Habituation and Internalization of Islamic Education Values in Character Building: A Phenomenological Study at Madrasah Ibtidaiyah Nasy’atul Muta’allimin Candi Sumenep

Authors

  • Ach. Syaiful Kariman Wirayudha Institute, Sumenep, Madura
  • Amiruddin Kariman Wirayudha Institute, Sumenep
  • Hafid Kariman Wirayudha Institute, Sumenep
  • Faizatul Fitriyah STAI Nasy’atul Muta’allimin Sumenep

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61860/jigp.v4i2.324

Abstract

Madrasah as an Islamic educational institution faces challenges in implementing Islamic values for student character building. Although religious activities have been carried out routinely, they have not effectively touched the core of students’ spirituality as reflected in their daily behavior. The gap between the ideality of madrasah as a producer of noble character and the reality of value shifts highlights the urgency of structured and sustainable Islamic value implementation studies. This study employs a qualitative approach with ethnographic-phenomenological methods at Madrasah Ibtidaiyah Nasy’atul Muta’allimin Candi, Sumenep, Madura. Research subjects include the madrasah principal, vice principals, teachers, school committees, parents/guardians, and surrounding community. Data were collected through in-depth interviews, participatory observation, and documentation, then analyzed through data reduction, data presentation, conclusion drawing, and verification stages. Data validity was ensured through credibility, transferability, dependability, and confirmability. The findings reveal that Islamic values implementation is based on three main foundations: faith, sharia, and ihsan, manifested through habituation of greeting-smiling-salutation values, honesty, trustworthiness, and responsibility. Implementation strategies include teacher exemplary behavior, madrasah culture, project-based learning, and cross-curricular integration, reinforced with specific practices such as teachers welcoming students, reciting Asmaul Husna, congregational dhuha prayer, and intensive parental cooperation. This study concludes that Islamic character building requires continuous habituation through real behavioral examples from teachers and parents. Recommendations are directed to madrasah education practitioners to develop structured, organized, and dynamic value implementation concepts according to each institution’s factual context, and to future researchers to explore the long-term impacts of habituation strategies on madrasah students’ character.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Alma, Buchari. 2005. Strategic Marketing of Educational Services. Bandung: Alfabeta.

Hefni, Azizah. 2015. If You Are Not Ashamed, Do Whatever You Want; The Art of Controlling Yourself by Cultivating a Sense of Shame. Yogyakarta: Divapress.

Daradjat, Zakiah. 1992. Islamic Education Science. Jakarta: Bumi Aksara.

Thaha, Zainal Arifin, et al. 2003. Reflections of the Sarong-Wearing Community. Yogyakarta; Qirtas.

Nurhadi, Dr. 2020. The Concept of Moral and Character Education in Islam. Cirebon: Guepedia.

Thomas Lickona. 1991. Educating for Character: How Our Schools Can Teach Respect and Responsibility. New York: Bantan Books.

Sujarweni, V. Wiratna. 2025. Complete, Practical, and Easy-to-Understand Research Methodology. Yogyakarta: Pustaka Baru Press.

Kasiram, H. Moh. 2008. Qualitative Research Methodology. Malang: UIN Malang Press.

Al-Ghazali, Abu Hamid bin Muhammad. 1985. Bidayattul Hidayah; Approaching Guidance. Bandung: Mizan Publishing.

Madjid, Dr. Nurcholish. 1997. Islamic Tradition; Its Role and Function in Indonesian Development. Jakarta: Paramadina.

Carrel, Alexis. 1987. The Mystery of Man. Bandung: Remadja Karya Publishers.

Covey, Steven. 1989. The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. Tangerang: Binarupa Aksara.

Mulyana, Prof. Dedy, MA. Ph.D. 2008. Qualitative Research Methodology. Bandung: Rosda.

Abdullah, S. 2010. Character Education Based on Islamic Values. Yogyakarta: Pustaka Pelajar.

Bourdieu, Pierre. 1990. The Logic of Practice. United States: Stanford University Press

Hanafi, M. 2007. Integration of Science and Religion; A Philosophical Review. Bantul: Al-hidayah.

Madjid, Nurcholish, Dr. 1992. Islam, Doctrine, and Civilization: A Critical Study of Faith. Jakarta: Paramadina.

Qardhawi, Yusuf. 2001. Fiqh Priorities. Depok: Gema Insani Press.

Tilaar, H.A.R. 2012. Character Education, Policy Foundations, and Development Guidelines. Jakarta: Rineka Cipta.

Setiawan, Deny. The Role of Character Education in Developing Moral Intelligence. Journal of Character Education 3.1. February Edition, 2013.

Ariefa Efianingrum. School Culture that is Conducive to Student Moral Development. Article in Dinamika Pendidikan Magazine: No. 01/Th. IV May (2007).

Interview with A. Ruswan, Spd on June 7, 2020

Interview with H. Ashim on July 28, 2020

Downloads

Published

12/09/2025

How to Cite

Ach. Syaiful, Amiruddin, Hafid, & Fitriyah, F. (2025). Habituation and Internalization of Islamic Education Values in Character Building: A Phenomenological Study at Madrasah Ibtidaiyah Nasy’atul Muta’allimin Candi Sumenep. JURNAL ILMIAH GEMA PERENCANA, 4(2), 1449–1470. https://doi.org/10.61860/jigp.v4i2.324