Teacher and student questions: a case study in Malaysian secondary school problem-based learning

Problem-based learning (PBL) promotes high order questioning and stimulates student thinking, thus playing an important role in preparing students to face real-world challenges. Yet, PBL is an uncommon instructional strategy in Malaysian secondary school science classrooms. Occurrence of questioning...

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Main Authors: Tan, Yin Peen, Arshad, Mohammad Yusof
Format: Article
Published: Canadian Center of Science and Education 2014
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/62816/
http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ass.v10n4p174
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spelling my.utm.628162017-06-19T00:16:52Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/62816/ Teacher and student questions: a case study in Malaysian secondary school problem-based learning Tan, Yin Peen Arshad, Mohammad Yusof LB Theory and practice of education Problem-based learning (PBL) promotes high order questioning and stimulates student thinking, thus playing an important role in preparing students to face real-world challenges. Yet, PBL is an uncommon instructional strategy in Malaysian secondary school science classrooms. Occurrence of questioning in the traditional spoon-feeding classroom is low. Thus, the PBL model adapted from Barrows has been introduced. This article investigates whether PBL is able to promote high order questioning and thinking in the Malaysian science classroom. A PBL class with 1 teacher and 17 students divided into 4 groups was observed, video-and audio-recorded, and the verbatim were analysed. Questions are categorized into high order, low order, eliciting ideas, and evaluating ideas questions. Findings show that the percentage of student questions is 67.9% while for teacher questions is 32.1%. The amount of student questions per hour is relatively high at 8.2 questions per student. Nearly half of the classroom questions are low order questions (47.9%), such as clarification, verification, concept completion, disjunctive, definition, example, quantification, and feature specification questions. High order questions consist of 16.3%, which include causal antecedent, causal consequence, goal orientation, comparison, enablement, and reflective questions. Eliciting ideas questions raised by the teacher cover 8.8% while evaluating ideas questions by students cover 27.1%. This study shows that the PBL environment promotes active learning, student thinking, and questioning in the Malaysian science classroom. However, student and teacher questions should be enhanced to be at higher order level. Several suggestions to extend low order questions into high order questions are discussed in this paper. Canadian Center of Science and Education 2014 Article PeerReviewed Tan, Yin Peen and Arshad, Mohammad Yusof (2014) Teacher and student questions: a case study in Malaysian secondary school problem-based learning. Asian Social Science, 10 (4). pp. 174-182. ISSN 1911-2017 http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ass.v10n4p174 DOI:10.5539/ass.v10n4p174
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic LB Theory and practice of education
spellingShingle LB Theory and practice of education
Tan, Yin Peen
Arshad, Mohammad Yusof
Teacher and student questions: a case study in Malaysian secondary school problem-based learning
description Problem-based learning (PBL) promotes high order questioning and stimulates student thinking, thus playing an important role in preparing students to face real-world challenges. Yet, PBL is an uncommon instructional strategy in Malaysian secondary school science classrooms. Occurrence of questioning in the traditional spoon-feeding classroom is low. Thus, the PBL model adapted from Barrows has been introduced. This article investigates whether PBL is able to promote high order questioning and thinking in the Malaysian science classroom. A PBL class with 1 teacher and 17 students divided into 4 groups was observed, video-and audio-recorded, and the verbatim were analysed. Questions are categorized into high order, low order, eliciting ideas, and evaluating ideas questions. Findings show that the percentage of student questions is 67.9% while for teacher questions is 32.1%. The amount of student questions per hour is relatively high at 8.2 questions per student. Nearly half of the classroom questions are low order questions (47.9%), such as clarification, verification, concept completion, disjunctive, definition, example, quantification, and feature specification questions. High order questions consist of 16.3%, which include causal antecedent, causal consequence, goal orientation, comparison, enablement, and reflective questions. Eliciting ideas questions raised by the teacher cover 8.8% while evaluating ideas questions by students cover 27.1%. This study shows that the PBL environment promotes active learning, student thinking, and questioning in the Malaysian science classroom. However, student and teacher questions should be enhanced to be at higher order level. Several suggestions to extend low order questions into high order questions are discussed in this paper.
format Article
author Tan, Yin Peen
Arshad, Mohammad Yusof
author_facet Tan, Yin Peen
Arshad, Mohammad Yusof
author_sort Tan, Yin Peen
title Teacher and student questions: a case study in Malaysian secondary school problem-based learning
title_short Teacher and student questions: a case study in Malaysian secondary school problem-based learning
title_full Teacher and student questions: a case study in Malaysian secondary school problem-based learning
title_fullStr Teacher and student questions: a case study in Malaysian secondary school problem-based learning
title_full_unstemmed Teacher and student questions: a case study in Malaysian secondary school problem-based learning
title_sort teacher and student questions: a case study in malaysian secondary school problem-based learning
publisher Canadian Center of Science and Education
publishDate 2014
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/62816/
http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ass.v10n4p174
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score 13.211869