A REVIEW OF TEACHING ISLAMIC EDUCATION IN A NEW DIGITAL AGE

Maimun Aqsha Lubis, Ramlee Mustapha, Abdul Rahman, ST., M.T., Ikwan Lubis SE.,MM, Mohd Sham Kamis

Abstract


The purpose of this article is to discuss the role of digital technology or ICT in Islamic education of teaching and learning in the classroom.  The aim of Islamic education is to cultivate the three key domains of a human: cognitive, affective, and psychomotor. In implementing the digital approach in Islamic education, the teachers need to consider the critical aspects of the teaching and learning processes in a classroom such as creativity, reflectivity, cooperation, and responsibility. The research found out that the focus of the digital approach was to change the old paradigm of traditional teaching to a new paradigm of teaching and learning process in the classroom. Undeniable, the digital technology becomes an important element in Islam, as the main source of information for Muslims all over the globe. Teaching approach using technology facilitated Islamic education in the teaching and learning process in the classroom. The implication of using digital technology enables teachers in Islamic education to have the courage to adopt modern technologies for their teaching in the classroom. 


Full Text:

PDF

References


Al-Quran Al-Karim

al-Attas, M. N. (1979). Aims and objectives of Islamic education. Hodder and Stoughton.

Al-Kahtani, S., & Al-Haider, S. (2010). Factors affecting the use of CALL by EFL female faculty members in Saudi higher education: Current status. Jalt Call Journal, 6(3), 153-170.

al-Sam‘ani, ‘Abd al-Karim ibn Muhammad.(1981). Kitab Adab al-Imla’ wa al-Istimla’. Beirut: Dar al-Kitab al-‘Arab.

Alvermann, D. E. (Ed.). (2010). Adolescents' online literacies: Connecting classrooms, digital media, and popular culture (Vol. 39). Peter Lang.

Badia, A., Meneses, J., Sigalés, C., & Fàbregues, S. (2014). Factors affecting school teachers’ perceptions of the instructional benefits of digital technology. Procedia-Social and Behavioral Sciences, 141, 357-362.

Balanskat, A., Blamire, R., & Kefala, S. (2006). The ICT impact report: A review of studies of ICT impact on schools in Europe. European Communities.

Beckmann,K.(2018). The Importance of Digital Education. Retrieved from https://www.thefuturetransformation.com/blog/work_4_0/the-importance-of-digital-education/

Bingimlas, K. A. (2009). Barriers to the successful integration of ICT in teaching and learning environments: A review of the literature. Eurasia journal of mathematics, science & technology education, 5(3).

Brett, M. (1973). Northern Africa: Islam and Modernization: Papers on the Theme of Islamization, Modernization, Nationalism and Independence. Presented and Discussed at a Symposium Arranged by the African Studies Association of the United Kingdom on the Occasion of Its Annual General Meeting, 14, September 1971. London: Cass.

Cambridge International Examinations. (2015). Digital Technologies in Classroom. Retrieved from http://www.cambridgeinternational.org/images/271191-digital-technologies-in-the-classroom.pdf

Christensen, C., Horn, M., & Johnson, C. (2008). Disrupting class: How disruptive innovation will change the way the world learns. New York: McGraw-Hill.

Cope, B., & Kalantzis, M. (2005). A pedagogy of multiliteracies designing social futures. In Multiliteracies: Lit Learning (pp. 19-46). Routledge.

Dar Al-Ifta Al-Misriyyah. 2018. Retrieved from

http://www.dar-alifta.gov.eg/Foreign/ViewArticle.aspx?ID=114&CategoryID=3

du Plessis, A., & Webb, P. (2012). Teachers' Perceptions about their Own and their Schools' Readiness for Computer Implementation: A South African Case Study. Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology-TOJET, 11(3), 312-325.

Faryadi,Q. (2012). A Guide to Effective Teaching. Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia.

Foley, L. M. (2013). Digital storytelling in primary-grade classrooms. Arizona State University.

Kamunge, J. M., & Moi, D. A. (1988). Report of the presidential working party on education and manpower training for the next decade and beyond. Republic of Kenya.

Klopfer, E., Osterweil, S., Groff, J., & Haas, J. (2009). Using the technology of today in the classroom today: The instructional power of digital games, social networking, simulations and how teachers can leverage them. The Education Arcade, 1, 20.

Koehler, M. J., Mishra, P., Kereluik, K., Shin, T. S., & Graham, C. R. (2014). The technological pedagogical content knowledge framework. In Handbook of research on educational communications and technology (pp. 101-111). Springer, New York, NY.

Langgulung, H. (2000). Islamic education and human resources development in Muslim countries. Muslim Education Quarterly, 18(1), 65-79.

Özden, M. (2007). Problems with Science and Technology Education in Turkey. Eurasia Journal of Mathematics, Science & Technology Education, 3(2).

Phelps, R. P. (2014). Synergies for better learning: An international perspective on evaluation and assessment. Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice, 21(4), 481-493.

Rowntree, D. (1981). A dictionary of education. Harpercollins.

Salavati, S. (2016). Use of Digital Technologies in Education: The Complexity of Teachers' Everyday Practice (Doctoral dissertation, Linnaeus University Press).

Shaaban, J. M. (2012). The Challenges of Teaching Islamic Religious Education on Spiritual and Academic Formation of Secondary School Students in Nairo-bi, Kenya. M.A Thesis of Kenyatta University.

Somekh, B. (2007). Pedagogy and learning with ICT: Researching the art of innovation. Routledge.

Sutherland, R., Armstrong, V., Barnes, S., Brawn, R., Breeze, N., Gall, M., ... & Wishart, J. (2004). Transforming teaching and learning: embedding ICT into everyday classroom practices. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 20(6), 413-425.

Sylvester, R., & Greenidge, W. L. (2009). Digital storytelling: Extending the potential for struggling writers. The reading teacher, 63(4), 284-295.

Toprakci, E. (2006). Obstacles at integration of schools into information and communication technologies by taking into consideration the opinions of the teachers and principals of primary and secondary schools in Turkey. Journal of Instructional Science and Technology (e-JIST), 9(1), 1-16.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


eISSN : 2600-769X