Masdar Hilmy, Khoirun Niam
<p>Scholarly works on the way Indonesian Muslims perceive and respond to a pandemic—including Covid-19—have left an untouched theoretical gap. Works on pandemics or plagues mostly consist of sporadic and preliminary brief reflective pieces. This article endeavors to fill the academic gap conce...
Khoirun Niam
Social transformation carried out by the New Order government through the development program resulted on the emergence of various face of Muslim intellectuals in Indonesia. They are divergent and located in a great variety of institutional settings as well as in the interstices between a number of ...
Khoirun Niam
This article describes the relation between institutional-affiliated Muslim intellectuals and the government in Indonesia during the period of 1990-2001. By analyzing the interview data and documentary studies, it tries to resketch the historical context of social and institutional relation of Musli...
Rofiqi Rofiqi, Husniyatus Salamah Zainiyati, Khoirun Niam
Khoirun Niam, Syamsul Arifin
This article seeks to trace how Muhammadiyah cultivates its Muslim intellectuals, particularly in the early 21st century, and examines how their contributions promote intellectual and charitable initiatives. Through interviews with prominent Muhammadiyah leaders and scholars, as well as documentary ...
Niswatin Khoiriyah, Nur Maslikhatun Nisak, Kusaeri Kusaeri, Khoirun Niam
Assessment has shifted from assessment of learning to assessment for learning. Self-Assessment (SA) is generally a formative assessment practice and seems to play an important role in developing students' spiritual attitudes, including being obedient to worship, practicing Islamic teachings, and rel...