Efektivitas Strategi Ta’bir Mushawwar dalam Pembelajaran Bahasa Arab di Madrasah Ibtidaiyah

  • Nuur Mahmudah Universitas Islam Negeri Antasari Banjarmasin
  • Khairunnisa Universitas Islam Negeri Antasari Banjarmasin
Keywords: Arabic; speaking skill; ta’bir mushawwar

Abstract

Speaking proficiency is one of the main skills in Arabic language learning, but fourth grade students of MI TPI Keramat face difficulties in assembling mufradat and practicing active conversation, mainly due to the lack of varied learning strategies. This study aims to analyze the effectiveness of the ta'bir mushawwar strategy, which uses picture as a media to facilitate students in constructing sentences and telling stories, in improving Arabic speaking skills. With a quantitative approach and pre-experiment design, this study involved 18 students of class IV-C. Data were collected through tests, observations, and interviews, then analyzed descriptively and N-Gain test. The posttest average was 83.06 (very good category) with 88.9% completeness, and the N-Gain score was 0.6398 which showed effectiveness in the medium category. The ta'bir mushawwar strategy offers a solution in the form of a visual and hands-on learning approach that can significantly improve students' speaking skills and make learning more interesting and interactive.

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Current File : /bin/debconf
#!/usr/bin/perl -w

=head1 NAME

debconf - run a debconf-using program

=cut

=head1 SYNOPSIS

 debconf [options] command [args]

=head1 DESCRIPTION

Debconf is a configuration system for Debian packages. For a debconf
overview and documentation for sysadmins, see L<debconf(7)> (in the
debconf-doc package).

The B<debconf> program runs a program under debconf's control, setting it up
to talk with debconf on stdio. The program's output is expected to be debconf
protocol commands, and it is expected to read result codes on stdin. See
L<debconf-devel(7)> for details about the debconf protocol.

The command to be run under debconf must be specified in a way that will
let your PATH find it.

This command is not the usual way that debconf is used. It's more typical
for debconf to be used via L<dpkg-preconfigure(8)> or L<dpkg-reconfigure(8)>.

=head1 OPTIONS

=over 4

=item B<-o>I<package>, B<--owner=>I<package>

Tell debconf what package the command it is running is a part of. This is
necessary to get ownership of registered questions right, and to support
unregister and purge commands properly.

=item B<-f>I<type>, B<--frontend=>I<type>

Select the frontend to use.

=item B<-p>I<value>, B<--priority=>I<value>

Specify the minimum priority of question that will be displayed.

=item B<--terse>

Enables terse output mode. This affects only some frontends.

=back

=head1 EXAMPLES

To debug a shell script that uses debconf, you might use:

 DEBCONF_DEBUG=developer debconf my-shell-prog

Or, you might use this:

 debconf --frontend=readline sh -x my-shell-prog

=head1 SEE ALSO

L<debconf-devel(7)>, L<debconf(7)>

=cut

use strict;
use Debconf::Db;
use Debconf::AutoSelect qw(:all);
use Debconf::Gettext;
use Debconf::Config;

# Find the end of the options for this command, and the beginning of the
# command to run, which may have arguments. Break those arguments out.
my (@argv, @command);
for (my $x=0; $x <= $#ARGV; $x++) {
	if ($ARGV[$x] =~ /^-(o|f|p|-(owner|frontend|priority))$/) {
		push @argv, $ARGV[$x++];
		push @argv, $ARGV[$x] if defined $ARGV[$x]; # skip option argument
		next;
	}
	elsif ($ARGV[$x] =~ /^-/) {
		push @argv, $ARGV[$x];
	}
	else {
		# end of arguments, start of command
		@command=@ARGV[$x..$#ARGV];
		last;
	}
}
@ARGV=@argv;
my $usage = gettext("Usage: debconf [options] command [args]");
my $owner='';
Debconf::Config->getopt($usage.gettext(qq{
  -o,  --owner=package		Set the package that owns the command.}),
        "o|owner=s"		=> \$owner,
);
die "$usage\n" unless @command;

Debconf::Db->load;
my $frontend=make_frontend();
my $confmodule=make_confmodule(@command);
$confmodule->owner($owner) if length $owner;

1 while ($confmodule->communicate);

my $code=$confmodule->exitcode;
$frontend->shutdown;
$confmodule->finish;
Debconf::Db->save;
exit $code;

=head1 AUTHOR

Joey Hess <joeyh@debian.org>

=cut

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