TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
1.2 THE
STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
1.3 THE PURPOSE OF THE STUDY
1.4 THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
1.5 RESEARCH
QUESTION
1.6 FORMULATION
OF HYPOTHESIS
1.7 SCOPE
AND DELIMITATION OF THE STUDY
CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 INTRODUCTION
2.2 DEFINITION OF REFLECTIVE THINKING
2.3.1 THE REFLECTIVE THINKING MODEL
2.3.2 THE FOUR STAGES IN REFLECTIVE THINKING
2.4 DEEP AND SURFACE APPROACH TO LEARNING, IMPLICATIONS
ON STUDENTS’ PERFORMANCE.
2.5.1 HOW TO BECOME A REFLECTIVE THINKER
2.5.2 CULTIVATING REFLECTIVE PRACTICE
2.6 BASIC SCIENCE PHILOSOPHY AND HOW IT IDEALLY
PROMOTES REFLECTIVE THINKING
CHAPTER THREE
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
3.1 INTRODUCTION
3.2 DESIGN OF THE STUDY
3.3 AREA OF THE STUDY
3.4 POPULATION FOR THE STUDY
3.5 SAMPLE AND SAMPLING TECHNIQUE
3.6 RESEARCH INSTRUMENT
3.7 VALIDATION OF INSTRUMENT
3.8 METHOD OF DATA COLLECTION
3.9 METHOD OF DATA ANALYSIS
CHAPTER FOUR
DATA PRESENTATION AND
ANALYSIS
4.1 INTRODUCTION
4.2 PRESENTATION OF RESULT AND DISCUSSIONS
4.3 ANALYSIS OF RESEARCH QUESTION
4.4 ANALYSIS OF RESEARCH HYPOTHESIS
CHAPTER 5
DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS, CONCLUSION
ANDRECOMMENDATION
5.1 DISCUSSION
OF FINDINGS
5.2 CONCLUSION
5.3 EDUCATIONAL
IMPLICATIONS OF FINDINGS
5.4 RECOMMENDATIONS
5.5 SUGGESTION
FOR FURTHER STUDIES
5.6 LIMITATION
OF THE STUDY
5.7 SUMMARY
REFERENCES
APPENDIX: LESSON PLAN FOR THE
RESEARCH INSTRUMENT
INSTRUCTIONAL
ACTIVITY-BASED ACHIEVEMENT (TEACHER MADE) TEST
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1
BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
Over the years, several methods, techniques
and strategies have been used in the teaching of Basic Science in Nigerian
classrooms for better delivery of the contents, concepts, principles and
philosophies of the Basic Science subject. Majority of the activities carried
out are teacher-centered (lecture method) instead of student-centered (guided
discovery method) and this in turn affects how students understands the
subject, as well as the overall students performance in Basic Science. Although
previous researchers have revealed that most of the methods, techniques and
strategies used by Nigerian teachers in teaching of Basic Science subject in
the classroom are not stimulating enough to stir up students inquisition and
curiosity to ask why, how, where and when a particular answer or solution is
arrived at. The students are more of passive listeners during the period the
class goes on and definitely, this will in no way instill confidence and as
well as the ability of the students to engage in rational thinking, thought
provoking discussions and argument on the whole process of arriving at the
solution to the problem. For students to be able to be confident and
independent of themselves there is need for responsibilities to be placed on
each and every one of them so as to make them value the importance of every
decision and choices made to arrive at any plausible solution to a problem.
This can be made possible by the teachers assigning tasks that will spur-up the
students’ curiosity to engage in critical and rational thinking so as to arrive
at the solution and at the same time will help in building the student’s
scientific personality.
The concept "reflective
thought" was introduced by John Dewey in 1910 in his "How We
Think", a work designed for teachers. Dewey admitted a debt to both his
contemporaries in philosophy, William James, and Charles S. Peirce. Dewey's
most basic assumption was that learning improves to the degree that it arises
out of the process of reflection. As time went on, terminology concerning
reflection proliferated, spawning a host of synonyms, such as "critical thinking,"
"problem solving," and “higher level thought."
Reflective practice is a disciplined
inquiry into the motives, methods, materials, and consequences of educational
practice. It enables practitioners to thoughtfully examine conditions and
attitudes which impede or enhance student achievement. Reflective teachers are
of many things, amongst
(1) Are responsive to the unique
educational and emotional needs of individual students;
(2) Question personal aims and
actions; and
(3) Constantly review instructional
goals, methods, and materials (Pollard & Tann, 1987).
The paradigm of reflective practice
is hardly a new one. In his seminal work, ‘How We Think’, Published in 1909,
John Dewey explained the concepts of reflective thinking and teaching....
(Must evaluate the potential
solutions to the problem in light of existing information, information that may
be incomplete and unverifiable? Reflective thinking requires the continual
evaluation of beliefs, assumptions, and hypotheses against existing data and
against other plausible interpretations of the data. The resulting judgments
are offered as reasonable integrations or syntheses of opposing points of view.
Because they involve on-going verification and evaluation, judgments based on
reflective thinking are more likely to be valid and insightful than beliefs
derived from authority, emotional commitment, or narrow reasoning (Dewey, 1933,
1938). (King and Kitchener, 1994, p. 6-7) John Dewey and King and Kitchener
propose that individuals engage in reflection when they encounter problems with
uncertain answers. When no authority figure has an answer, when they believe no
one answer is correct, and when the solution cannot be derived by formal logic.
The uncertainty or the belief in uncertainty is the essential requirement in
this case for reflective thinking to occur. An individual must acknowledge that
some problems may not be solved by one absolute truth
1.2 THE
STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
The overall performance of Nigerian
students in Basic Science has not been at its best over the years, mainly
because the methods, techniques and strategies used in teaching the subject are
not that stimulating and scientific enough, and this has led to students’ poor
performance in the subject. There is no denying the fact that the
aforementioned factors militate against optimum students’ performance in the
Basic Science subject in the Nigerian classrooms. Most of these methods only
spoon feeds the students with answers and solutions to problems while denying
them the knowledge of the processes that led to the answers and solutions. Also
majority of the class activities are teacher-centered instead of being
student-centered. This will only make the students a shadow of their teachers
instead of them becoming a reflection of pure knowledge. For the students to be
more confident of the knowledge they seek to acquire, there is need for task
that will spring-forth rational reasoning and reflection to be assigned to the
students.
Therefore, this research work will
look into how the Reflective thinking
strategy effects students’ performance in Basic Science and also whether
students that are exposed to the reflective practice approach perform better
than those that are not exposed to the practice.
1.3
THE PURPOSE OF THE STUDY
This research project work is to find
out the following;
1. To identify how ‘Reflective thinking strategy’ affects students’ academic performance
in Basic Science.
2. To establish If ‘Reflective thinking strategy’ and its practices can make students
understanding better the principles, concepts and contents of the Basic Science
subject compare to other teaching strategies and methods used in the teaching
of Basic Science.
3. To determine whether the performances of
students who are exposed to the reflective practice approach (deep approach) and
those who are not (surface approach), significantly differ in their academic
performances in Basic Science.
4. To determine each of the four stages of ‘Reflective thinking strategy’ on
overall students’ academic performance in Basic Science.
5. To establish reasons why ‘Reflective thinking strategy’ should be
exposed to students of Basic Science by their respective teachers in their
respective schools.
1.4
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
This study on “The effect of Reflective thinking strategy on students’
achievement in Basic Science in Nigeria classrooms” intends to identify the
important role the ‘Reflective thinking
strategy’ plays on students’ academic performance and what the students
stand to benefit if exposed to the reflective thinking practice.
This research will also benefit the
Education Ministry, Schools and Teachers by offering a teaching method that has
been found to involve all levels of Bloom taxonomy and secondly the research
will highlight the advantages a reflective practitioner has over a
non-reflective practitioner.
On the whole, this research project
work will emphatically bring to the knowledge of the public that the teaching
of Basic Science is expected to lay a sound basis for scientific and reflective
thinking so as to create a radical change in teaching strategy from chalk and
talk science teaching to enquiry.
1.5 RESEARCH QUESTION
1. Does Reflective
thinking strategy have any effect on students’ academic performance in
Basic Science?
2. Does Reflective
thinking strategy make students understand better the principles, concepts
and contents of the Basic Science compared to the traditional teaching method
(lecture method) that is generally used in the teaching of Basic Science in
Nigeria’s classrooms?
3. Is there any difference in the
mean-score performance of students that are exposed to Reflective thinking strategy and those who are not in Basic
Science?
1.6 FORMULATION
OF HYPOTHESIS
This hypothesis would be tested in
this study:
There will be no significant effect
of reflective thinking strategy on the academic achievement of students exposed
to reflective thinking strategy, and those not exposed to the strategy in the
teaching of Basic science.
1.7 SCOPE
AND DELIMITATION OF THE STUDY
This research project work was
carried out in Ajeromi Ifelodun Local Government Area of Lagos State with a
population of about 3 million people. The scope of this study was strictly
confined to methods and strategies used in the teaching the subject, its
effects on students’ academic achievement and also ways of encouraging students’
to engage in reflective thinking.
This research work was highly limited
by some factors. The problem of finance, non-conformity of people, lack of
textbooks and finally the Academic Staff Union of University (ASUU) strike all
militated against this research project work.
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