hots wkshop in melaka

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‘HOTS IN ENGLISH’ WORKSHOP

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Page 1: Hots wkshop in melaka

‘HOTS IN ENGLISH’WORKSHOP

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The World Has Changed

We have moved into a more demanding cognitive age, compelling people to become better at absorbing, processing and combining information.

Can we learn to change with it?

Who might our kindergarten children be working with on an on-the-job project in 2025?

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3

Three-Question Exercise

1

2

3What would learning look like if it were designed around your answers?

What will the world be like 20 years from now?

What skills will your child need to be successful in that world?

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Globalization Is an Integral Part of This Generation ………….

Because of globalization—the ongoing process of intensifying economic, social, and cultural exchanges across the planet—young people the world over need more innovative thinking skills, cultural awareness, higher-order cognitive skills, and sophisticated communication and collaboration skills than ever before.

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Tony Wagner, co-director of the Change Leadership Group, examines the U.S. education system in the 21st century, considers why American students are falling behind their international peers, and proposes methods to begin to correct the downward slide. The global achievement gap is the

gap between what we are teaching and testing in our schools, even in the ones that are most highly-regarded, versus the skills all students will need for careers, college, and citizenship in the 21st century.

What qualities do you most want in a potential new employee?

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Seven Survival Skills • critical thinking and problem

solving;• collaboration across networks

and leading by influence; • agility and adaptability; • initiative and

entrepreneurship; • effective oral and written

communication; • accessing and analyzing

information; and• curiosity and imagination.

Wagner hears that the single most important skill is the ability to ask the right questions.

RESPONSES

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Challenges of 21st Century Teaching

· Greater Need for Education in Society and Economy

· Higher Standards for Learning

· More Diverse Students with Greater Educational Needs

· Greater Expectations of Schools for Ensuring Success

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There are new 21st Century Contexts

Global Competition

Global Cooperation

Information Growth

More Jobs & Careers

Service Economy

Why are 21st century skills so important?

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SIX CRITICAL SKILLS FOR 21st CENTURY

CRITICAL SKILLS

COMMUNICATIONCREATIVITY &INNOVATION

INFORMATION LITERACY

RESPONSIBLE CITIZENSHIP

COLLABORATION

PROBLEM SOLVING

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370

SOURCE: World Bank EdStats; IMF; UNESCO; PISA, TIMSS, PIRLS, Global Insight; McKinsey & Company

1 Universal scale created by McKinsey & Co., based on Hanushek & Woessmann methodology, to enable comparison across systems. 2 Public spend per student for basic education (pre-school, primary, and secondary school levels) for 2008 current prices

Note: Malaysia 2008 public spend is US$3000, while in 2012, public spend is US$3500 (PPP adjusted)

Public spend per student2, PPP units

7,000–8,000

8,000–9,000

Excellent

3000–4,000

2,000–3,000

1,000–2,000

0–1,000

327

10,000+

9,000–10,000

4,000–5,000

Kyrgyzstan

6,000–7,000

Poor

Fair

Good

Great

478

560

540

500

480

440

420

320

0

580

520

460

380

340

400

360

UAE

455

Kazakhstan

Morocco

Thailand

ColombiaTunisia 397

441

Argentina

Chile

MexicoRomania

Malaysia 20082

412

489

Bulgaria

Slovak Republic

Russia

Serbia

422

578

Croatia

Poland

Chinese Taipei

Shanghai

544

458

Australia

Czech Republic

Israel

Korea, Rep.Singapore

458

547

Japan

Hong Kong

Portugal

New Zealand

Macao SAR, China

402

531

France

Germany

Spain

530

486

Canada

Italy

Ontario

Slovenia

464

545 Finland

Ireland

UK

483

531

Netherlands

USA

Luxembourg

Belg.Flanders

5,000–6,000

Armenia

El Savador

Philippines

Syria

Panama

Moldova

Algeria Mauritius

Turkey Iran

Lithuania

Botswana

Oman

LatviaHungary

Estonia

Malta

Cyprus

Iceland

Sweden

Switzerland

Denmark Norway

Belg. CFB Austria

Saudi ArabiaUruguay

Azerbaijan

IndonesiaGhana

Georgia

Jordan

W. Cape

BahrainGreece

Kuwait

Universal scale score1 2009 (max, median, min)

QUALITY: We are in the ‘poor’ performance band internationally, ~3 schooling years behind top performing Asian countries

13

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18 United Kingdom 494

19 Germany 497

OECD Average

PISA 2009+ results: Malaysia ranks among the bottom third of 74 participating countries on all three

dimensionsReading1 Math2 Science3

Regional peers

Rank CountryMean score Rank Country

Mean score Rank Country

Mean score

1 Shanghai-China 556

2 Korea 539

3 Finland 536

4 Hong Kong 533

5 Singapore 526

55 MALAYSIA 414

62 Indonesia 402

1 Shanghai-China 5752 Finland 554

3 Hong Kong 5494 Singapore 542

5 Japan 539

12

34

5

Shanghai-ChinaSingapore

Hong KongKorea

Taiwan

600562

555546

543

52 Thailand 419

68 Indonesia 371

42 Russian Fed. 459

43 Chile 449

International Average

53 Thailand 421

57 MALAYSIA 404

41 Croatia 460

42 Israel 447

International Average

51 Thailand 425

66 Indonesia 383

52 MALAYSIA 422

40 Greece 470

41 Malta 461

International Average

3

SOURCE: PISA 2010

Slovak Republic

20 Austria 496

21 497

20 Ireland 508

21 Czech Republic 500

……

……

……

……

Note: Countries are ranked in descending order of the percentage of top performers (Level 5 or 6).

OECD Average OECD Average

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International skills: Malaysian students are poorer in knowledge application and complex problem-solving than their peers

1 Advanced benchmark: able to organize information, make generalisations, solve non-routine problems and draw and justify conclusions from data

2 Romania included for comparison due to similarities in population size and GDP per capita. Note: Countries arranged by proportion of students in advanced level in descending order

SOURCE: TIMSS 2007 for 8th Grade

% of students by performance level in TIMSS Maths

58 5763

6380

73

4840 40

31

79

25

0

Int’

lavera

ge

Indonesi

a

52

2

Mala

ysi

a

18

2

Thaila

nd

34

3R

om

ania

2

17

4

Hong K

ong

6

Sin

gapore

3

Kore

a

2

Intermediate

Below minimum

Advanced1

80

77 77 75 7565

3217

10

61

82

22

Sin

gapore

7

Int’

lavera

ge

2

3523

Rom

ania

2

3

20

0

8

Kore

a

3

Indonesi

a

Mala

ysi

a

3

20

Thaila

nd

3

Hong K

ong

% of students by performance level in TIMSS Science

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Cognitive skills: Student performance is lagging across all dimensions in comparison with peers

SOURCE: TIMSS 2007 for 8th Grade

596

397

581

574

477

398

595

593

569

478

579

579

557

468

405

300 400 500 600

South Korea

Singapore

Hong Kong

Malaysia

Indonesia

Reasoning

Applying

Knowledge

Scores in TIMSS MathsTIMSS 2007 score

543

532

554

458

425426

567

547

522

473

558

438

564

533

487

400500600

Hong Kong

Singapore

South Korea

Malaysia

Indonesia

Scores in TIMSS ScienceTIMSS 2007 score

Malaysia performance across knowledge recall, application and reasoning all lag behind peers countries

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LACK OF HOTS AMONG OUR M’SIAN STUDENTS TO BECOME

21ST CENTURY INNOVATORS, THINKERS AND

ENTREPRENEURS.

ONE MAJOR IMPEDIMENT TO SUCH A SUSTAINED DEVELOPMENT = THE

DELIVERY OF OUR PRESENT EDUCATION SYSTEM

The passive learning styles and non-

innovative teaching styles

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Are our students globally aware?

Are our students self-directed?

Are our students good collaborators?

Are our students critical thinkers and problem solvers?

Are our students ready?

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Implementing higher order thinking skills (HOTS) in the curriculum, assessments and training

TIMSS and PISA have demonstrated that our students struggle with higher-order thinking skills

This has been enforced by surveys of Malaysian and multinational companies

Need to embed HOTS into new KSSM and KSSR curriculum and assessments to raise quality of education to an international standard

RATIONALE

OUTCOME

KPI AND 2015 TARGET

IMPACT ON JPN AND PPD

To equip every student with the required 21st century skills so as to maximise their employability in the today’s increasingly global workforce

Training to deliver enhanced curriculum to students

All Math and Science teachers to be trained in HOTs by 2014

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LOW ORDER THINKING (LOT) is often characterized by the:

- recall of information or

- explanation of ideas and concepts

(LOT)

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Bloom's Taxonomy

….. a classification of the different learning objectives that educators set for students

…divides educational

objectives into 3 domains: Cognitive,

Affective, and Psychomotor

loosely described as knowing/head, feeling/heart and doing/hands respectively

Within each domain, learning

at the higher levels is

dependent on having attained

prerequisite knowledge and skills at lower

levels.

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27

Revised taxonomy of the cognitive domain Anderson and Krathwohl (2001)

ANDERSON, L W, & KRATHWOHL D R (eds.) (2001). A Taxonomy for Learning, Teaching, and Assessing: A Revision of Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives. New York: Longman

BLOOM’S TAXONOMY

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HOTS

LOTS

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WHY HOTS ?????

• If we want our students to develop the capacity to think, reason and problem solve, then we need to start with high-level, cognitively complex tasks.

Stein and Lane, 1986

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Self-directe

d

Self- discipline

d

Self-correcti

ve

Self-monitore

d

STUDENTS WHO ARE HIGHLY

STIMULATED IN

HOT…….

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Projects/activities/

assignments in classroom must include Qs that

challenge students’

thinking process

Clarify their understanding

Make knowledgeab

le assumptions

Come up with

reasons and

evidence

Define their viewpoints

and perspectives

Determine implications

and consequence

s

Evaluate the

concept at hand

in its entirety

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Cognitive Domain Suggested Verbs Remember(Knowledge)

-shallow processing: drawing out factual answers, testing recall and recogniiton

ChooseDescribeDefineIdentifyLabel

MatchMemorizeNameOmitRecite

RecognizeSelectStateList 

 Understand (Comprehension)

-translating, interpreting and extrapolating 

 ClassifyDefendDemonstrateDistinguishExplainRepresentRestateTranslate

 ExpressExtendGive exampleIllustrateindicateRewriteSelectShow

 InterrelateInterpretInferJudgeMatchParaphraseSummarizeTell

Bloom’s Taxonomy and Verbs: Examples of verbs to use for each cognitive level.

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Cognitive Domain Suggested Verbs

 Apply -knowing when to apply, why to apply, and recognizing patterns of transfer to situations that are new, unfamiliar or have a new slant for students. 

 ApplyChooseDramatizeExplain Use

 GeneralizeJudgeOrganizePaintPrepare

 ProduceSelectShowSketchSolve

 Analyze

-breaking down into parts, forms. 

 AnalyzeCategorizeClassifyCompare

 DifferentiateDistinguishIdentifyInfer

 Point outSelectSubdivideSurvey

 Evaluate

-according to some set of criteria and state why 

 AppraiseJudge

 CriticizeDefend 

 Compare

 Create (Synthesis)

-combining elements into a pattern not clearly there before

 ChooseCombineComposeConstruct CreateTell

 DesignDevelopDoFormulateHypothesizeInvent

 MakeMake upOriginatePlanProduceRole play

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PERFORMANCE INDICATORS IN KSSM SECONDARY SCHOOL-BASED ASSESSMENT FOR ENGLISH LANGUAGE

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Descriptors and EvidenceExtracted from Form 2 English Language DSP

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GALLERY WALK

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ARE THE RESPONSES REFLECTIVE OF THESE THINKING

PROCESSES?

Clarify their understanding

Make knowledgeab

le assumptions

Come up with

reasons and

evidence

Define their viewpoints

and perspectives

Determine implications

and consequence

s

Evaluate the

concept at hand

in its entirety

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Daughter:

“Dad, I’m in love with a boy who’s far from me. I’m in Australia and he lives in the UK. We met on a dating website, became friends on Facebook, had long chats on Whatsapp, he proposed to me on Skype and now we’ve had 2 months of relationship through Viber. Dad, I need your blessings and good wishes.”

ACTIVITY 3 – 5 mins.

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PREDICT what her father would say…………

DAD: …………………….…………………………….

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Father:

“Wow! Really!! Then get married on Twitter, have fun on Tango, buy your kids on Amazon and send them through Paypal. And if you’re fed up with your husband…. Sell him on Ebay…….”

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