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A scrapbook of child stories as a media to improving the story-telling skill
Author(s) -
Fetty Fellasufah,
Ali Mustadi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of education and learning (edulearn)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2302-9277
pISSN - 2089-9823
DOI - 10.11591/edulearn.v15i2.18014
Subject(s) - storytelling , psychology , test (biology) , normality , statistical significance , class (philosophy) , mathematics education , homogeneous , population , normality test , statistical hypothesis testing , mathematics , social psychology , statistics , computer science , narrative , demography , art , artificial intelligence , sociology , paleontology , literature , combinatorics , biology
This research aimed to determine the effect of scrapbook child stories as a media for storytelling skills for elementary school students. This type of research was a quasi-experimental quantitative study with a pretest-posttest group design. The population of this research was second grade elementary school students of Candimulyo sub-district, involving two classes as the control class and the experimental class. The test results were then analyzed using the prerequisite test and hypothesis testing. The prerequisite test consists of the normality test using the Kolmogorov Smirnov test and the homogeneity test using the One Way Anova. Hypothesis testing using t-test with independent sample t-test. The results of the analysis were then tested using a significance level of 0.05. The results of this result showed that the control class and the experimental class had a normal and homogeneous distribution. The t-test results showed a significance level 0.05. It means that there was a significant effect of scrapbook child stories to improve storytelling skills.

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