Efektivitas Strategi Ta’bir Mushawwar dalam Pembelajaran Bahasa Arab di Madrasah Ibtidaiyah
Abstract
Speaking proficiency is one of the main skills in Arabic language learning, but fourth grade students of MI TPI Keramat face difficulties in assembling mufradat and practicing active conversation, mainly due to the lack of varied learning strategies. This study aims to analyze the effectiveness of the ta'bir mushawwar strategy, which uses picture as a media to facilitate students in constructing sentences and telling stories, in improving Arabic speaking skills. With a quantitative approach and pre-experiment design, this study involved 18 students of class IV-C. Data were collected through tests, observations, and interviews, then analyzed descriptively and N-Gain test. The posttest average was 83.06 (very good category) with 88.9% completeness, and the N-Gain score was 0.6398 which showed effectiveness in the medium category. The ta'bir mushawwar strategy offers a solution in the form of a visual and hands-on learning approach that can significantly improve students' speaking skills and make learning more interesting and interactive.
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("none" is a synonym.) #text.hinting: force_autohint #text.hinting_factor: 8 # Specifies the amount of softness for hinting in the # horizontal direction. A value of 1 will hint to full # pixels. A value of 2 will hint to half pixels etc. #text.kerning_factor : 0 # Specifies the scaling factor for kerning values. This # is provided solely to allow old test images to remain # unchanged. Set to 6 to obtain previous behavior. Values # other than 0 or 6 have no defined meaning. #text.antialiased: True # If True (default), the text will be antialiased. # This only affects the Agg backend. ## The following settings allow you to select the fonts in math mode. #mathtext.fontset: dejavusans # Should be 'dejavusans' (default), # 'dejavuserif', 'cm' (Computer Modern), 'stix', # 'stixsans' or 'custom' (unsupported, may go # away in the future) ## "mathtext.fontset: custom" is defined by the mathtext.bf, .cal, .it, ... ## settings which map a TeX font name to a fontconfig font pattern. (These ## settings are not used for other font sets.) #mathtext.bf: sans:bold #mathtext.cal: cursive #mathtext.it: sans:italic #mathtext.rm: sans #mathtext.sf: sans #mathtext.tt: monospace #mathtext.fallback: cm # Select fallback font from ['cm' (Computer Modern), 'stix' # 'stixsans'] when a symbol can not be found in one of the # custom math fonts. Select 'None' to not perform fallback # and replace the missing character by a dummy symbol. #mathtext.default: it # The default font to use for math. # Can be any of the LaTeX font names, including # the special name "regular" for the same font # used in regular text. ## *************************************************************************** ## * AXES * ## *************************************************************************** ## Following are default face and edge colors, default tick sizes, ## default fontsizes for ticklabels, and so on. See ## https://matplotlib.org/api/axes_api.html#module-matplotlib.axes #axes.facecolor: white # axes background color #axes.edgecolor: black # axes edge color #axes.linewidth: 0.8 # edge linewidth #axes.grid: False # display grid or not #axes.grid.axis: both # which axis the grid should apply to #axes.grid.which: major # gridlines at {major, minor, both} ticks #axes.titlelocation: center # alignment of the title: {left, right, center} #axes.titlesize: large # fontsize of the axes title #axes.titleweight: normal # font weight of title #axes.titlecolor: auto # color of the axes title, auto falls back to # text.color as default value #axes.titley: None # position title (axes relative units). None implies auto #axes.titlepad: 6.0 # pad between axes and title in points #axes.labelsize: medium # fontsize of the x any y labels #axes.labelpad: 4.0 # space between label and axis #axes.labelweight: normal # weight of the x and y labels #axes.labelcolor: black #axes.axisbelow: line # draw axis gridlines and ticks: # - below patches (True) # - above patches but below lines ('line') # - above all (False) #axes.formatter.limits: -5, 6 # use scientific notation if log10 # of the axis range is smaller than the # first or larger than the second #axes.formatter.use_locale: False # When True, format tick labels # according to the user's locale. # For example, use ',' as a decimal # separator in the fr_FR locale. #axes.formatter.use_mathtext: False # When True, use mathtext for scientific # notation. #axes.formatter.min_exponent: 0 # minimum exponent to format in scientific notation #axes.formatter.useoffset: True # If True, the tick label formatter # will default to labeling ticks relative # to an offset when the data range is # small compared to the minimum absolute # value of the data. #axes.formatter.offset_threshold: 4 # When useoffset is True, the offset # will be used when it can remove # at least this number of significant # digits from tick labels. #axes.spines.left: True # display axis spines #axes.spines.bottom: True #axes.spines.top: True #axes.spines.right: True #axes.unicode_minus: True # use Unicode for the minus symbol rather than hyphen. See # https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plus_and_minus_signs#Character_codes #axes.prop_cycle: cycler('color', ['1f77b4', 'ff7f0e', '2ca02c', 'd62728', '9467bd', '8c564b', 'e377c2', '7f7f7f', 'bcbd22', '17becf']) # color cycle for plot lines as list of string colorspecs: # single letter, long name, or web-style hex # As opposed to all other paramters in this file, the color # values must be enclosed in quotes for this parameter, # e.g. '1f77b4', instead of 1f77b4. # See also https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/intermediate/color_cycle.html # for more details on prop_cycle usage. #axes.autolimit_mode: data # How to scale axes limits to the data. By using: # - "data" to use data limits, plus some margin # - "round_numbers" move to the nearest "round" number #axes.xmargin: .05 # x margin. See `axes.Axes.margins` #axes.ymargin: .05 # y margin. See `axes.Axes.margins` #polaraxes.grid: True # display grid on polar axes #axes3d.grid: True # display grid on 3d axes ## *************************************************************************** ## * AXIS * ## *************************************************************************** #xaxis.labellocation: center # alignment of the xaxis label: {left, right, center} #yaxis.labellocation: center # alignment of the yaxis label: {bottom, top, center} ## *************************************************************************** ## * DATES * ## *************************************************************************** ## These control the default format strings used in AutoDateFormatter. ## Any valid format datetime format string can be used (see the python ## `datetime` for details). For example, by using: ## - '%%x' will use the locale date representation ## - '%%X' will use the locale time representation ## - '%%c' will use the full locale datetime representation ## These values map to the scales: ## {'year': 365, 'month': 30, 'day': 1, 'hour': 1/24, 'minute': 1 / (24 * 60)} #date.autoformatter.year: %Y #date.autoformatter.month: %Y-%m #date.autoformatter.day: %Y-%m-%d #date.autoformatter.hour: %m-%d %H #date.autoformatter.minute: %d %H:%M #date.autoformatter.second: %H:%M:%S #date.autoformatter.microsecond: %M:%S.%f ## The reference date for Matplotlib's internal date representation ## See https://matplotlib.org/examples/ticks_and_spines/date_precision_and_epochs.py #date.epoch: 1970-01-01T00:00:00 ## *************************************************************************** ## * TICKS * ## *************************************************************************** ## See https://matplotlib.org/api/axis_api.html#matplotlib.axis.Tick #xtick.top: False # draw ticks on the top side #xtick.bottom: True # draw ticks on the bottom side #xtick.labeltop: False # draw label on the top #xtick.labelbottom: True # draw label on the bottom #xtick.major.size: 3.5 # major tick size in points #xtick.minor.size: 2 # minor tick size in points #xtick.major.width: 0.8 # major tick width in points #xtick.minor.width: 0.6 # minor tick width in points #xtick.major.pad: 3.5 # distance to major tick label in points #xtick.minor.pad: 3.4 # distance to the minor tick label in points #xtick.color: black # color of the tick labels #xtick.labelsize: medium # fontsize of the tick labels #xtick.direction: out # direction: {in, out, inout} #xtick.minor.visible: False # visibility of minor ticks on x-axis #xtick.major.top: True # draw x axis top major ticks #xtick.major.bottom: True # draw x axis bottom major ticks #xtick.minor.top: True # draw x axis top minor ticks #xtick.minor.bottom: True # draw x axis bottom minor ticks #xtick.alignment: center # alignment of xticks #ytick.left: True # draw ticks on the left side #ytick.right: False # draw ticks on the right side #ytick.labelleft: True # draw tick labels on the left side #ytick.labelright: False # draw tick labels on the right side #ytick.major.size: 3.5 # major tick size in points #ytick.minor.size: 2 # minor tick size in points #ytick.major.width: 0.8 # major tick width in points #ytick.minor.width: 0.6 # minor tick width in points #ytick.major.pad: 3.5 # distance to major tick label in points #ytick.minor.pad: 3.4 # distance to the minor tick label in points #ytick.color: black # color of the tick labels #ytick.labelsize: medium # fontsize of the tick labels #ytick.direction: out # direction: {in, out, inout} #ytick.minor.visible: False # visibility of minor ticks on y-axis #ytick.major.left: True # draw y axis left major ticks #ytick.major.right: True # draw y axis right major ticks #ytick.minor.left: True # draw y axis left minor ticks #ytick.minor.right: True # draw y axis right minor ticks #ytick.alignment: center_baseline # alignment of yticks ## *************************************************************************** ## * GRIDS * ## *************************************************************************** #grid.color: b0b0b0 # grid color #grid.linestyle: - # solid #grid.linewidth: 0.8 # in points #grid.alpha: 1.0 # transparency, between 0.0 and 1.0 ## *************************************************************************** ## * LEGEND * ## *************************************************************************** #legend.loc: best #legend.frameon: True # if True, draw the legend on a background patch #legend.framealpha: 0.8 # legend patch transparency #legend.facecolor: inherit # inherit from axes.facecolor; or color spec #legend.edgecolor: 0.8 # background patch boundary color #legend.fancybox: True # if True, use a rounded box for the # legend background, else a rectangle #legend.shadow: False # if True, give background a shadow effect #legend.numpoints: 1 # the number of marker points in the legend line #legend.scatterpoints: 1 # number of scatter points #legend.markerscale: 1.0 # the relative size of legend markers vs. original #legend.fontsize: medium #legend.title_fontsize: None # None sets to the same as the default axes. ## Dimensions as fraction of fontsize: #legend.borderpad: 0.4 # border whitespace #legend.labelspacing: 0.5 # the vertical space between the legend entries #legend.handlelength: 2.0 # the length of the legend lines #legend.handleheight: 0.7 # the height of the legend handle #legend.handletextpad: 0.8 # the space between the legend line and legend text #legend.borderaxespad: 0.5 # the border between the axes and legend edge #legend.columnspacing: 2.0 # column separation ## *************************************************************************** ## * FIGURE * ## *************************************************************************** ## See https://matplotlib.org/api/figure_api.html#matplotlib.figure.Figure #figure.titlesize: large # size of the figure title (``Figure.suptitle()``) #figure.titleweight: normal # weight of the figure title #figure.figsize: 6.4, 4.8 # figure size in inches #figure.dpi: 100 # figure dots per inch #figure.facecolor: white # figure facecolor #figure.edgecolor: white # figure edgecolor #figure.frameon: True # enable figure frame #figure.max_open_warning: 20 # The maximum number of figures to open through # the pyplot interface before emitting a warning. # If less than one this feature is disabled. #figure.raise_window : True # Raise the GUI window to front when show() is called. ## The figure subplot parameters. All dimensions are a fraction of the figure width and height. #figure.subplot.left: 0.125 # the left side of the subplots of the figure #figure.subplot.right: 0.9 # the right side of the subplots of the figure #figure.subplot.bottom: 0.11 # the bottom of the subplots of the figure #figure.subplot.top: 0.88 # the top of the subplots of the figure #figure.subplot.wspace: 0.2 # the amount of width reserved for space between subplots, # expressed as a fraction of the average axis width #figure.subplot.hspace: 0.2 # the amount of height reserved for space between subplots, # expressed as a fraction of the average axis height ## Figure layout #figure.autolayout: False # When True, automatically adjust subplot # parameters to make the plot fit the figure # using `tight_layout` #figure.constrained_layout.use: False # When True, automatically make plot # elements fit on the figure. (Not # compatible with `autolayout`, above). #figure.constrained_layout.h_pad: 0.04167 # Padding around axes objects. Float representing #figure.constrained_layout.w_pad: 0.04167 # inches. Default is 3./72. inches (3 pts) #figure.constrained_layout.hspace: 0.02 # Space between subplot groups. Float representing #figure.constrained_layout.wspace: 0.02 # a fraction of the subplot widths being separated. ## *************************************************************************** ## * IMAGES * ## *************************************************************************** #image.aspect: equal # {equal, auto} or a number #image.interpolation: antialiased # see help(imshow) for options #image.cmap: viridis # A colormap name, gray etc... #image.lut: 256 # the size of the colormap lookup table #image.origin: upper # {lower, upper} #image.resample: True #image.composite_image: True # When True, all the images on a set of axes are # combined into a single composite image before # saving a figure as a vector graphics file, # such as a PDF. ## *************************************************************************** ## * CONTOUR PLOTS * ## *************************************************************************** #contour.negative_linestyle: dashed # string or on-off ink sequence #contour.corner_mask: True # {True, False, legacy} #contour.linewidth: None # {float, None} Size of the contour # linewidths. If set to None, # it falls back to `line.linewidth`. ## *************************************************************************** ## * ERRORBAR PLOTS * ## *************************************************************************** #errorbar.capsize: 0 # length of end cap on error bars in pixels ## *************************************************************************** ## * HISTOGRAM PLOTS * ## *************************************************************************** #hist.bins: 10 # The default number of histogram bins or 'auto'. ## *************************************************************************** ## * SCATTER PLOTS * ## *************************************************************************** #scatter.marker: o # The default marker type for scatter plots. #scatter.edgecolors: face # The default edge colors for scatter plots. ## *************************************************************************** ## * AGG RENDERING * ## *************************************************************************** ## Warning: experimental, 2008/10/10 #agg.path.chunksize: 0 # 0 to disable; values in the range # 10000 to 100000 can improve speed slightly # and prevent an Agg rendering failure # when plotting very large data sets, # especially if they are very gappy. # It may cause minor artifacts, though. # A value of 20000 is probably a good # starting point. ## *************************************************************************** ## * PATHS * ## *************************************************************************** #path.simplify: True # When True, simplify paths by removing "invisible" # points to reduce file size and increase rendering # speed #path.simplify_threshold: 0.111111111111 # The threshold of similarity below # which vertices will be removed in # the simplification process. #path.snap: True # When True, rectilinear axis-aligned paths will be snapped # to the nearest pixel when certain criteria are met. # When False, paths will never be snapped. #path.sketch: None # May be None, or a 3-tuple of the form: # (scale, length, randomness). # - *scale* is the amplitude of the wiggle # perpendicular to the line (in pixels). # - *length* is the length of the wiggle along the # line (in pixels). # - *randomness* is the factor by which the length is # randomly scaled. #path.effects: ## *************************************************************************** ## * SAVING FIGURES * ## *************************************************************************** ## The default savefig params can be different from the display params ## e.g., you may want a higher resolution, or to make the figure ## background white #savefig.dpi: figure # figure dots per inch or 'figure' #savefig.facecolor: auto # figure facecolor when saving #savefig.edgecolor: auto # figure edgecolor when saving #savefig.format: png # {png, ps, pdf, svg} #savefig.bbox: standard # {tight, standard} # 'tight' is incompatible with pipe-based animation # backends (e.g. 'ffmpeg') but will work with those # based on temporary files (e.g. 'ffmpeg_file') #savefig.pad_inches: 0.1 # Padding to be used when bbox is set to 'tight' #savefig.directory: ~ # default directory in savefig dialog box, # leave empty to always use current working directory #savefig.transparent: False # setting that controls whether figures are saved with a # transparent background by default #savefig.orientation: portrait # Orientation of saved figure ### tk backend params #tk.window_focus: False # Maintain shell focus for TkAgg ### ps backend params #ps.papersize: letter # {auto, letter, legal, ledger, A0-A10, B0-B10} #ps.useafm: False # use of afm fonts, results in small files #ps.usedistiller: False # {ghostscript, xpdf, None} # Experimental: may produce smaller files. # xpdf intended for production of publication quality files, # but requires ghostscript, xpdf and ps2eps #ps.distiller.res: 6000 # dpi #ps.fonttype: 3 # Output Type 3 (Type3) or Type 42 (TrueType) ### PDF backend params #pdf.compression: 6 # integer from 0 to 9 # 0 disables compression (good for debugging) #pdf.fonttype: 3 # Output Type 3 (Type3) or Type 42 (TrueType) #pdf.use14corefonts : False #pdf.inheritcolor: False ### SVG backend params #svg.image_inline: True # Write raster image data directly into the SVG file #svg.fonttype: path # How to handle SVG fonts: # path: Embed characters as paths -- supported # by most SVG renderers # None: Assume fonts are installed on the # machine where the SVG will be viewed. #svg.hashsalt: None # If not None, use this string as hash salt instead of uuid4 ### pgf parameter ## See https://matplotlib.org/tutorials/text/pgf.html for more information. #pgf.rcfonts: True #pgf.preamble: # See text.latex.preamble for documentation #pgf.texsystem: xelatex ### docstring params #docstring.hardcopy: False # set this when you want to generate hardcopy docstring ## *************************************************************************** ## * INTERACTIVE KEYMAPS * ## *************************************************************************** ## Event keys to interact with figures/plots via keyboard. ## See https://matplotlib.org/users/navigation_toolbar.html for more details on ## interactive navigation. Customize these settings according to your needs. ## Leave the field(s) empty if you don't need a key-map. (i.e., fullscreen : '') #keymap.fullscreen: f, ctrl+f # toggling #keymap.home: h, r, home # home or reset mnemonic #keymap.back: left, c, backspace, MouseButton.BACK # forward / backward keys #keymap.forward: right, v, MouseButton.FORWARD # for quick navigation #keymap.pan: p # pan mnemonic #keymap.zoom: o # zoom mnemonic #keymap.save: s, ctrl+s # saving current figure #keymap.help: f1 # display help about active tools #keymap.quit: ctrl+w, cmd+w, q # close the current figure #keymap.quit_all: # close all figures #keymap.grid: g # switching on/off major grids in current axes #keymap.grid_minor: G # switching on/off minor grids in current axes #keymap.yscale: l # toggle scaling of y-axes ('log'/'linear') #keymap.xscale: k, L # toggle scaling of x-axes ('log'/'linear') #keymap.copy: ctrl+c, cmd+c # Copy figure to clipboard ## *************************************************************************** ## * ANIMATION * ## *************************************************************************** #animation.html: none # How to display the animation as HTML in # the IPython notebook: # - 'html5' uses HTML5 video tag # - 'jshtml' creates a Javascript animation #animation.writer: ffmpeg # MovieWriter 'backend' to use #animation.codec: h264 # Codec to use for writing movie #animation.bitrate: -1 # Controls size/quality tradeoff for movie. # -1 implies let utility auto-determine #animation.frame_format: png # Controls frame format used by temp files #animation.ffmpeg_path: ffmpeg # Path to ffmpeg binary. Without full path # $PATH is searched #animation.ffmpeg_args: # Additional arguments to pass to ffmpeg #animation.convert_path: convert # Path to ImageMagick's convert binary. # On Windows use the full path since convert # is also the name of a system tool. #animation.convert_args: # Additional arguments to pass to convert #animation.embed_limit: 20.0 # Limit, in MB, of size of base64 encoded # animation in HTML (i.e. IPython notebook) #mpl_toolkits.legacy_colorbar: True
Youez - 2016 - github.com/yon3zu
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