2 research outputs found

    TINGKAT HARMONI SOSIAL SISWA SMP SE- KOTA PONTIANAK

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    This study aims to determine the level of social harmony in both female and male students of class VII SMP in Pontianak City. This type of research uses quantitative research, and the population is class VII students of SMPN in Pontianak City. The sampling technique was carried out by using a random sampling technique. Data collection is using a social harmony questionnaire distributed via a google form. The method used is descriptive, aiming to describe social harmony accurately, clearly, detailed, and systematically. The analysis technique used is a descriptive statistical analysis using the mean, median, frequency, standard deviation, range, mode, and ability. The social harmony of four indicators: awareness of cultural diversity, tolerance, self-disclosure, and conflict resolution constructively. The results showed that students' average social harmony score was 139, 47. Social  harmony for each indicator, the average is on 50%. This study suggests conducting correlation research to see the connectedness of social peace with family, cultural, religious, and socio-economic status

    In sweet harmony or in bitter discord?:how cultural values and stakeholder requirements shape and users read an urban computing technology

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    Abstract Culture is, in many ways, implicated in and shapes technology design and use. Inspired by Stuart Hall’s conception of encoding/decoding, we maintain that technological artefacts reflect the cultural values of their creators, while users, in their encounters with the technological artefacts, may decode those artefacts in various ways that are shaped by the users’ cultural values. In this article, we apply this lens to study a decade-long urban computing project that took place in the wild. We focus on the project’s development team and on how their cultural values shape technology design. We also acknowledge that such an urban computing project involves many other stakeholder groups that affect the course of events. In our analysis, we examine how these stakeholders shaped and interpreted the technology in question. Although the development project had a seemingly generic “for all” ethos, the various stakeholders pulled the focus in different directions. The trajectory of the project can be characterized as reacting to these competing influences—sometimes achieving fit, while other times resulting in conflicts. The contribution of this paper is a structured analysis and reflections on cultural issues in community technology design in the wild, with a focus on the role of the developers’ cultural values and other stakeholders’ technology-related requirements and interpretations. This study has implications for subsequent studies in the wild by framing them as fluid settings of a great variety of stakeholders with a multiplicity of values, requirements, and interpretations
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