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Does curriculum help students to develop their English competence? A case in Indonesia
Dwi Poedjiastutie1, Fida Akhyar2, Deviy Hidayati3, Fajriyah Nurul Gasmi4.
To sustain its future competitive employment both at national and international level, Indonesia
Government needs to invest more in its human resources. Therefore, education is the critical
aspect to prepare highly educated and well-trained human resources for an innovation driven
global competitiveness. In education, when curriculum fails to provide sufficient skills and
competence for learners, human resources will not likely to move up to higher development level.
This article aims at exploring the issues and challenges encountered by Indonesia government in
improving the most crucial aspect needed for global competitiveness that is English
communication competence. English communication level of Indonesian learners is considered
low and satisfactory. Since Indonesian students obtain English from schools and classroom
teaching, curriculum objectives should help them achieving the target of learning. However, there
are three major issues found in Indonesia curriculum: top-down approach, the absence of Needs
Analysis (NA) studies, and no curriculum evaluation. In nutshell, those three factors are suspected
to contribute the underdeveloped English communication competences of Indonesian learners. In
view of this, Indonesian can learn from other countries that have succeeded in reforming and
developing English curriculum while taking into account the uniqueness of its own context.
Affiliation:
- Universitas Muhammadiyah Malang, Indonesia
- Universitas Muhammadiyah Malang, Indonesia
- Universitas Muhammadiyah Malang, Indonesia
- Universitas Muhammadiyah Malang, Indonesia
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