From Compliance to Self-Regulation: Internalizing Discipline Through Culture in an Elementary School

Authors

  • Nursidik Faculty of Psychology, Institut Agama Islam Pemalang, Indonesia
  • Raharjo Faculty of Education and Teacher Training, UIN Walisongo Semarang, Indonesia
  • Azam Syukur Rahmatullah Master of Islamic Studies Program, Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta, Indonesia
  • Arina Athiyallah Faculty of Psychology, Institut Agama Islam Pemalang, Indonesia
  • Lika Hestyaningsih Faculty of Psychology, Institut Agama Islam Pemalang, Indonesia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15575/psy.v13i1.52555

Abstract

Discipline in elementary education is frequently reduced to rule compliance. However, educational psychology views discipline as a developmental process through which externally guided behaviour gradually becomes self-regulation. Limited attention has been given to how this transition is supported through integrated school-culture practices. Therefore, this qualitative instrumental research aimed to examine how the BR3T programme (Bersih/Clean, Rapi/Neat, Tertib/Orderly, Teratur/Regular, Terpelihara/Well-maintained) at SD IT Salsabila, Purworejo, Central Java, functions as a cultural practice that facilitates discipline internalization. Data were collected from 25 participants, including 10 students (Grades 2–6), five homeroom teachers, and ten parents, through non-participant observation, semi-structured interviews, and document analysis. Subsequently, analyses were conducted thematically using Miles, Huberman, and Saldaña's interactive framework. The results showed three interdependent processes, namely (1) behavioural habituation through structured repetition, (2) teacher role modelling that translates routines into moral meaning, and (3) reinforcement through monitoring and reflection that fosters self-evaluation. Collectively, these processes support a gradual shift from supervised compliance toward emerging self-regulation.

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Published

2026-06-30

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Section

Articles

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