EXAMINING HIGHER ORDER THINKING IN INDONESIAN LOWER SECONDARY MATHEMATICS CLASSROOMS

Indonesian students’ poor performance in the mathematics test of PISA 2015 prompted the decision by the Ministry of Education of Indonesia to pay more attention to the integration of higher-order thinking (HOT) in the curricula starting in 2018. This new regulation emphasizes the need to have a shar...

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Main Authors: Citra Putriarum Tanudjaya, Michiel Doorman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sriwijaya University 2020-04-01
Series:Journal on Mathematics Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejournal.unsri.ac.id/index.php/jme/article/view/11000
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spelling doaj-362a07249d9e48be954d18d008d1e42c2020-11-25T03:00:29ZengSriwijaya UniversityJournal on Mathematics Education2087-88852020-04-0111227730010.22342/jme.11.2.11000.277-3004975EXAMINING HIGHER ORDER THINKING IN INDONESIAN LOWER SECONDARY MATHEMATICS CLASSROOMSCitra Putriarum Tanudjaya0Michiel Doorman1Utrecht UniversityUtrecht UniversityIndonesian students’ poor performance in the mathematics test of PISA 2015 prompted the decision by the Ministry of Education of Indonesia to pay more attention to the integration of higher-order thinking (HOT) in the curricula starting in 2018. This new regulation emphasizes the need to have a shared understanding of HOT in mathematics on many levels, such as curriculum, pedagogy, and assessment, and among students, teachers and policy makers. This study aims to examine HOT in Indonesian lower secondary mathematics classrooms by assessing students’ ability to demonstrate HOT skills through an open-ended mathematics problem, and by exploring teachers’ views of HOT skills through semi-structured interviews. It involved 372 ninth-grade students and six mathematics teachers from six lower secondary schools in Jakarta and Palembang. The findings show that most students could construct the mathematical model but experienced difficulty in transferring knowledge into new contexts, in applying creative thinking, and with information literacy skills. Besides, some of the teachers were familiar with the concept of HOT, but some viewed HOT as skills for talented students, or HOT problems having a high level of difficulty and long storylines. The knowledge of existing teaching strategies, familiarity with HOT problems, and colleague-support are needed to improve the development of HOT skills in the mathematics classroom.https://ejournal.unsri.ac.id/index.php/jme/article/view/11000higher-order thinkingcurriculumpedagogyassessmentteachers’ viewsstudents’ ability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Citra Putriarum Tanudjaya
Michiel Doorman
spellingShingle Citra Putriarum Tanudjaya
Michiel Doorman
EXAMINING HIGHER ORDER THINKING IN INDONESIAN LOWER SECONDARY MATHEMATICS CLASSROOMS
Journal on Mathematics Education
higher-order thinking
curriculum
pedagogy
assessment
teachers’ views
students’ ability
author_facet Citra Putriarum Tanudjaya
Michiel Doorman
author_sort Citra Putriarum Tanudjaya
title EXAMINING HIGHER ORDER THINKING IN INDONESIAN LOWER SECONDARY MATHEMATICS CLASSROOMS
title_short EXAMINING HIGHER ORDER THINKING IN INDONESIAN LOWER SECONDARY MATHEMATICS CLASSROOMS
title_full EXAMINING HIGHER ORDER THINKING IN INDONESIAN LOWER SECONDARY MATHEMATICS CLASSROOMS
title_fullStr EXAMINING HIGHER ORDER THINKING IN INDONESIAN LOWER SECONDARY MATHEMATICS CLASSROOMS
title_full_unstemmed EXAMINING HIGHER ORDER THINKING IN INDONESIAN LOWER SECONDARY MATHEMATICS CLASSROOMS
title_sort examining higher order thinking in indonesian lower secondary mathematics classrooms
publisher Sriwijaya University
series Journal on Mathematics Education
issn 2087-8885
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Indonesian students’ poor performance in the mathematics test of PISA 2015 prompted the decision by the Ministry of Education of Indonesia to pay more attention to the integration of higher-order thinking (HOT) in the curricula starting in 2018. This new regulation emphasizes the need to have a shared understanding of HOT in mathematics on many levels, such as curriculum, pedagogy, and assessment, and among students, teachers and policy makers. This study aims to examine HOT in Indonesian lower secondary mathematics classrooms by assessing students’ ability to demonstrate HOT skills through an open-ended mathematics problem, and by exploring teachers’ views of HOT skills through semi-structured interviews. It involved 372 ninth-grade students and six mathematics teachers from six lower secondary schools in Jakarta and Palembang. The findings show that most students could construct the mathematical model but experienced difficulty in transferring knowledge into new contexts, in applying creative thinking, and with information literacy skills. Besides, some of the teachers were familiar with the concept of HOT, but some viewed HOT as skills for talented students, or HOT problems having a high level of difficulty and long storylines. The knowledge of existing teaching strategies, familiarity with HOT problems, and colleague-support are needed to improve the development of HOT skills in the mathematics classroom.
topic higher-order thinking
curriculum
pedagogy
assessment
teachers’ views
students’ ability
url https://ejournal.unsri.ac.id/index.php/jme/article/view/11000
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