DR Sharidah Kassim (UiTM)
DR Sharidah Kassim (UiTM)
DR Sharidah Kassim (UiTM)
Hjh Shahridah Kassim (Dr) Faculty of Health Sciences UiTM Puncak Perdana
Overview
Democtratisation & Liberalisation in the
context of education National Education Strategic Plan From teaching to learning Outcome Based Education Issues and Challenges
Democracy
Freedom Rights
DEMOCRATISATION OF EDUCATION
Educate
Foster, Nurture, train, Cause to develop innate capabilities optimally
DEMOCRATISATION OF EDUCATION
Is
rather an amorphous phrase, which one can park all kinds of political and economic consideration.
DEMOCRATISATION OF EDUCATION Basically is a condition for the progress of the society, favourable conditions and obstacles, quality of education in relation to the requirement of socioeconomic development
LIBERALISATION
Liberating education consists in acts of cognition, not
transferals of information. It is a learning situation in which the cognizable object (far from being the end of the cognitive act) intermediates the cognitive actors -- teacher on the one hand and students on the other. Accordingly, the practice of problem-posing education entails at the outset that the teacher-student contradiction to be resolved. Dialogical relations -- indispensable to the capacity of cognitive actors to cooperate in perceiving the same cognizable object --are otherwise impossible. Freire,P.(1993). Pedagogy of the oppressed
Education Act 1996 Education in Malaysia is on-going effort towards further developing the potential of individuals in a holistic and integrated manner so as to produce individuals who are intellectually, spiritually, emotionally and physically balanced and harmonious based on a firm belief in and devotion to God. An effort to produce Malaysian citizen who are knowledgeable and competent, who possess high moral standards and who are responsible and capable of achieving a high level of personal wellbeing as well as being able to contribute to the family, society and the nation at large.
Source: Curriculum Specifications Form 5 (2006). Integrated Curriculum for Secondary Schools. Curriculum Development Centre, Ministry of Education Malaysia
NATIONAL HIGHER EDUCATION LONGTERM STRATEGIC PLAN (NHESP Education ACT 1996 : for Higher Education
Purpose: Method: Target: Guiding principle: Ultimate goal:
to develop individuals potential holistic and integrated Balanced and harmonious human capital. Intellect, emotion, spiritual, physical Belief and devotion to the Creator Malaysians who are knowledgeable, of noble/ distinguished characters/ responsible, able to self-prosper and contribute to the harmony and prosperity of the family, society and country
CHANGE
http://www.mohe.gov.my/transformasi/images/1_bi.pdf
Gardiner, L. F. Why We Must Change: The Research Evidence THE NEA HIGHER EDUCATION JOURNAL http://www.nea.org/assets/img/PubThoughtAndAction/TAA_00Fal_13.p df
PARADIGM SHIFT
Instruction Paradigm
Teaching/ learning structures Lectures- start/ end at the same time 1 hour lecture 1 credit One teacher, one classroom Single instructional approach Objectives Independent disciplines, departments End of course assessment
. Barr, R. B & Tag, J. (1995) From Teaching to Learning -A New Paradigm for Undergraduate Education http://www.ius.edu/ilte/pdf/barrtagg.pdf
Learning Paradigm
Goal
of a higher learning institutions to create environments and experiences that bring students to discover and construct knowledge for themselves, to make students members of communities of learners that make discoveries and solve problems.
Learning Paradigm
Teaching/ learning structures Holistic Learning environments Learning held constant but time varies Outcomes Pre/during/post assessments Cross discipline/ department colloboration
. Barr, R. B & Tag, J. (1995) From Teaching to Learning -A New Paradigm for Undergraduate Education http://www.ius.edu/ilte/pdf/barrtagg.pdf
Outcomes?
Moving away from:
Are students getting the right answer?
Outcomes?
Moving to:
Can students demonstrate the qualities that we value in educated persons, the qualities we expect of college graduates?
Outcomes?
Moving to:
Can students gather and evaluate new information, think critically, reason effectively, and solve problems?
Outcomes?
Moving to:
Can [students] communicate clearly, drawing upon evidence to provide a basis for argumentation?
Outcomes?
Moving to:
Do [students] decisions and judgments reflect understanding of universal truths[/concepts] in the humanities and arts [etc.]?
Outcomes?
Moving to:
Can [students] work respectfully and productively with others?
st 21
century learning
A
Can Explain
Can Interpret Can Apply Have Perspective Can Empathize Have Self-Knowledge
Wiggins,G. & McTighe, J.( Understanding By Design)
st 21
century learning
st 21
century learning
st 21
century skills
What is learning?
Relatively permanent change in
behavior or mental state based on experience
Relatively permanent change: Can be altered with future learning Behavior: Some response to a situation or event Mental state: knowledge, attitude, belief, strategy
Learning
th 20
century vs
st 21
century
Education in the 20th century: is filling the vessel Is re-telling Is information transfer Content based Textbook driven Passive learning Working in isolation
Education in the 21st century: is igniting the fire Is discovery Learning to learn
Instructional based
learning
st 21
st 21
Teaching is holistic
Not fragmented Learning is designed on upper levels of Blooms synthesis, analysis and evaluation (HOTS)
Quality Accountability
Why OBE?
the quality of education:
highly valued by the community and by nations; seen as fundamental to being successful in this knowledge age. What matters today : good education and training =key aspects for being successful in life. It is too time-consuming for learners to attend academic institutions; get qualifications and then still have to get inservice training to be able to do the job. Therefore, good education and training should not only be of an academic nature, but it should also prepare learners adequately for the workplace.
Why OBE?
About 44,000 graduates are without jobs as they have
nothing outstanding to offer to the job markets although they possess degrees and diplomas. Professor Emeritus Datuk Dr Khoo Kay Kim of Univ. Malaya said this was one problem which must be looked into. He said this had been mainly caused by students memorising facts without knowing how to apply them in a particular situation. As a result, most of them cant even do simple things or solve simple problems. Another factor is their laid-back attitude. This is one phenomenon that is evident today
Why OBE?
About 44,000 graduates are without jobs as they have
nothing outstanding to offer to the job markets although they possess degrees and diplomas. Professor Emeritus Datuk Dr Khoo Kay Kim of Univ. Malaya said this was one problem which must be looked into. He said this had been mainly caused by students memorising facts without knowing how to apply them in a particular situation. As a result, most of them cant even do simple things or solve simple problems. Another factor is their laid-back attitude. This is one phenomenon that is evident today NST August 20, 2002
What is OBE ?
Education that is outcome-based, is a learner centered, results oriented system founded on the belief that all individuals can learn James Towers (1996)
What is OBE ?
OBE is education based on producing particular educational outcomes that: focuses on what students can actually do after they are taught; expect all learners/students to successfully achieve particular (sometimes minimum) level of knowledge and abilities.
What is OBE ?
Outcome based does not mean curriculum based with outcomes sprinkled on top. It is a transformational way of doing business in education. (Spady, 1993) OBE is an approach to education in which decisions about the curriculum are driven by the learning outcomes that students should display at the end of the course. These decisions include curriculum content, educational strategies, student selection and assessment.
What is OBE?
ITS NOT WHAT WE TEACH, ITS WHAT THE STUDENTS LEARN
OBE
Textbook/worksheet focused & teacher centred Learner centred & educator/ facilitator use group/ teamwork See syllabus as rigid & non negotiable Learning programmes seen as guides that allow educators to be innovative & creative in designing programmes/ activities Teachers/trainers responsible for learning Learners take responsibility for their learning, motivated by personality of teacher learners motivated by constant feedback/ affirmation of worth Emphasis what teacher hopes to achieve Emphasis outcomes what learner becomes & understands Content placed in rigid time frames Flexible time frames - learners work at own pace
Traditional teaching
teacher owns the knowledge and convey it to the students.
SCL
as a coach/facilitator, innovator, motivator who asks questions and provides guidelines for the acquisition of knowledge.
teacher
Principles of OBE
a) Clarity of focus about outcomes Always have the outcomes as the focus. Let the students know what they are aiming for. b) Designing backwards Design curriculum backward by using the major outcomes as the focus and linking all planning, teaching and assessment decisions directly to these outcomes. c) Consistent, high expectations of success Set the expectation that OBE is for ALL learners. Expect students to succeed by providing them encouragement to engage deeply with the issues they are learning and to achieve the high challenging standard set (Spady, 1994). d) Expanded opportunity Develop curriculum to give scope to every learner to learn in his/her own pace. Cater for individual needs and differences, for example, expansion of available time and resources so that all students succeed in reaching the exit outcomes.
OBE Requisites
What the students learn must be clearly
identified. The students progress is based on demonstrated achievement. Multiple instructional and assessment strategies need to be available to meet the needs of each student. Adequate time and assistance need to be provided so that each student can reach the maximum potential
OBE Emphasis?
ASSESSMENT OF OUTCOMES
Relevancy of OBE
Rating/Accreditation requirements:
1.
Quality Assurance Audit by the Ministry of Education: Malaysian Qualifications Framework (MQF) emphasis on learning outcomes. Accreditation Requirement for Professional Programmes by professional bodies emphasizes learning outcomes
2.
Therefore, OBE
OBE is an educational process. Directed/focussed at achieving certain specified outcomes in terms of individual student learning. Outcomes - key things students should understand and be able to do or the qualities they should develop. Both structures and curricula are designed to achieve those capabilities or qualities. Educational structures and curriculum are regarded as means not ends. If they do not do the job they are rethought (Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI)).
Therefore, OBE
OBE is a process that involves the restructuring of curriculum, assessment and reporting practices in education to reflect the achievement of high order learning and mastery rather than accumulation of course credits. Amongst Expected Changes: Curriculum Restructuring/Revision Innovative/Flexible Delivery Method Variety of Assessment & Evaluation Methods Collection of Evidences Continuous Quality Improvement (Closing the Loop (CDL))
OBE PROCESS
Curriculum Curriculum REVIEW CQI Report Closing the Loop (CDL) Evaluate / analyse Academic Level Program Outcomes (PO) PEO
Program Standards
Planning (1)
Curriculum
Blooms Taxonomy
Evaluating (4)
Entrance/Exit Surveys Test Blueprint Lesson Plan Marking Scheme Student Portfolio Formative Assessment Summative Assessment
Blooms Taxonomy
Developing (2)
TL Activities Assessments SLT
Blooms Taxonomy
Rubrics
Implementing (3)
Evidences Documenting Curriculum
Credit Hour
CONCLUSION
What kind of education do we need? The answer to the question lies in the answer to a different question: What kind of society do we want?
Eugenio Tironi: El sueo chileno (2005)
The Wingspread Group on Higher Education, 1995: teaching is more than lecturing. active engagement in learning is more productive than passive listening. we should evaluate institutional performance against student outcomes.
Conclusion
Conclusion
Are our students critical thinkers and problem solvers? Are our students globally aware? Are our students self-directed?
Conclusion
Are our students flexible and adaptable?
http://www.healthprofessionals21.org/docs/HealthProfNe wCent.pdf
THANK YOU