The Influence of Students Motivation Toward Students Achievement

This paper examines the language attitudes of Minangkabau people toward Minangkabau language (MIN) and Indonesian (BI) in West Sumatra, Indonesia. The data were collected in the form of questionnaires, in-depth interviews and participant observation with a sample of 200 Adult respondents in six rese...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tuti Alawiyah, Urip Sulistiyo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Jambi 2018-08-01
Series:International Journal of Language Teaching and Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://online-journal.unja.ac.id/IJoLTE/article/view/5000
id doaj-bf85133cfb5946ec8ff939f3c473f06d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-bf85133cfb5946ec8ff939f3c473f06d2020-11-25T01:20:01ZengUniversitas JambiInternational Journal of Language Teaching and Education2614-11912598-23032018-08-012214515610.22437/ijolte.v2i2.50005000The Influence of Students Motivation Toward Students AchievementTuti Alawiyah0Urip Sulistiyo1STKIP Al-Azhar DiniyyahUniversitas JambiThis paper examines the language attitudes of Minangkabau people toward Minangkabau language (MIN) and Indonesian (BI) in West Sumatra, Indonesia. The data were collected in the form of questionnaires, in-depth interviews and participant observation with a sample of 200 Adult respondents in six research areas. This research uses a Likert scale with the categories classified into five alternatives (1 = Strongly Disagree, 2 = Disagree, 3 = Uncertain, 4 = Agree, and 5= strongly agree) and there are some tables analyzed based on yes/no questions, no=0 and yes=1. There are twelve questions on the questionnaire pertaining to the attitudes of adults. The results show that the adult attitudes can be classified into three categories, (1) positive; (2) negative; and (3) ambivalent attitudes. The third category is dominant. The term ‘ambivalent” is used for intermediate results. It is shown that the respondents expressed their feeling in both positive and negative comments in the same utterance when answering the questions related to MIN. For these responses, it is seen that there is a mixed feeling where they use “but” or “although” after expressing their positive feelings thereby countering their first statement. The evidence of the ambivalent and mixed feelings from respondents is shown. This means that Minangkabau people tend to avoid the conflict of having negative opinions; they tend to say what they mean in more indirect ways. On the other side, there is a positive attitude in response to the questions about BI. Majority of respondents have very strong positive attitudes towards BIhttps://online-journal.unja.ac.id/IJoLTE/article/view/5000motivationstudents achievement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tuti Alawiyah
Urip Sulistiyo
spellingShingle Tuti Alawiyah
Urip Sulistiyo
The Influence of Students Motivation Toward Students Achievement
International Journal of Language Teaching and Education
motivation
students achievement
author_facet Tuti Alawiyah
Urip Sulistiyo
author_sort Tuti Alawiyah
title The Influence of Students Motivation Toward Students Achievement
title_short The Influence of Students Motivation Toward Students Achievement
title_full The Influence of Students Motivation Toward Students Achievement
title_fullStr The Influence of Students Motivation Toward Students Achievement
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Students Motivation Toward Students Achievement
title_sort influence of students motivation toward students achievement
publisher Universitas Jambi
series International Journal of Language Teaching and Education
issn 2614-1191
2598-2303
publishDate 2018-08-01
description This paper examines the language attitudes of Minangkabau people toward Minangkabau language (MIN) and Indonesian (BI) in West Sumatra, Indonesia. The data were collected in the form of questionnaires, in-depth interviews and participant observation with a sample of 200 Adult respondents in six research areas. This research uses a Likert scale with the categories classified into five alternatives (1 = Strongly Disagree, 2 = Disagree, 3 = Uncertain, 4 = Agree, and 5= strongly agree) and there are some tables analyzed based on yes/no questions, no=0 and yes=1. There are twelve questions on the questionnaire pertaining to the attitudes of adults. The results show that the adult attitudes can be classified into three categories, (1) positive; (2) negative; and (3) ambivalent attitudes. The third category is dominant. The term ‘ambivalent” is used for intermediate results. It is shown that the respondents expressed their feeling in both positive and negative comments in the same utterance when answering the questions related to MIN. For these responses, it is seen that there is a mixed feeling where they use “but” or “although” after expressing their positive feelings thereby countering their first statement. The evidence of the ambivalent and mixed feelings from respondents is shown. This means that Minangkabau people tend to avoid the conflict of having negative opinions; they tend to say what they mean in more indirect ways. On the other side, there is a positive attitude in response to the questions about BI. Majority of respondents have very strong positive attitudes towards BI
topic motivation
students achievement
url https://online-journal.unja.ac.id/IJoLTE/article/view/5000
work_keys_str_mv AT tutialawiyah theinfluenceofstudentsmotivationtowardstudentsachievement
AT uripsulistiyo theinfluenceofstudentsmotivationtowardstudentsachievement
AT tutialawiyah influenceofstudentsmotivationtowardstudentsachievement
AT uripsulistiyo influenceofstudentsmotivationtowardstudentsachievement
_version_ 1725135886180417536