ENGLISH AS A STUDENT LITERATION ELECTABILITY: STUDY OF THE ABILITY OF LITERATION IN INDONESIA'S PISA (PROGRAM FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ASSESSMENT) INDEX

Naufal Atha Haidarbahy(1*)


(1) Sekolah Telkom
(*) Corresponding Author

Abstract


This study discusses the important role and what are influences the overall reading ability of Indonesian students and their effect on electability competencies that impact PISA reading index, especially in the ability of reading English texts. Indonesian students generally only have a cumulative literacy index of 397 in 2015 which rose only one point from the cumulative literacy index in 2012 which is still relatively low among countries that follow the PISA assessment. This reflects the electability of students literacy who have not reached expectations yet. The literacy skills of Indonesian students in English with the relationship to the PISA index is
influenced by several factors such as the state of reading, level of reading interest, intelligence or intellectual ability, social background, economic and reader culture, reading abilities and habits and ability to absorb new reading. These factors creates continuity in the important role of building electability literacy, namely to create an objective culture, critical and open mind comprehensively in its application in various realms of activity. Knowing that anything which affects literacy skills also needs to be considered that impedes literacy skills such as no language and code similarity between the writer and reader, communication failure, disruption to speech tools, the system of educational institutions that lack sufficient opportunities for reading traditions and socio-economic factors. And nowadays when the 'borderless world' paradigm globalizes society, there must be language alignment tools in literacy, namely English, so that
the ability of English language literacy should be obeyed, especially students to understand the importance of English electability in positioning Indonesian students to compete with other countries in literacy skills.

Keywords


PISA; reading electability; influences; aspects

Full Text:

PDF

References


Anderson, M. J. (1982). Reading attitudes of college students: Progress

toward adequate assessment. Reading Improvement, 20(2), 120-124.

Bonk, W. J. (2000). Second language lexical knowledge and listening

comprehension. International Journal of Listening, 14, 14-31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10904018.2 000.10499033

Curtis, M. E. (1987). Vocabulary Testing and Instruction. In M. G.

McKeown, & M. E. Curtis (Eds.), The nature of vocabulary acquisition (pp.

-51). Hillside, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.

Day, R. R., & Bamford, J. (1998). Extensive reading in the second

language classroom. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Engku Ibrahim, E. H., Othman, K., Sarudin, I., & Muhamad. A. J. (2013).

Measuring the vocabulary size of Muslim pre-university students.

World Applied Sciences Journal, 21(Special Issue of Studies in

Language Teaching and Learning), 44-49.

Fatimah, H., & Vishalache, B. (2006). Language immersion for language

proficiency ESL learners: The Alemac Project. Reading Matrix, 6(2).

Gu, Y., & Johnson, R. K. (1996). Vocabulary learning strategies and

language learning outcomes. Language Learning, 46, 643-679.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.14671770.1996.tb01355.x

Hu, M., & Nation, I. S. P. (2000).

Vocabulary density and reading omprehension. Reading in a Foreign

Language, 23(1), 403-430.

Hunt, A., & Beglar, D. (2005). A framework for developing EFL

vocabulary. Reading in a Foreign Language, 17(1), 23-59.

Hirsh, D., & Nation, P. (1992). What vocabulary size is needed to read

unsimplified texts for pleasure? Reading in a Foreign Language, 8,

-696.

Kirsch, I. S., & Guthrie, J. T. (1984). Adult reading practices for work and leisure. Adult Education Quarterly,34,213-232.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0001848184034004003

Krashen, S. (2004). The power of reading. Portsmouth: Heinemann

Wesport, Conn: Libraries Unlimited.

Laufer, B. (1992). How much lexis is necessary for reading comprehension. Vocabulary and applied linguistics,

-132. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-34912396-4_12

Laufer, B., & Ravenhorst-Kalvoski, G. C. (2010). Lexical threshold

revisited: Lexical text-coverage, learners, vocabulary size and reading

comprehension. Reading in a Foreign Language, 22(1), 15-30.

Laufer, B., & Sim, D. D. (1985). Measuring and explaining the reading

threshold needed for English for academic purposes texts. Foreign

Language Annals, 18(5), 405-411. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.19449720.1985.tb0097


Article Metrics

Abstract view : 360 times
PDF - 56 times

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2019 English Language and Literature International Conference (ELLiC) Proceedings

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Electronic ISSN: 2579-7263
CD-ROM ISSN: 2579-7549

Published by

FACULTY OF FOREIGN LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
UNIVERSITAS MUHAMMADIYAH SEMARANG
Jl. Kedungmundu Raya No.18 Semarang, Central Java, Indonesia
Phone: +622476740295, email: [email protected]