Exploring Materials Development of English Curricula in Indonesia:
A Content Analysis Study
Ratna Sari Dewi
1
, Desi Nahartini
1
, Dede Puji Setiono
1
and Imam Subchi
1
1
UIN Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta, Indonesia
Keywords: Curriculum; Material Development; 2013 Curriculum.
Abstract: Curriculum implementation is based on the learners’ potential, development, and condition to master useful
competency. Learners must have quality educational services and opportunity to freely, dynamically, and
comfortably express themselves. With these basic principles of curriculum implementation, teachers are
demanded to have the know-how to teach. Unfortunately, when Indonesian English teachers teach their
students,they mostly rely on using available textbooks. However, such learning materials which are
ideallysuitable for the needs ofthe students are not always available. This situation should not discourage
teachers as far as they have the objectives of the teaching. To know what English teachers should teach,
teachers have to explore the materials development intended in curriculum. This study aims to know: 1)
how English materials development is constructed within the latest curriculum in Indonesia,how materials
of English subject in senior high school are developed in K13 in senior high school are in the two recent
curriculums. This research employed a qualitative approach by using content analysis method. The data
obtained through questionnaire, document analysis, and observation. This research’s findings showed that
the development of ELT Material Development in Indonesia from 2013 Curriculum is not followed by the
changing of approaches used by teacher in classroom. Teachers tend to teach more grammar and structure
separately and explicitly out of their communicative competence. Teachers’ habitual and their previous
experiences influence the way of their teaching. Therefore, the government’s policy to certify teacher is
very crucial in developing ELT syllabus and further for providing ‘effective teaching’ as part of curriculum
development.
1 INTRODUCTION
Curriculum serves as the substance that gives the
soul to learning process. Curriculum should be
primarily based on the consideration of promoting
learners’ interest in identifying and developing their
full potential. The term curriculum is used here to
refer to the overall plan or design for a subject and
how the content for a Subject is transformed into a
blueprint for teaching and learning which enables
the desired learning outcomes to be achieved
(Richard, 2013; Sugiharto, 2013).
Since the planning of the curriculum should be
set based on the students’ need, the changing of the
curriculum as periodically is a must from era to era.
A number of principles in curriculum design cannot
be neglected (Johnson, 1989; Brown, 1995).Then,
materials of the instruction should follow the
curriculum as it is the most easily noticed as the
mark of the changing (Anderson et al, 2010)
In the history of Indonesia's education, national
education curriculum has experienced many
changes, namely in the years 1947, 1952, 1964,
1968, 1975, 1984, 1994, 2004, 2006 and the latest is
2013. In ten years ago in Indonesia there were
several factors which led to the movement for a
competency-based and decentralized curriculum.
The first factor is that it has something to do with
the implementation of regional autonomy around the
end of 1990. The curriculum which has been
formally made by the government is still considered
to have many weaknesses caused by the treatment of
students who are considered the same throughout
Indonesia although religion, culture, language and
potential of individuals are different (Sanjaya, 2005;
Suderadjat, 2004; Us & Harmi, 2011; Utomo, 2005).
The second factor is that in the curriculum field
most of the national and international results are
considered bad. For example, Quoted from (Sanjaya,
2010) about the World Bank it was explained that
Dewi, R., Nahartini, D., Setiono, D. and Subchi, I.
Exploring Materials Development of English Curricula in Indonesia: A Content Analysis Study.
DOI: 10.5220/0009926813031310
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Recent Innovations (ICRI 2018), pages 1303-1310
ISBN: 978-989-758-458-9
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
1303
based on the survey, for four years student reading
skills were the lowest compared to all Asian
countries. The unsettled integrated curriculum in
Indonesia also became the issues.
Considering the needs and the demands on the
English material in every changing of the
curriculum, English material instruction logically
also should be developed (Brown 1995).
Unfortunately, the changing of curriculum in
Indonesia let say the two latest curriculums; school
based curriculum 2006/ KTSP and
curriculum 2013/ K13 didn’t clearly tell about
the material development of English Subject.
1.1 Curriculum 2013
Curriculum 2013 was officially launched on July
15, 2013 in ministry of Education and Culture.
While, in Ministry of Religion it was begun in July
2014. Basically the curriculum in 2013 is similar to
the former curriculum, curriculum 2006 or
Kurikulum Tingkat Satuan Pendidikan (KTSP), with
some differences. There is a new definition of
curriculum content applied for the 2013 Curriculum
such as Kompetensi Dasar (basic competencies) and
Kompetensi Inti (core competencies). In addition,
the knowledge utilization of KI is from the new
taxonomy of educational objective developed by
Marzano and (Kendall, 2007).
In terms of the process dimension (the design of
learning process in a curriculum), Curriculum 2013
advocates student active learning with the scientific
approach model. The model has five activities which
should be developed in the learning-teaching
process; observing, questioning,
exploring/experimenting, analyzing, and
communicating.
Each of these activities is considered as a
competency and, therefore,
it should be planned and assessed.Regarding to
the assessment, the 2013 Curriculum advocates the
use of1 - 4 to score the students works and transform
these scores to A, B, C, and D replacing the very
long tradition 1-10 scale.
1.2 Material Development
Materials development is both a field of study
and a practical undertaking. As a field it studies the
principles and procedures of the design,
implementation and evaluation of language teaching
materials’ (Tomlinson 2001: 66).
In the notion of curriculum design and material
development Nunan (2001), proposed six principles
of material design; first, English language material
should be contextualized clearly to the curriculum
they serve, second, English language materials
should be authentic in terms of text and task, third,
English language material should stimulate
interaction, fourth, English language material should
allow learners to focus on formal aspect of language.
Fifth, English language material should encourage
learners to develop learning skill and skills in
learning, and sixth, English language material
should encourage learners to apply their developing
language skills to the world beyond the classroom.
As a practical undertaking it refers to anything
which is done by writers, teachers or learners to
provide sources of language input, to exploit those
sources in ways which maximize the likelihood of
intake and to stimulate purposeful output: in other
words the supplying of information about and/or
experience of the language in ways designed to
promote language learning.
Ideally the ‘two aspects of materials
development are interactive in that the theoretical
studies inform and are informed by the development
and use of classroom materials’. In developing
materials for any aspect of language learning,
whether it be a skill- based course in listening,
speaking, reading or writing or an integrated-skills
basic series, the writer’s understanding of language
and language use will have a major impact on
material’s design, since it will play a role in
determining the goals the writer sets for the
materials, the focus of the materials themselves and
the activities within them (Richard, 2005).
1.3 Material Development based on
Curriculum 2013
In Curriculum 2013, the government then sets
the Graduate Competency Standards (SKL) through
Permendiknas Number 54 Year 2013. The Graduate
Competency Standards (SKL) is a criteria of
graduate qualification that includes attitude,
knowledge, and skills. Then SKL is translated into
the form of Core Competence (KI), then translated
again into the form of Basic Competence (KD). The
required KIs and KDs are described in the following
paragraphs (Permendikbud No.60 / 2014).
Grounded on the background above, a set of
research questions guides the current study:
1. How the teachers of senior high school
within Curriculum 2013 construct materials
development?
2. How is the class performance in using the
material development in both curricula?
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KTSP (Kurikulum Tingkat Satuan Pendidikan)
or School-Based Curriculum (SBC) is an operational
educational programs that is planned and actualized
at each instructive organization (school). In light of
the Minister of National Education Regulation
(Permendiknas) number multi year 2006, there are
various parts canvassed in School-Based Curriculum
(KTSP), for example, first, the goals of instruction
organization; second, the structure and substance of
School-Based Curriculum (KTSP); and (3)
scholastic logbook. (Hartoyo, 2011) refers to that
essentially the 2006 educational programs (KTSP) is
produced from standard of substance by schools
dependent on their specific situation and possibility.
Consequently, each school has an alternate route in
performing KTSP. The KTSP of one school ought
not be equivalent to different schools regardless of
whether it has a similar report program in light of
the fact that each school has distinctive qualities. In
spite of the fact that KTSP shifts among one and
different schools, government gives a few controls
expressed in Governmental Regulation (PP) No.19,
2005 concerning National Standard of Education
(SNP) on May 16, 2005 for example, standard of
substance and standard of ability of alumni
(Hartoyo, 2011). In KTSP, when building up their
schedule, instructors should initially recognize the
normal abilities gave in the Curriculum Policies
archive. Educators at that point decide the substance
of each branch of knowledge, instructional
strategies, sort of appraisal, learning markers and
materials that will offer understudies the chance to
meet the normal capabilities (BSNP, 2006).
Instructional techniques picked by educators are
prescribed to be understudy focus and include
different dynamic learning strategies (BSNP, 2006).
Competency-based educational programs
(KTSP) in the Indonesian setting seems, by all
accounts, to be characterized extensively, as the
Curriculum Policies and Curriculum Guidelines
propose, by expected skills grasping three learning
spaces (BSNP, 2006). These three domains,
cognitive, affective and psychomotor, are drawn
from Blooms Taxonomy (Bloom, 1956). The
cognitive domain is concerned with intellectual
skills, being divided into six levels of complexity,
moving from the lowest order of thinking to the
highest. These are knowledge, comprehension,
application, analysis, synthesis and evaluation.
Knowledge concerns remembering of previously
learned material and is described by using
operational verbs which are measurable such as
memorise, recall or name. Comprehension deals
with the ability to demonstrate understanding of
facts and ideas. Application refers to the ability to
use information and materials to solve problems and
to respond to concrete situations. Analysis involves
identifying and analysing patterns, organising ideas
and recognising trends, while synthesis requires the
learner to use existing concepts to create new ideas,
designs and inventions. Finally, evaluation is
characterised by comparison and evaluation of ideas.
The affective domain deals with attitudes,
motivation, willingness to participate, and valuing of
what is being learned. There are five levels in the
affective domain moving through the lowest order
processes to the highest. They are receiving,
responding, valuing, organising and characterising.
Receiving relates to the students willingness to
listen or to pay attention. Responding refers to
students active participation in the learning process.
Valuing is concerned with the values students attach
to objects, ideas or experiences and their acceptance
or rejection of particular attitudes or actions.
Organising refers to students willingness to
synthesise values, information, and ideas and
accommodate them within their own schema, and
characterising deals with students willingness to
change their behaviour to reflect their values and
themselves.
The keep going area, psychomotor, centers
around learning through aptitudes advancement and
execution identifying with manual assignments and
physical development. Under the KTSP, the
psychomotor area demonstrate given to educators in
PD was the one presented by (Dave,1975). This
space incorporates impersonation, control, accuracy,
enunciation, and naturalization. Impersonation is
worried about watching or replicating conduct.
Control identifies with performing specific activities
by adhering to guidelines and rehearsing every one.
Exactness centers around understudies playing out
an undertaking or action with aptitude and to
elevated requirements without help. Explanation is
worried about performing exercises that relate and
consolidate important aptitudes to accomplish
amicable and reliable outcomes. Naturalization
alludes to very gifted execution which is performed
normally and frequently consequently. These
learning areas outline the expert advancement gave
to instructors about the idea of capabilities and how
to consolidate these abilities into the prospectus
(Depdiknas, 2007).
Exploring Materials Development of English Curricula in Indonesia: A Content Analysis Study
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2 METHODS
The approach used in this study is a qualitative
approach with the use of content analysis as the
method. The content is analyzed by using six
principles of materials design specified by Nunan
and his theory about curriculum, the study intend to
investigate each curriculum (KTSP and K13)
towards English Subject material. To support the
theory of Nunan, the theory proposed by Tomlinson
also will be used. In addition, the data used in the
study are the documents in curriculums and some
textbooks used for senior high school published by
the Ministry of National Education (MONE) of the
Republic of Indonesia.
The instruments used in this study are documents
analysis, interview sheets and classroom observation
sheet. The document analysis sheet is made from
Nunan and Richard’s theory about Material
Development with some adaptations and
modifications. The interview sheet is constructed by
considering Tomlinson’s research findings about
material development. The interview was done to
some English teachers of senior high schools in
South Tangerang and Jakarta. The instruments are
validated to check the construct validity and the
reliability of the instruments.
3 FINDING
3.1 Questionnaire Result
According to the results of the open
questionnaire, the teachers generally point out same
idea that the main characteristic of School-based
curriculum (KTSP) is the authority of the school to
develop, design and implement this curriculum
based on the school’s contexts and potentials. Also,
the aspects of cognitive, psychomotoric and
affective become the main focus in this curriculum.
Nevertheless, only is cognitive aspect clearly
defined to be assessed in the curriculum.
Unlike KTSP, for teachers, K13 states
straightforwardly to use scientific approach in
teaching by operating 5M (Mengamati (observe),
Mengumpulkan data (collecting data),
Menanya (questioning), Mengkomunikasikan
(communicating), and Mengasosiasi (associating)).
Furthermore, three teaching models are offered to be
implemented by the teachers at their school despite
of any diversity in students’ level competence and
background, namely discovery learning, problem
based learning and project based learning.
In the given the situation of some changes from
KTSP to K13 above, six teachers find the materials
in reference textbooks to be generally same or have
no significant difference. However, one teacher
considers the material in K13 reference textbook as
a perfection of the textbook in the previous
curriculum. Nevertheless, with generally same
materials, five teachers note some differences such
as reduction in certain materials, teaching method to
be implemented, the use of High Order of Thinking
Skills (HOTS), an emphasis on character education,
and the structure or order of the materials.
Most of the teachers, thirty one teachers to be
precise, use the textbook published by the
government as their main source of reference. In
other words, the government textbook still has a
prominent role for teachers in material development
as well as textbooks published by public
publishers.There are twelve out of those thirty one
teachers use textbooks from other public publishers
as their additional references such as Erlangga
(entitled Lokahead, Pathway, Bupena), Grafindo,
Yudhistira, and Windows on the World.
The reference used by teachers is not only
limited on textbook but also other sources in order to
enrich students’ knowledge as mentioned by one
teacher.Some other sources are video, film, social
media (newspaper) and internet. A lot of advantages
can be benefited from internet such as web search
engine (Google), Youtube, and other websites (e.g.
3
rd
edition of Cambridge Advanced Learner’s
Dictionary). A number of materials are available
therein the form of text, audio or video.
The next part is an investigation of using
authentic materials for teaching and learning in class
such as song, film, poems, newspaper, magazine or
internet. According to teachers’ responses, all
teachers have ever used any kind of those materials
in class. The teachers use this kind of materials by
firstly planning the lesson in line with the syllabus
and then look for further materials in the internet
after textbook.
In the classroom teaching, there are several
techniques that the teacher uses in using the
materials such as analysing the song, film watching,
reading newspaper or magazine and discuss the
moral value within. Second, teachers assign students
to work in group and do a research on particular
topic being discussed.
In spite of several different characteristics
between KTSP and Curriculum 2013, twenty one
teachers view that the material is not different or
generally the same even though clear distinctions
exist in terms of the teaching approach, method and
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techniques in teaching, and an emphasis on students’
character building and21st century learning skills
(4C) .In fact, regardless of the similarity of the
materials, two teachers find the material of K13
more developed and completed by providing more
examples than KTSP.
Unlike those teachers, the other eight teachers
are aware of the focus on 21
st
Century Learning
Skills and Scientific Approach in K13 as a clear
difference in the material of both curriculums. Thus,
this is necessary for teachers to look for the material
which is able to facilitate students to be more
creative and productive by providing factual
material, practical examples, unlike KTSP which
provides more theories.
Also, the material needs to be relevant with the
teaching procedures to be implemented with
required certain quality of questions (HOTS).
During the teaching, teacher needs to make sure that
the material makes possible to strengthen students’
character of nationality, religiosity, mutual help
(gotong-royong), caring, cooperation, confidence.
Eventually, the material should enable teachers to
assess students’ behaviour and social skill, not only
the knowledge aspect.
After investigating the teachers of view on the
materials used in KTSP and K13, the next question
aims to hear about any suggestions would be made
by the teachers. Unfortunately, eighteen teachers
give no response to this question. Nonetheless, seven
teachers say that adding more portion to the current
material is unnecessary since it is already enough for
some teachers and many for the others. Teachers
have different opinion in which or what materials to
be added in learning. The addition of material is
necessary especially in that requires bigger points of
graduate competence standard. Besides, the material
for high school students are too easy so more
materials are essential to build better understanding
among the students, especially in language structure.
Meanwhile, one teacher views that the idea of
adding materials might be different from one teacher
to the teachers according to their teaching ideology
and the difficulty level of particular materials for
students, such as text genres.
As previously mentioned that lesson planning is
an initial step for teachers to develop their teaching
materials. In this part, sixteen teachers leave the
answer sheet blank. However, according to the
response of seven teachers, it shows that relatively
the lesson planning in both curriculums is the same.
The fundamental difference of both is the teaching
in class with the scientific approach, character
building, literacy and 4C as main characteristics of
K13 curriculum as mentioned by three teachers.
Even though those teachers claim the lesson
planning generally the same, the other teachers are
aware of several aspects they need to think of in
lesson planning according to terms and conditions
applied in the curriculum as mentioned by one of the
teachers. The lesson plan shows that K13 has
already determined the standard to be achieved by
the students unlike KTSP in which the competence
match with students’ need and potentials. In more
detail, several teachers stated that graduate
competency standard (SKL) in K13 requires
teachers to describe the competence according to the
8 process
Once the lesson plan is well planned consistent
with the terms and conditions of the curriculum with
specific learning objectives, eleven teachers search
for more relevant materials from other sources such
as internet, book, discussion of professional
development program with subject teachers
(Musyawarah Guru Mata Pelajaran – MGMP), or
discuss with other English teachers. One teacher
mentioned the use of evaluation of previous learning
is also useful in order to develop materials for more
effective learning.
3.2 Document Analysis Result
The discussion of documents analyses on the
material development of both curricula was referred
to the six principles of material design by Nunan
(2001). According to the data of the document
analyses gained by analyzing the lesson plans and
the materials from both curricula (KTSP and K13)
given by the 20 selected teachers to their students,
the results proved in the following:
a) The materials were contextualized to the
served curriculum.
b) 80% of the materials given were not authentic
(taken from English textbooks or internet)
c) The material provided most likely stimulated
interaction in spite of its inauthenticity.
d) 70% teachers led the students to focus on
formal aspect of language, while the rests just
focused on the topic and examples.
e) 70% teachers encouraged students to develop
their learning skills and strategies in learning
by providing them with the confidence to
persist in their attempts to find solutions
when they have initial difficulties in
communicating.
Exploring Materials Development of English Curricula in Indonesia: A Content Analysis Study
1307
f) The materials given by the teachers were
considered to be encouraging students to
apply their developing language skills in their
daily activities andsituations, and their future.
3.3 Class Performance Analysis Result
Before the teaching learning process, the lesson
plan made by the English teachers as the scoring
criteria based on the observation checklist from
MONE. The teachers analyzed whether the lesson
plan arranged is in line with curriculum 2013 or
not.There are 25 components of the lesson plan
grouped in nine aspects: (1) Lesson identity, (2)
Formulation of the indicators, (3) Formulation of the
learning objectives,
(4) Learning material, (5) Source of learning, (6)
Media of the learning process, (7) Model of the
learning, (8) Scenario of the learning, and (9)
Scoring.
According to the result of the assessment on
teachers’ lesson plans, the teacher have planned the
lesson very well by putting down all 25 components
listed in nine aspects above and corresponding to the
requirements of the curriculum. This finding is in
line with Suparlan (2003) who proposed that lesson
plan is to be made as detailed as possible in
accordance with the needs and demands in
thesyllabus.
Basically, the teachers used the book When the
English Rings the Bell as the main resource in
teaching. However, a few discrepancies were found.
First, teachers did not include the lesson objectives
in the lesson plan documents. Second, there was no
clear description of allocated time for each activity
during the class.
During the teaching and learning process in the
classroom, students actively participated in
classroom activities by giving the opinion,
questioning, doing the task well, and answering
thequestion. Also, students paid attention to the
teacher. It was evidenced by students’ attention to
the teacher’s explanation, students’ enthusiasm,
students’ interest, classroom environment (happiness
in the teaching learningprocess). In team work,
students showed satisfactory performance by helping
the otherfriends, appreciating the other friends,
having solidarity, and being active in group. Last, in
terms of responsibility, students showed positive
responsibility among students during the class.
3.4 The Result of Teaching and
Learning Process Analysis
According to the observation in accordance with
the observation checklist by Depdikbud, the activity
used by the teacher was considered to be a good
activity by having a pre-activity which included an
explanation of the basic competence, and a
discussion connecting the current lesson to the
previous one. In main-activity, the teacher with
enthusiasm guided the students to do the task. Also,
the teacher encouraged students to be active, pay
attention and be responsible during the group work.
Last in the post-activity, the teacher guided the
students to communicate with friends in the group
and invited them to solve the problem together.
Nevertheless, the time allocation was not clearly
divided for each activity.
4 DISCUSSIONS
4.1 How the Teachers of Senior High
School within the Two Latest
Curriculums Construct Materials
Development
First of all, the analyses of results pointed out
that teachers were fully aware of the distinctions
between KTSP and K13. The most basic difference
is that KTSP is developed from standard of content
by the school based on its context and potentiality
(Hartoyo, 2011; Muslich, 2008, p.17, Suparlan,
2011, p.9). The teachers’ well understanding on this
distinction was interpreted in several different
features to consider which then written down in
planning the lesson as required by each curriculum.
The other difference is that K13 requires teachers
to implement the scientific approach in their
teaching by using three suggested learning models,
namely: discovery learning, problem based learning
and project based learning. As the very first step in
developing materials, the teachers have successfully
accomplished Nunan’s first principle by
contextualizing the materials to the curriculum.
In planning the lesson in order to develop the
materials, the results highlighted two points. First,
the teachers made use of the textbook provided by
the government as their main reference. The teachers
provided various reasons when further materials
after this textbook would be necessary, such as those
mentioned by Tomlinson (2001) that the used
materials should inform learners about the language,
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be experiential by providing exposure to the
language in use, be elicitative by stimulating
language use, and be exploratory by facilitating
discoveries about language use.
This situation provided an evidence that a
textbook does not always meet the variety of
conditions in a language class (Ur, 1996; Richards,
2003). The type of the materials taken from other
sources varied among the teachers depending on
their view of language and learning to be
comprehended (Crawford in Richards-Renandya,
2002). Second, the teachers’ lesson plans were
generally well written. Unfortunately, teachers could
have planned their lessons in more detail by
describing the lesson objectives, estimated time
allocation of each activity and other sources used.
As mentioned, teachers primarily used the
materials from the government textbook with
intermittently looking further materials from other
sources. It brought up an idea for future researcher
to study more deeply how many percentage the other
sources is used in certain period of time. Among a
number of reasons provided by teachers in using
supporting materials (mostly from internet) after
textbook was their necessity as authentic materials to
support the learning by encouraging learners to
apply their developing language skills to the world
beyond the classroom as defined in Principle 6.
Those authentic materials could be in the form of
written (newspaper, magazine,) or spoken (video,
audio). As pointed out by Nunan (2001) that the text
specifically written for the classroom purpose
generally distort the language in some way. In fact,
the results of document analysis showed that
teachers used most of the materials from the internet
(but still with the texts specifically designed for
teaching in classrooms) and textbooks. This situation
suggests that teachers were fully concerned about
the essential of using authentic materials but did not
put it into practice. Thus, the Principle 2 that the
materials should be authentic in terms of text and
task requires an improvement.
4.2 How the Class Performance in
using the Material Development in
Both Curriculum
In the classroom, teachers followed the lesson
plan for the most part. In the same way as the lesson
had been planned before, the activity was divided
into pre-activity, main-activity and post-activity as
proposed by Sadiman (2000). Unfortunately,
unspecified time allocation of each activity in the
lesson plan impacted on the indeterminate length of
each activity during the class.
This situation could be a serious issue since
teachers need to make sure that certain competences
should be achieved by students for certain period of
time in one academic year. In addition, the
classroom did not last 2x40 minutes as expected in
the curriculum, but 2x35 minutes, in spite of a
suggestion that the effective of time allocation every
meeting in teaching learning process at Junior High
School is about 2x45 minutes to improve the quality
of the teacher in teaching learning process (Rusman,
2012).
During the classroom activities, the teachers
played an important role in order to support the
learning process among students in the
implementation of learning models according to the
scientific approach (Permendikbud 81A: 2013).
Teachers encouraged students so that students were
able to acquire the 5Ms ((Menanya (questioning),
Mengumpulkan data (collecting data), Mengasosiasi
(associating), Menyimpulkan (making conclusion)).
A number of roles that the teachers played, such
as motivating, encouraging, interacting, offering
suggestions, giving feedbacks etc., led highly
positive performance of most students. It was proved
by most students successfully met the lesson target
with a few of them reached the higher and the lower.
In line with Principle 5 that the material should
encourage learners to develop learning skill and
skills in learning, the material needed also to be
supported by teachers’ encouragement.
This encouragement is about how the teachers
instruction could trigger the interaction between
students to students and between students to the
teachers so the interaction in Principle 3 is likely to
stimulate and happen. One of the important roles
played by the teachers is giving feedback during
teaching and learning activities in classroom,
especially in every step of 5M activity. Giving
feedback was worthwhile to emphasize the focus of
formal aspect of language which is comprised in the
materials according to Principle 4. Accordingly, the
students performed highly positive activeness,
attention, team work and responsibility.
5 CONCLUSIONS
The aim of this study is to investigate how the
teachers construct materials development within
Curriculum 2013 and how the class performance is
in using the material. The researcher used interview,
questionnaire, document analysis and classroom
Exploring Materials Development of English Curricula in Indonesia: A Content Analysis Study
1309
observation as the methods to conduct data
collection and data analysis.
The results found that the material development
in Curriculum 2013 has no significant difference
from its development in the previous development in
spite of a number of changes in the newest
curriculum. The use of materials in this kinds of
development facilitates students to perform well
during the teaching and learning process in the
classroom..
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