History Description of Marvy

33 d Lorensius Leonaraguna e Inka Ayu Henelawati f Primandari Wijayanti g Michael Yohanes B.G. h Annisa Septipanindya Sari i Valentina Intan K. j Wuri Lukito Sari In the first general meeting of Marvy, the people who were in charge in one particular division were given choice which division they wanted to work in. In the process of the decision making, each member had hisher own right to decide which division heshe felt interested in. They did it by considering their ability. After that, other members would give opinion and fortunately there was no rejection on somebody‟s choice for division. It proved how each of the members recognized hisher strength to be explored in the division heshe chose. They could identify themselves and it was supported by other members‟agreement.

c. Statute

Marvy was a legal organization after officially signing an agreed upon statute before a notary public. The statute was legalized in the office of Retno Hastuti, S.H. located at Jl. Laksda Adisucipto Km. 7, Ruko Janti No. 11, Caturtunggal, Depok, Sleman. It was issued on 16 December 2013. The content of the official document was date, name of the notary, representatives of Marvy members and their identities, chapter I up to XII with 30 articles containing 34 regulations, rights and obligations, and the closing remark signed by the notary. The complete document was attached in the Appendix C of this research.

d. Financial Report

As a legal institution, Marvy also managed its financial report well. The financial report included the capital of the founders and new members, cash flow with the income and the expenses, the tax of the members‟ earnings, and the profit. All data would be presented in the Appendix C. The financial report showed the characteristics of healthy accounting which covered procedural, transparent and accountable. The treasurers in Marvy had done the procedural accounting where they kept the transaction evidence and made the anual reports monthly. All money came in and out was always recorded. The transparency was obtained when all financial flows were clearly shared in the monthly meeting. All members of Marvy could see the flows of the money. The financial report also contained accountable characteristic since all the data could be assured.

e. Services

Firstly, there were three main divisions in Marvy namely teaching, translation, and learning media. As the institution went in progress, the learning media division consisting of six members Arinda Febriana as the Coordinator, Irfanda Adie, Anita Yusticia, Wuri Lukito, Annisa Septipanindya, and Lorensius Leonaraguna realized that its work was so little. The job description of the division was to produce interesting learning media for English learners so that they could learn English in a fun way. However, it turned out that after several 35 promotions, there was no one ordering any media from the division. The promotion was continued. Marvy members got more spirit to promote the institution via online, brochures and leaflets. After several weeks of waiting, still there was no one contacting Marvy to order any learning media. Because of it, in the end of 2014, Marvy held a general meeting to do revolution in a seafood restaurant in Yogyakarta. In the meeting, there were some decisions. One of them was the revolution to renew the organization of Marvy. The three divisions were then shortened into two divisions. The learning media division was omitted because of some reasons. Each member of the learning media division got an opportunity to choose which division either teaching or translation heshe wanted to work in. It lasted in a short time and finally the revolution was done. After the change., Marvy was sure to provide two services namely teaching and translation. The demand of these services was quite high. There were some people contacted Marvy to ask for English private course and for translating some needs. The teaching included English for elementary school, junior high school, senior high school, and general. It could cover English lesson for school students or for specific purposes depending on the clients‟ demand. For the translation, there had been some projects on abstracts, papers, articles, and manual books. English private course charge for one hour and a half meeting: Elementary school : 35,000.00 IDR Indonesian Rupiahs Junior high school : 40,000.00 IDR