Mexico, generally with a pessimistic approach. Private educational institutions state that almost all of their new professionals get a job, less than a year after finishing their studies. With this work, a first step is taken to later make more extensive and comparative studies with public and private universities on the reality faced by recent graduates. Through a statistical sample for population proportions, respondents were asked if they had a job of more than 30 hours a week, for three different periods, resulting in an average of 22.2 percent with an affirmative answer.


Author(s):  
Baguma Asuman ◽  
Md. Shahadat Hossain Khan ◽  
Che Kum Clement

This article reports on the barriers encountered by teachers and the possible solutions to the integration of web-based learning (WBL) into higher educational institutions in Uganda. A total of 50 teachers in the departments of ICT, management, and social sciences from five different universities were purposively selected. A self-designed questionnaire was adapted to collect participants responses. Both quantitative and qualitative methods were used to analyze data. The findings indicate that teachers had a positive attitude to incorporate WBL into teaching and learning process, but they encountered some difficulties which were identified as slow internet speeds, insufficient web-based tools, lack of technical support, etc. It further identified possible enablers to overcome these difficulties and provides empirical evidence of incorporating new knowledge in the existing literature. It also provides recommendations in terms of overcoming difficulties to enhance and incorporate WBL in teaching and learning contexts of higher education in Uganda particularly and developing countries in general


2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 226-241
Author(s):  
Jordi Planella-Ribera ◽  
Asun Pié-Balaguer ◽  
Eva Patricia Gil-Rodríguez

In this article, we look at educational forms from the point of view of queer theory. We understand educational forms as techno-scientific practices in the sense defined by Donna Haraway (1997, Modest_Witness@Second_Millennium. FemaleMan_Meets_OncoMouse. Routledge). We contemplate the eminently subjugating nature of educational institutions in industrial and post-industrial societies. Our work is based on the introduction of queer theory into the social sciences and its influence on pedagogy, promoting the avoidance of normalising and exclusive subjectivities. We propose a use and understanding of queer that goes beyond the strictly sexual, in order to go as deeply as possible into a critique of bodily abnormality as a form of construction and remission. We also analyse the role that technology plays in building normality and/or making subversions possible, as well as its consequences for bodies and subjectivities in our modernised society.


Author(s):  
V. I. Evdokimov ◽  
V. F. Glukhov

Relevance. To improve the quality of publications while maintaining their growth rate, employees of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of Russia have approved a methodology for assessing the integrated score of publication performance of organizations.Intention. Analysis of the integrated score of publication performance of the leading educational and scientific organizations of the Russian Emergencies Ministry for 10 years (2010–2019).Methodology. The object of the study was the annual indicators of the integrated score of publication performance of the Russian Emercom as calculated by the staff of the Scientific Electronic Library [https://www.elibrary.ru/].Results and Discussion. A low average annual integrated score of publication performance was revealed in the Emercom of Russia. For an educational organization in the Russian Emercom, it amounted to (55.67 ±5.8) points, for a research organization – (29.0 ± 1.5) points (p < 0.01). The average annual integrated score of publication performance for the same period at Omsk State Technical University turned out to be 6 times higher (306.4 ± 19.0) than the average for educational institutions of the Russian EMERCOM (p < 0.001). It turned out that the EMERCOM of Russia had few highly rated publications on computer and information sciences, physical and chemical branches of knowledge, and quite a lot of publications on social sciences. Most likely, the latter are not a priority in the state assignment for research and development of the EMERCOM of Russia. Shown are the ways to increase the integrated score of publication performance of the EMERCOM of Russia organizations.Conclusion. The slogan of researchers “print or die” in modern conditions is becoming less and less relevant. Russian and world science were flooded with insignificant and sometimes false publications. The fractional calculation of the integrated score of publication performance will make the authors think before including anyone in gift co-authorship or creating “fake” affiliations. This methodology will help improve the quality of domestic publications, and printing weak articles will become irrelevant.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document