SCIENCE CLASSROOM PRACTICES IN AN ISLAMIC RELIGIOUS SECONDARY SCHOOL: ADAPTING CLASSROOM ETHNOGRAPHY

Authors

  • Amnah Abdullah Universiti Teknologi MARA
  • Mohd. Zaki Ishak University Malaysia Sabah
  • Robert Francis Peters University Malaysia Sabah

Keywords:

Ethnography, Classroom Ethnography, Qualitative Data Analysis, Coding, Sabah

Abstract

This article is a response to the article “Classroom Ethnography: Adapt or Adopt?” The aim of this article is to guide potential local postgraduates on the coding process for the selected classroom ethnography which is not well understood. Qualitative data collection and data analysis were used from a larger ethnographic study. We explored in-depth the influence that culture has on learning science in an Islamic Religious Secondary School form five science classrooms. The ethnographic fieldwork capturing the informants’ beliefs and values central to their distinctive way of life could provide emerging data for understanding the culture sharing group’s learning of science in a period of time. The choice of manual coding attempts to describe the nature of science classroom practices at this Islamic Religious Secondary School science classroom. This article presents findings that adapting classroom ethnography is possible. We found that the students’ initial sources of cultural influence are the nature of science classroom practices.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2024-07-17

How to Cite

Amnah Abdullah, Mohd. Zaki Ishak, & Robert Francis Peters. (2024). SCIENCE CLASSROOM PRACTICES IN AN ISLAMIC RELIGIOUS SECONDARY SCHOOL: ADAPTING CLASSROOM ETHNOGRAPHY. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMANITIES, PHILOSOPHY AND LANGUAGES (IJHPL), 3(10). Retrieved from https://gaexcellence.com/ijhpl/article/view/459