Investigating The Students’ Challenges in Speaking English in English Club Program at an Islamic Boarding School in Jember
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Faculty of Education
Abstract
Speaking is one of the most essential skills in English as a Foreign Language
(EFL) learning, especially in environments that aim to produce communicatively
competent individuals. In Islamic boarding schools (pesantren) that implement
English Clubs as part of their language programs, students are expected to practice
speaking in both formal and informal settings. However, many learners still struggle
to speak English fluently and confidently. This research investigates the challenges
students face in developing their speaking skills through English Club activities at
a pesantren in Jember, East Java.
Adopting a qualitative descriptive design with a deductive thematic analysis
approach, this study collected data through semi structured interviews with three
purposively selected participants who were actively involved in English Club
programs. The participants were chosen based on consistent attendance, high
speaking performance, and active classroom engagement. Thematic analysis was
conducted using the framework by Braun and Clarke (2006), with themes aligned
to pre existing theoretical categories of psychological, linguistic, and environmental
barriers, as well as students’ perceptions of the program’s effectiveness.
The analysis revealed four major themes: (1) Psychological Challenges,
including anxiety, shyness, and fear of negative judgment; (2) Linguistic
Challenges, such as limited vocabulary, weak grammar, and pronunciation
uncertainty; (3) Environmental Challenges, like irregular scheduling, inconsistent
policy enforcement, and peer discouragement; and (4) Perceived Effectiveness,
where students acknowledged the positive impact of English Club activities like
Daily Vocabulary Memorization (Muhadasah), Grammar and Pronuncation Class
(Ta’limul Lughoh), and Public Speaking on their confidence and fluency. Despite
the challenges, students viewed the English Club as a beneficial non formalplatform that supports speaking development, especially when activities are
consistent, contextualized with Islamic values, and emotionally supportive.
This study concludes that speaking challenges in pesantren based English
Clubs are multidimensional and intertwined, influenced by internal psychological
factors, language proficiency, and environmental support. It underscores the need
for more structured, consistent, and culturally relevant speaking activities facilitated
within emotionally safe environments. The study recommends that facilitators
adopt student centered approaches, administrators strengthen policy enforcement,
and future researchers explore the role of peer interaction and digital tools in
enhancing EFL speaking fluency.
Description
Reupload file repository 3 Februari 2026_Arif/Halima
