Recently, I went to a local hospital where I heard an officer try to explain or convince the audience that there is no real loss to potential kidney donors if they ever decided to donate one of their kidneys. The officer said that on average, kidney donors live longer than the average person. She went on to explain that this is because the kidney donors are usually people who are already fit because otherwise they would not be considered as donors.
Of course the audience seemed convinced by her arguments and no one seemed to be able to detect the flaw in her argument. To put it simply her comparison was invalid. If the goal of her argument was to convince potential donors that their life will be least affected by the transplant, then she should compare the lifespans of those who actually donated their kidneys against those who are at the same level of fitness as these donors but who do not have their kidneys removed. This would show if there is a shortening of the lifespan of the kidney donors.
What is striking is that most (if not all) in the audience couldn’t spot the error in the comparison made by the officer. As someone who is very interested in the teaching of thinking skills, I am both amused and saddened by this error going undetected. I doubt that the officer concerned did it maliciously. I am in fact quite certain she herself didn’t realize the error in her argument. But this episode does point to the importance of teaching our students to think.
I will not elaborate at length why it is important to teach thinking skills as I have discussed it in some of my other postings about the economic reasons for teaching thinking and I believe the example above is sufficient to illustrate its importance in life in general. However, perhaps we ought to consider seriously about how the teaching of thinking skills is to be done. I will try and illustrate the issues concerned with teaching thinking skills with some examples from my experience in Singapore.
In Singapore, the teaching of thinking skills has been going on for quite awhile. Officially, the powers that be here, recognized the importance of teaching thinking. De Bono‘s CoRT was once a staple in Singapore schools until it went out of fashion. Today one is more likely to see the approach taken by Robert Marzano
and others which is basically to infuse the teaching of thinking skills into the subject content area in the school curriculum. However, even then I will argue the way that is implemented means that Marzano’s framework for teaching thinking skills has been sacrificed at Singapore’s altar of Pragmatism. While the thinking skills advocated by Marzano is used officially, the manner in which it is being used leaves a lot to be desired (see my comments here).
Furthermore, in practice, Marzano’s framework seems to be used only for the teaching of social studies, history and geography (they are separate subjects in Singapore). Little is heard about it being used for the other subjects like Maths, Science, Art and others . Why is this so? This is because only in this three subject areas, there are what is known as the thinking skills type questions in the examination papers. Even in the three subjects, the use of this framework for thinking becomes somewhat of a joke (see same link above for my comments).
If teachers in Singapore are cynical about the teaching of thinking skills, some of the blame perhaps can also be placed on the shoulder of the Curriculum Planning and Development Division (CPDD) of Singapore’s Ministry of Education (MOE). I have attended courses and briefings organized by the CPDD in the past. In their attempt to allay the fears of a tired and overworked teacher audience who is going to be asked to accept another “initiative” to their teaching load, quite often it is heard from CPDD officers that the then “new initiative” pertaining to the teaching of thinking skills is not new (duh!) and something that the teachers have been doing. If you are in that audience, you too would feel then there is no real need to change the way you teach since you have been teaching thinking already!
So what happens here is that although the MOE has officially accepted the idea of teaching thinking through infusion into the subject content areas, in reality, what is practised is very different. Thinking skills still exists in silos in Singapore’s education system.
The other issue that has to be considered with teaching thinking skills is the type of thinking skills that is to be taught. The post, “Coaching Critical Thinking to Think Creatively” by Zaid Alsagoff, illustrates, among others, the dilemma that is faced by educators pertaining to the teaching of thinking skills. What teaching skills should be taught? Should we teach critical thinking or creative thinking or problem-solving (though they all may not necessarily be separate entities)? I think we are in this state of flux with regards to the teaching of thinking because we are not clear what end-product (kind of students and adults) we want. The economic needs seem to define the kind of “education” that ought to be given but are we clear how to get to the end product.
Personally, I see two approaches. At the tertiary level perhaps, the approach has been more focused on the kinds of workers we want in the future workplace. This leads to thinking courses being focused on perhaps problem-solving and creative thinking or the more specific stuff like SWOT etc. At the school level, educators tend to focus more on the more “generic” thinking skills as suggested by the Marzano model. I think there is a place for all these different approaches but in my view, they should be integrated or infused into the core curriculum and not taught separately.
The different subjects anyway will lend themselves quite differently to the different kinds of thinking skills. They should reflect the kind of thinking that is done by professionals in the subject areas, which means if they are taught thinking in history, they must be taught how a historian thinks. The thinking skills demanded by a scientist is quite different. Having said that, there are also thinking skills that overlap in the different disciplines. For example, the inquiry approach is common to both the historian and the scientist.
There are also the “thinking skills” that more reflect perhaps cognitive habits that must be inculcated in everyone. For example, the “Habits of Mind” as proposed by Costa and Kallick comes to mind. In short there is a whole range of thinking skills to be taught.
In my mind, the teaching of thinking skills should, therefore, not be done in a one-size-fits-all manner. To do so would be wrong even if it is in the name of teaching thinking skills. To use an analogy, very often at the tertiary level, the IT Department would conduct almost the same ICT course across the disciplines found in a tertiary institute. So a student studying accountancy would be given the same course as an engineering student (see this example). This is done usually out of administrative convenience or intellectual laziness, or perhaps also more likely, because the various departments do not know what ICT skills are really essential for their very different student requirements.
So the teacher of science should know what thinking skills lends itself best for the teaching of science. The teacher of History should know what thinking skills goes well with his discipline and so on for the other subject areas. This requires the teachers of the various disciplines to be clear themselves about what they think a product of their department ought to be able to do with his head.
Lastly perhaps, the teaching of thinking skills should be explicit in the sense that students ought to know what thinking skills is being used or taught. Thinking skills should be taught explicitly because stduents must be made aware of the thinking that goes on in their heads. They have to be more conscious. Teachers too will be made more conscious that they ARE teaching thinking and that it is not done by some hidden osmosis-like and accidental processes. The teaching of thinking should also be done explicitly while the “content” is being taught instead of just dishing out “facts” from the textbooks. Teachers who are not familiar with the the infusion of thinking skills in their subject content areas should therefore seriously undergo professional training in this area.
| Filed Under: Directions in education , Teacher training , Thinking skills Tagged with disciplines, education, framework, habits, pemikiran, pendidikan, schools, sekolah, Singapore, skills, teachers, thinking, Thinking skills, training |
Aug
17Preparing teachers to prepare self-directed learners
Posted By: Amran on August 17, 2008 at 9:23 pmWorkers who are independent learners have become one of the most important characteristics of the workforce of the future. Independent learners would know how to seek whatever information on their own when they enter the workforce. They would be resourceful workers. Also according to Carol Sanford in “Myths of Organizational Effectiveness at Work”:
“The foundational element in effective work systems is self-correcting, self-managing, self-accountable, self-governing behavior. Energy spent on monitoring and attempting to affect the behavior of team members or other entities from the outside is energy wasted and energy that could be better expended on improving the business and the capability of people. The critical element is to increasingly create self-governing capability.”
The old factory line approach to teaching and learning that features the teacher doing most of the thinking and talking has to give way to students having to explore, do their own research and thinking about what they are learning. Teachers would have to craft lessons that excite their charges with that spirit of inquiry that has as its basis in the natural curiosity of children and teenagers. Part of that crafting includes the need to design appropriate activities that comes with appropriate assessment strategies because not only would the teachers need to know what goes on in the heads of their students but also the latter would also need to know if his learning is going in the right direction.
That is the new challenge for teachers everywhere, including those in Singapore, if they are serious about preparing students for the future. Students must be made to take more responsibility for their own learning. They will have eventually decide when they have left school, what is it that they have to learn or re-learn, how they will be learning, when and why. They will have to be able to monitor their own progress to see if their work skills suits whatever work they have been employed to do or that they hope to do. How do they know if they are on the right track?
Already experts are talking about workers having two or even three careers in a lifetime. overnment leaders in Singapore are echoing this same view about multiple careers ina life time too.This implies of course a lot of learning and re-learning is required of workers in the economy of the future. In fact, it is already beginning to happen. With this scenario, it becomes imperative that teachers teach students how to do their own self-directed learning and link to this, also how to do their own self-assessment of their own learning. Teachers, therefore, need to devise in schools today, assessment strategies for their students to learn to monitor their own learning. Assessment can no longer be in the sole responsibility of the teachers. Students must learn to assess their own learning.
| Filed Under: Assessment , Directions in education , learning , Teacher training Tagged with Assessment, independent, learning, self-directed, students, teacher, teachers, training |
I was once a member of a team of consultants and trainers that helped implement the MasterPlan for IT in Education (MPITE) for Singapore’s Ministry of Education (MOE). During my four-year stint there, a major role we had to perform was to push schools towards the use of ICT in the classrooms. We were always on the lookout for teachers who were keen with the use of ICT. Usually we find them to be young and very enthusiastic about ICT use. However, most of them show a good knowledge of ICT tools but they tend to look at things from the point of view of technology first instead of teaching first. They are technologists first, and teachers, second. Usually you can spot hem when they gush over the use of certain ICT tools and their teaching would be oriented towards the use of these tools. What ICT integration needs are the MacGyvers of education.
Remember that popular TV series, MacGyver, that featured a secret agent who is able to do fantastic things through his use of “simple” technology? We need our MacGyvers too because if we look at MacGyver, he is not a technologist. He is a secret agent. However, his knowledge of things mark him out as a secret agent who happens to be a technologist. He is clear about his mission and technology only becomes a tool for him to achieve his goals. The MacGyvers of ICT integration need to be like him in this respect and no, they don’t have to look as good as the TV version either.
The MacGyvers of education need to be clear that his role is firstly that of a teacher. Therefore, when he wants to use ICT tools in his teaching, the ICT tools must fit the learning objectives that he has set for his class. ICT tools are important but they must never be placed first. They must always come second to the learning objectives. These MacGyvers‘ enthusiasm for the use of ICT must be properly channeled.
Leaders in the school must embrace their knowledge and energy but must temper these qualities with good sound pedagogical principles. Schools leaders, who are usually older and less of a “technologist”, must also at the same time make a strong effort to find out what makes these technological toys so interesting to their MacGyvers. No doing so can cause a dampening of the latter’s enthusiasm to use these tools in teaching.
The MacGyvers should be involved in the ICT planning for the school. Get them to be the pathfinders for the rest of the teachers in the school. As pathfinders, they would be the ones who would be willing to try new ICT tools. But as pathfnders, it is also important that the learning objectives are achieved because the old hands in the school will always question the usefulness of such new-fangled tools. Having said that, it does not mean that success is expected every time a new ICT tool is used. This is where leaders who plan for ICT integration in schools must give some leeway for some degree of experimental failure. Still, if the leaders are involved with the McGyvers in the planning of lesson units involving the use of ICT tools, they can help to minimize the likelihood of unsuccessful ICT integrated lessons, through the wisdom of their experience as teachers.
| Filed Under: Directions in education , ICT Tagged with education, ICT, integration, IT, leaders, MOE, MPITE, pathfinders, pendidikan, school, schools, sekolah, Singapore, teacher, teachers, technology, teknologi, tools |

