Digital Translanguaging in Teaching Turath: Negotiating Tradition And Modernity At An Islamic University

Authors

  • Kinnatul Asriyyah Universitas Kiai Abdullah Faqih Gresik
  • Eky Putri Rochmaniyah Universitas Kiai Abdullah Faqih Gresik
  • Sofyan Dena Kusuma Universitas Kiai Abdullah Faqih Gresik
  • Muhammad A'inul Haq Universitas Kiai Abdullah Faqih Gresik
  • Nashrullah Universitas Kiai Abdullah Faqih Gresik
  • Friendis Syani Amrulloh Universitas Kiai Abdullah Faqih Gresik
  • Imam Nur Aziz Universitas Kiai Abdullah Faqih Gresik

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.57060/jers-b3f1qg54

Keywords:

Digital Translanguaging, Turath Pedagogy, Islamic Higher Education, Virtual Ethnography, Third Space

Abstract

The tension between preserving the linguistic sanctity of Turath (Islamic heritage) and accommodating the cognitive habits of digital natives represents a critical challenge in modern Islamic Higher Education. While traditional pedagogies often remain rigid, there is an urgent need to understand how digital interactions facilitate the negotiation of meaning between classical Arabic texts and contemporary student identities. Purpose: This study investigates how digital translanguaging practices function as a bridge between tradition and modernity within the context of Balaghah (Rhetoric) instruction. Method: Employing a virtual ethnographic case study at an Indonesian Islamic University, the research analyzed online interactions via WhatsApp and Zoom using a hybrid of Thematic Analysis and Computer-Mediated Discourse Analysis (CMDA). Key Findings: The results demonstrate that digital translanguaging serves as a strategic pedagogical resource rather than a linguistic deficiency. Four primary strategies emerged: (1) vernacularization for cognitive scaffolding, (2) trans-semiotizing through visual logic (emojis/memes), (3) the negotiation of authority via "Santri slang" to mitigate language anxiety, and (4) iterative clarification loops. Implications: The study concludes that these practices create a "Third Space" that evolves the traditional Makna Gandul technique into a digital vernacular, proving essential for the sustainable preservation of Turath pedagogy in the 21st century.

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Published

2024-10-12

How to Cite

Digital Translanguaging in Teaching Turath: Negotiating Tradition And Modernity At An Islamic University. (2024). Journal of Education and Religious Studies, 4(03), 146-153. https://doi.org/10.57060/jers-b3f1qg54

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