standar operasional prosedur strorytelling

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STANDAR OPERASIONAL PROSEDUR STORYTELLING IMPLEMENTASI INDIVIDU PADA PRAKTIK KOMUNITAS DI TK IT AL KAMILAH BANYUMANIK Oleh : Eny Rahayu D. P 22020110200016 PROGRAM PROFESI NERS ANGKATAN XVII PROGRAM STUDI ILMU KEPERAWATAN FAKULTAS KEDOKTERAN

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Page 1: Standar Operasional Prosedur Strorytelling

STANDAR OPERASIONAL PROSEDUR

STORYTELLING

IMPLEMENTASI INDIVIDU PADA PRAKTIK KOMUNITAS

DI TK IT AL KAMILAH BANYUMANIK

Oleh :

Eny Rahayu D. P 22020110200016

PROGRAM PROFESI NERS ANGKATAN XVII

PROGRAM STUDI ILMU KEPERAWATAN

FAKULTAS KEDOKTERAN

UNIVERSITAS DIPONEGORO

SEMARANG

2010

Page 2: Standar Operasional Prosedur Strorytelling

STANDAR OPERASIONAL PROSEDUR

STORYTELLING

IMPLEMENTASI INDIVIDU PADA PRAKTIK KOMUNITAS

DI TK IT AL KAMILAH BANYUMANIK

A. LATAR BELAKANG

Konsentrasi belajar anak adalah bagaimana anak fokus dalam

mengerjakan atau melakukan sesuatu, hingga pekerjaan itu dikerjakan dalam

waktu tertentu. Pada beberapa anak bisa mengalami kesulitan, kesusahan dan

gangguan dalam hal konsentrasi dan atensi yang ia berikan. Banyak pula

orangtua yang juga mengeluh dan bingung dalam meningkatkan dan mengatasi

anak yang sulit berkonsentrasi.1

Gangguan Konsentrasi tergolong ke dalam salah satu jenis gangguan

ADHD, singkatan dari Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder atau dalam

bahasa Indonesia Gangguan Pemusatan Perhatian dan Hiperaktivitas (GPPH),

suatu kondisi yang juga dikenal sebagai Attention Deficit Disorder (sulit

memusatkan perhatian. Berbagai macam hal dapat dilakukan untuk mengatasi

anak dengan sulit konsentrasi. Salah satunya dapat dilakukan dengan story

telling.1 Sementara itu Pellowski (1977) mendefinisikan storytelling sebagai

sebuah seni atau seni dari sebuah keterampilan bernarasi dari cerita-cerita

dalam bentuk syair atau prosa, yang dipertunjukkan atau dipimpin oleh satu

orang di hadapan audience secara langsung dimana cerita tersebut dapat

dinarasikan dengan cara diceritakan atau dinyanyikan, dengan atau tanpa

musik, gambar, ataupun dengan iringan lain yang mungkin dapat dipelajari

secara lisan, baik melalui sumber tercetak, ataupun melalui sumber rekaman

mekanik.2

Menurut penelitian oleh Dina Nurcahyani Kusumastuti, storytelling dapat

meningkatkan minat baca anak,3 selain itu juga dari hasil penelitian oleh Rd.

Safrina, Sri Setyarini dan Ika Lestari D bahwa storytelling dapat meningkatkan

hasil pembelajaran bahasa Inggris pada siswa.4 Banyak sekali manfaat yang

bisa kita peroleh melalui dongeng salah satunya adalah mampu melatih daya

Page 3: Standar Operasional Prosedur Strorytelling

konsentrasi. Storytelling sebagai media informasi dan komunikasi yang

digemari anak-anak, melatih kemampuan mereka dalam memusatkan perhatian

untuk beberapa saat terhadap objek tertentu. Ketika seorang anak sedang asyik

mendengarkan dongeng, biasanya mereka tidak ingin diganggu. Hal ini

menunjukkan bahwa anak sedang berkonsentrasi mendengarkan dongeng.5

Bila dilihat dari permasalahan yang di temukan di TK IT Al Kamilah

sesuai dengan skrining awal dan MES 1 bahwa terdapat risiko kemungkinan

gangguan ADHD. Berdasarkan hasil tabulasi data didapatkan data bahwa

perilaku yag mengalami gangguan adalah masalah konsentrasi. 4 dari 6 anak

yang merupakan anak kelolaan ini merupakan anak-anak yang termasuk dalam

data anak-anak dengan risiko kemungkinan gangguan ADHD, sehingga

dilakukan story telling sebagai implementasi individu pada kasus kelolaan.

B. STRATEGI PELAKSANAAN

1. Hari/Tanggal : Rabu, 4 November 2010

2. Waktu : 09.00 WIB-09.25 WIB

3. Tempat : TK Al Kamilah Banyumanik

4. Jumlah Peserta : 5 anak

C. PROSEDUR PELAKSANAAN

No.

Tahap Kegiatan

1. Pra Interaksi a. Persiapan perawatKognitif- Perawat mengetahui tujuan

storytelling.- Perawat mengetahui prosedur

storytelling.- Perawat mengerti dan

memahami cerita yang akan dibawakan.

- Perawat dapat berkomunikasi efektif dengan anak.

Afektif- Perawat bersikap sabar

dengan anak.

Page 4: Standar Operasional Prosedur Strorytelling

Psikomotor- Perawat dapat menggunakan

peralatan yang sesuai dengan cerita yang akan dibawakan.

- Perawat dapat memiliki ekspresi sesuai dengan cerita yang akan dibawakan.

b. Persiapan anakKognitif- Anak dapat mengetahui dan

memahami jalan cerita dengan baik.

Afektif- Anak kooperatifPsikomotor- Anak dapat duduk saat

storytelling berlangsung.c. Kontrak waktud. Persiapan alat

2. Orientasi a. Memberikan salamb. Menjelaskan tujuan dan maksudc. Menanyakan kesiapan anak dan

pembuatan peraturan bersama3. Kerja a. Storytelling

b. Evaluasi4. Terminasi a. Mengakhiri kontrak

b. Salam penutup

D. EVALUASI

1. Evaluasi Struktur

a. Menyiapkan SOP (Standar Operasional Prosedur)

b. Waktu pelaksanaan telah disepakati dan ditetapkan

c. Tempat dan perlengkapan telah dipersiapkan

d. Materi dan media telah dipersiapkan

2. Evaluasi Proses

a. Siswa aktif mengikuti kelangsungan kegiatan.

b. Media dan alat bantu dapat digunakan secara efektif.

c. Kegiatan dapat berjalan sesuai rencana.

3. Evaluasi Hasil

Page 5: Standar Operasional Prosedur Strorytelling

a. 50% siswa yang hadir dapat menyebutkan 2 tokoh dalam cerita.

b. 50% siswa yang hadir dapat menyebutkan tentang pelajaran apa yang

terdapat dalam cerita.

c. 75% siswa tidak meninggalkan tempat sebelum kegiatan selesai.

Page 6: Standar Operasional Prosedur Strorytelling

DAFTAR PUSTAKA

1. Muhammad Baitul Alim. 2009. Melatih Konsentrasi Anak. http://www.psikologizone.com/melatih-konsentrasi-anak. Diakses pada tanggal 26 Oktober 2010

2. Boltman, Angela, 2001. Children’s Storytelling Technologies: Differences

in Ellaboration and Recall. http://itiseer.1 st .psu.edo/563253.html . Diakses

pada tanggal 26 Oktober 2010

3. Dina Nurcahyani Kusumastuti . 2010.

http://eprints.undip.ac.id/22141/1/dina_imut2.pdf

4. Rd. Safrina.

http://perpustakaan.upi.edu/artikel/administrasi/upload/rd._safrina__fpbs.pd

f

5. Asfandiyar, Andi Yudha, 2007. Cara Pintar Mendongeng, Jakarta: Mizan

Page 7: Standar Operasional Prosedur Strorytelling

PENGARUH KEGIATAN STORYTELLING TERHADAPPERTUMBUHAN MINAT BACA SISWA DI TK BANGUN 1 GETAS KEC.

PABELAN KAB. SEMARANG

ABSTRAK

Judul skripsi “Pengaruh Kegiatan Storytelling Terhadap Pertumbuhan Minat Baca Siswa di TK Bangun 1 Getas Kec. Pabelan Kab. Semarang”. Tujuan penelitian ini adalah untuk mengetahui sejauh mana pengaruh layanan storytelling terhadap pertumbuhan minat baca anak di TK Bangun 1 Getas. Metode pada penelitian ini menggunakan metode eksplanatori (penjelasan) yaitu menyoroti dan menerangkan keterkaitan masing-masing variabel. Populasi dalam penelitian ini adalah keseluruhan siswa TK baik kelompok A dan B yang berjumlah 52 responden. Sampel penelitian adalah keseluruhan dari populasi karena populasinya kurang dari 100. Teknik pengumpulan data yaitu menggunakan angket, wawancara, dan studi pustaka. Berdasarkan penelitian ini diketahui bahwa kegiatan storytelling yang diadakan oleh sekolah berpengaruh pada pertumbuhan minat baca siswa, dan lebih dari 90,77% siswa benar-benar menggemari kegiatan storytelling di sekolah.Tujuan kegiatan storytelling adalah untuk menarik minat siswa agar gemar membaca dan mampu menangkap pengetahuan serta pengalaman tentang berbagaihal positif yang diceritakan sejak dini. Hasil penelitian ini diharapkan berguna bagi Guru untuk lebih meningkatkan metode kegiatan bercerita menjadi lebih baik. Sekolah sebaiknya menambah bahan perpustakaan yang dimiliki serta menampilkan cerita melalui media yang beraneka ragam. Simpulan penelitian ini menunjukkan bahwa kegiatan storytelling di TK Bangun 1 Getas sangat besar pengaruhnya terhadap pertumbuhan minat baca anak.

Kata kunci: storytelling, pertumbuhan minat baca

Page 8: Standar Operasional Prosedur Strorytelling

Dr. David Rabiner: New Research

* HOW ADHD AFFECTS PRESCHOOLERS' UNDERSTANDING OF STORIES

One of the most profound effects that ADHD can have on children's development is in the area of academic performance. Numerous studies - several of which have been reviewed in ADHD RESEARCH UPDATE - have documented that children with ADHD are at substantial risk for academic difficulties, and that the majority fail to achieve at a level that is consistent with their academic ability. As indicated in the study reviewed above, children with high levels of attention problems but not high levels of conduct problems were at specific risk for academic difficulty over a 6-year period and to require special educational services. In my own work, I have found that attention problems specifically - and not hyperactive/impulsive symptoms - exert substantial negative effects on the development of children's reading skills.

A study published recently in the Journal of Clinical Child Psychology provides an extremely interesting look at how ADHD can have an adverse impact on skills related to academic performance even before academic problems are likely to be evident. In this study (Sanchez, R.P., Lorch, E.P., Milich, R., & Welsh, R. (1999). Comprehension of televised stories by preschool children with ADHD. Journal of Clinical Child Psychology, 28, 376-385), the authors looked at how preschool children with and without ADHD might differ in their understanding of televised stories.

Televised stories- actually, they used a series of clips from Sesame Street - were used because the children were young enough so that most of them would not yet be expected to be reading. In addition, the benefits of using television to examine young children's comprehension of stories is that it is a familiar context for children, it captures children's attention at an early age, and can provide a less-monotonous context than do many laboratory tasks that are used to investigate ADHD.

It is certainly a common experience for parents to observe that their child with ADHD can attend faithfully to his or her favorite tv shows for an extended period of time, even though the same level of attending to homework is rarely evident. Children's ability to understand and comprehend televised stories can thus

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serve as a useful medium to learn about their comprehension of story material more generally. If problems are evident in this context - which probably captures children with ADHD operating at their best in terms of attending - then it can inform parents, educators, and clinicians about the struggles that are even more likely to occur in a classroom context.

Participants in this study were 27 boys and girls with ADHD between 4 and 6 years old and 52 comparison children without ADHD. About 75% of the children in each group were male and almost 90% were Caucasian. All the participants with ADHD had been diagnosed with ADHD, Combined Type. Thus, they had the inattentive and the hyperactive/impulsive symptoms as opposed to the inattentive symptoms only. Although many children were being treated with medication at the time of the study, care was taken to be sure that children were medication-free when actually tested.

All children viewed a 23 minute videotape that consisted of 13 separate segments of Sesame Street. Four segments that were embedded in this larger group of segments were the actual target stimuli for the study. All of the target segments had conventional story structures and were narrative in nature. In other words, they were typical of Sesame Street stories.

Children were assigned at random to one of two viewing conditions. Half of the children in each group viewed the segments with attractive toys present and available to play with; the other children viewed the tape without any toys around to serve as potential distractors.

Each child was videotaped while watching the Sesame Street stories. This tape was used to identify the amount of time that participants were actually focusing their attention on the screen where the tape was playing. Thus, an accurate record of the visual attention of each participant was available. Each child watched the videotape individually, so that other children were not present as another possible source of distraction

Children were told that they would be watching a tv program and that afterwards, they would be asked some questions about what they had watched. In the condition where toys were present, it was simply mentioned that they could play with the toys if they wanted to. Thus, they were neither specifically encouraged to play with the toys or discouraged from doing so.

Page 10: Standar Operasional Prosedur Strorytelling

After the tape was over, the experimenter returned to ask each child questions about the stories they had watched. Questions were asked about the 4 targeted stories in the order that these stories had appeared on the tape. Pictures of the characters from each story were presented to the child, and the names of each character was provided to try to help cue their recall of what they had watched.

Two types of questions were asked: factual questions (e.g. What does the man do with the fish he catches?") and causal relation questions (e.g. Why does the man kiss the fish?") The former questions thus test for children's recall of specific events that occurred in each story. The causal relation questions, in contrast, required the child to draw upon several different elements in the story and to recall the relationship between these elements. Between 12 and 15 questions were asked for each story, and these were divided equally between the factual and causal relation type questions.

* RESULTS

The first question the authors examined is how children in the two groups compared in terms of how attentive they were to actually watching the videotape and whether this varied according to whether toys were present. Overall, as might be expected, children without ADHD were more attentive (i.e. actually spent more time looking at the screen) than children without ADHD. In the no-toy condition, the % of time children in these groups were observed to be "observing the screen" were 90.4% and 80.3% respectively.

For both groups, the presence of toys substantially reduced their level of attention. The % of time attending dropped to 30% on average for children without ADHD, and all the way to 7% for children with ADHD. In other words, even though the toys were a substantial distracter for both groups of children, the adverse impact on attending to what they needed to was even greater in children with ADHD. Thus, this is experimental evidence of the far greater distractibility in children with ADHD, which, after all, is one of the core symptoms of inattention.

Here is something even more interesting. Even though children without ADHD reduced their attending behavior when toys were present from 90% to 30%, the proportion of questions that they answered correctly DID NOT CHANGE. This strongly suggests that

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these children were "strategic viewers" who could systematically divide their attention between the tv stories and the toy play such that their ability to recall and comprehend the stories did not suffer.

For children with ADHD, however, the findings were quite different. When toys were not present, children with ADHD were about as accurate as comparison children in their responses to factual questions. Thus, in the absence of distraction, they answered factual items every bit as well. In the toy-present condition, however, their performance was adversely affected such that they now did much worse than comparison children. In this condition, in fact, they answered correctly to about 50% fewer questions.

What is important here is that even though the comparison children also "paid less attention" to the stories when toys were present, they were still somehow able to divide their attention between toys and the stories such that their recall was not hurt. Children with ADHD, however, apparently could not do that. Thus, not only did they attend less when distractors were present, but they were unable to divide their attention in such a way that their level of performance was preserved.

Results for the causal relation questions were somewhat different. Here, the children with ADHD did worse than the comparison children regardless of whether toys were present as a distracter. Thus, even when their visual attention to the program was high, children with ADHD still did not do as well in responding to questions that required an understanding of how the different elements in a story fit together.

It would be quite interesting to know whether similar results would have been obtained for the comprehension items even if the children with ADHD had been receiving their medication when testing occurred.

* IMPLICATIONS

The results of this interesting study have potentially important implications for educating children with ADHD.

First, as has been demonstrated in the past, the presence of distracting stimuli appear to have a significantly greater adverse impact on the performance of children with ADHD than of other

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children. Not only is a child with ADHD less likely to pay attention to what he or she is supposed to when an attractive alternative stimulus is present, but he or she is also apparently less able to effectively allocate attention to competing activities in ways that help maintain a good level of performance.

These data support the benefits of arranging the environment for many children with ADHD in such a way that potential distractions are minimized. In a classroom setting, of course, this is not always easy to do, particularly without isolating a child in a way that can be stigmatizing. At home, however, when it comes to getting homework done, this type of intervention may be easier to accomplish. Please note, however, that although reducing distractions may be helpful for many children with ADHD, there will always be exceptions. Thus, evaluating whether such environmental modifications are helpful for a particular child always needs to be carefully evaluated.

The comprehension results seem especially important. These data indicate that comprehension may be an area of particular difficulty for children with ADHD, and that such difficulty may be evident as early as the preschool years. This result is consistent with another study of reading comprehension in children with ADHD that was reviewed in an earlier issue of ADHD RESEARCH UPDATE. (See http://www.helpforadd.com/reading.htm)

Careful assessment of the comprehension abilities of a child with ADHD, even for a child whose basic reading skills or ability to recall factual information about stories appears adequate, may thus be quite useful in identifying necessary targets for intervention. This, however, is rarely done.

When difficulties in this area is identified, specific training to help a child with ADHD understand cause-and-effect relations, both in stories and in real-life social situations, may be quite helpful. This may be best done by a reading specialist who is aware of specific techniques and strategies to assist children in their comprehension skills. Such training may have benefits not only for academic performance, but for a child's social relationships as well.  

A note from Dr. Rabiner:

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I hope the above information was of interest to you and potentially helpful. Staying informed about the latest research findings on ADD/ADHD will enable you to make better informed decisions about the best ways to promote your child's healthy development. That is my objective in publishing a monthly newsletter, ADHD RESEARCH UPDATE, and I invite you to become a regular subscriber. If you work with children who have ADHD in a professional capacity, I also think you will find that ADHD RESEARCH UPDATE is a convenient way to stay on top of important new research information.

Best wishes,

David Rabiner, PhDLicensed Psychologist

http://adhd.kids.tripod.com/rabinerpre.html:dr