Higher Order Thinking (HOT) to Promote EFL Students’ Awareness
in Go Green Issues
Sri Setyarini
Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia, Jl. Dr. Setiabudi No.229, Isola, Bandung, Jawa Barat, Indonesia
Keywords: Character Education, English Learning, Go Green, Higher Order Thinking, Social Awareness.
Abstract: As one of agendas in Curriculum 2013, Higher Order Thinking (HOT), so far has been integrated in English
Learning particularly for junior high school students although the outcome seemed not to be satisfying. One
of the indicators is the students could not get exposures clearly deal with increasing their social awareness in
Go Green issues. Therefore, this paper presents research result focusing on HOTs in storytelling to promote
EFL students’ awareness in go green issues. As a case study, it involves one class of seventh grade students
with one teacher. Two instruments were employed to collect the data namely classroom observation and
interview with the students and teachers. The findings show that the teacher applied brainstorming in go green
issue through showing pictures, direct observation to their environment, and role playing with a go green
specific topic related to their surrounding situation. The results from the interview show that the students
could understand well the materials given since they directly reflect to what really happen in their place. By
doing so, they realize that what they have learnt in the classroom should direct them to raise their awareness
so that the issue of go green could be done well. In addition, the students also claim that they could place
themselves and behave optimally to contribute the go green program. It was recognized by the teachers in the
interview that the students tended to accept what the teachers instructed them to succeed go green issue as
they were engaged through HOTs in storytelling classes.
1 INTRODUCTION
Nowadays in the millennia time crimes among the
youngsters can be found in many places in the
country. Even, some criminal actions may be
recognized as common cases in the present societies.
They break the traffic rules as if they do not do
anything, distract their friends through bullying, or
have a less sympathy attitude toward their
environment. It seems that the education process
taken by the students does not significantly change
the way students think and behave in their real life.
Specifically, in Indonesia which has a diverse culture,
place, language, race, and ethnic, being tolerant is one
of the issues faced by the citizen. Tolerance is defined
as an attitude of being willing to accept and get along
with other people, and “not minding if they have
opinions that we don’t agree with” (Zakin, 2012).
One of the reasons for that condition is due to the
practice of teaching and learning which mostly still
focuses on mastering content knowledge but paying
less attention on how students can realize and imply
knowledge they have in their real life. It can be
indicated through the result of Program for
International Students Assessment (PISA, 2012)
showing that practice of teaching and learning in
Indonesia is still dominated by transmitting
knowledge through lower order thinking level such as
remembering and recalling materials given by
teachers in classroom activities. This teaching
practice considers students as an object of teaching
who follow what the teachers ask them to do rather
than to be an active meaning maker and decision
maker throughout the learning process
(Lengkanawati, 2015). Therefore, it is rarely
investigated that the students are trained to develop
their ideas, opinion, and choices during learning
process aimed at improving their thinking capacity
(Setyarini, 2018).
Regarding this notion, the government has tried to
compose Curriculum 2013 which is expected to be
able to accommodate those needs and prepare
students achieving success either in their academic or
in their social life. Many parties has realized that
enabling students to have a good content mastery is
not enough to make them to be a successful student in
110
Setyarini, S.
Higher Order Thinking (HOT) to Promote EFL Students’ Awareness in Go Green Issues.
DOI: 10.5220/0008546501100114
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Interdisciplinary Arts and Humanities (ICONARTIES 2019), pages 110-114
ISBN: 978-989-758-450-3
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All r ights reserved
this millennial era but driving them to have a higher
level of thinking as a life style may lead them to be a
right decision maker in all aspect of their life (Puchta,
2012; Yen & Halili, 2015). It is then socialized and
revealed in revised Curriculum 2013 that put Higher
Order Thinking Skills (HOTs) as one of the agendas
in educational purposes. An instruction for teachers
to integrate HOT in their teaching practices is
explicitly written in the curriculum. Furthermore, the
administration of HOTs in teaching is also an effort
to prepare students becoming a good citizen as people
do analyzing, evaluating, synthesizing before
deciding one action to do (Awan et al., 2018). As
stated by King et al. (2010) that Higher Order
Thinking Skills involve a complex judgmental
thinking and other skills which are beyond the
common thinking that require students to analyze,
evaluate, and create.
However, although HOTs has been instructed
officially by the government, many teachers are still
unfamiliar with ways of implementing it in their
teaching practices even the basic concepts of this
model. Setyarini (2016) found that teachers cannot
implement the model optimally in their classroom due
to several reasons including lack of knowledge and
experience in using HOTs. Furthermore, HOTs is not
yet socialized well by the government through
trainings or specific program to help teachers deal
with the concept and its implementation in practice.
As a result, some teachers tend to rely on traditional
teaching in which teaching process dominated by
remembering, recalling, and understanding facts
rather than activating their thinking ability toward
analyzing, evaluating, until decision making and
problem solving. Traditional education is
characterized by methods of instruction that
emphasize memorization and assessment schemes
that value students’ ability to recall information. The
same education system that failed to provide students
with depth of understanding, an ability to interpret
and apply information—about traditional curricular
subjects from chemistry to literature—clearly lacked
the capacity to convey to students anything as
sophisticated or radical as the idea of a civil society
founded upon the goals of openness, tolerance, and
respect for the individual (Zaki, 2012).
2 LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Higher Order Thinking Skills
In educational context, Higher Order Thinking
Skills involve a complex judgmental thinking and
other skills which are beyond the common thinking
that require students to analyze, evaluate, and create.
It has been one of the modern issues in 21st century
of education around the world and was believed that
to train decisive, open-minded individual with
fragmental qualities referred as activities for critical
thinkers (Elder & Paul, 2008). This notion is
supported by King, et al (2012) who claim that Higher
Order Thinking Skills are grounded in lower order
skills such as discriminations, simple application and
analysis, and cognitive strategies which are then
linked to the prior knowledge of subject matter
contents (vocabulary, procedural knowledge, and
reasoning patterns). Appropriate teaching strategies
and learning environments facilitate the growth of
Higher Order Thinking Skills as do student’s
persistence, self-monitoring, and open-minded,
flexible attitudes. Higher Order Thinking Skills have
been defined variously depending on the subjects and
contexts these terms are used. Some of them argue
that HOTs deal with uncertainties, independencies,
and flexibilities related to the context as quoted
below:
The challenge of defining “thinking skills,
reasoning, critical thought, and problem solving” has
been referred to as a conceptual swamp in a study by
Cuban (Lewis & Smith, 1993) and as “century old
problem” for which there is no well-established
taxonomy or typology. In addition, explanation of
how learning occurs have been viewed as inadequate,
with no single theory adequately explaining “how all
learning takes place” (Crowl, Kaminsky & Podell,
1997, p.23)
Moreover, Lai (2011) mentions that HOTs have
been identified as one of several skills necessary to
prepare students for their secondary education.
Higher Order Thinking Skills are also believed as a
main tool for encountering education or daily lives.
Meanwhile, Crowl et al. (1997) explain Higher Order
Thinking Skills as part of the process of evaluating
the evidence collected in problem solving or the
results produced by thinking creatively. Considering
several major concepts related to Higher Order
Thinking Skills, overall there are three assumptions
about thinking and learning. First, the levels of
thinking cannot be unmeshed from the levels of
learning; they involve interdependence, multiple
components and levels. Second, whether thinking can
be learned without subject matter content is only a
theoretical point. In real life, students will learn
content in both community and school experiences,
no matter what theorists conclude, and the concepts
and vocabulary they learn in the prior year will help
them learn both Higher Order Thinking Skills and
Higher Order Thinking (HOT) to Promote EFL Students’ Awareness in Go Green Issues
111
new content in the coming year. Third, Higher Order
Thinking Skills involves a variety of thinking
processes applied to complex situations and have
multiple variables (King et al, 2012, p. 12).
2.2 Character Education in Curriculum
2013
The integration of character education in learning
process has been a targeted project in Curriculum
2013. It reveals to response some challenges in 21st
century education that expect students to have good
social skills especially to deal with problem solving
and decision making in their real life (William, 2010).
According to Setyarini (2018) the educational process
should incorporate experiences that engage students
in developing decision making that enhance their
ability to make judgments in a proper way. In
character education, achieving decision skill needs to
involve both cognitive and affective process
(William, 2010). Unfortunately, many educators still
believe that affective and cognitive are two separated
skills that should be taught to students whereas it has
a strong relationship that influences each other. It is
also defined that successful learners are strong in both
cognitive and affective processing (William, 2010).
They are equipped to engage in cognitive processing
such as analysis, synthesis, and evaluation but they
have also refined affective skills such as receiving,
responding, valuing, resolving conflict, and applying
a value system to a situation (Covey 1989; Goleman
1995).
2.3 Social Awareness in EFL Classroom
Tolerance is commonly believed as an issue in a
nation with diversity like Indonesia. It should be
underlined that since in a very young age, students are
aware of differences such as skin color and language
but they just do not put their attention much on it
(Masko, 2005). Unfortunately, society around
children such as parents and teachers also mostly less
concern about this that they may think young students
are free to comment on what they see from their own
perspective only (Zaki, 2010). This kind of thinking
is possibly fossilized in students’ mind and reflected
in their attitude toward their surroundings. Regarding
this, Jones (2004) and Masko (2005) suggest that the
earlier the better to introduce students about diversity
since they are less likely to internalize unspoken
negative messages about differences as they grow
older which can culminate in a learned hierarchy that
is then enacted throughout their lives (Jones, 2004;
Masko, 2005). It will help students to acknowledge
and make sense of diversity so that they can begin to
develop empathy for others rather than judging them
for being different from themselves (Paley et al.,
1998). In this case, school can be one of vital places
for students to learn about diversity while their ability
to accept difference is dependent on how their
environment accepts it particularly from the teachers’
attitude (Hollingsworth, Didelot, & Smith, 2003).
However, discussion of controversial issues, such as
diversity of skin color, is not a common occurrence
even in the social studies classroom, an expected site
of such exchanges (Nystrand, Gamoran, &
Carbonaro, 1998).
Among different definitions of being tolerant,
defining tolerance starts with recognition of one self
in relation to others which is realized from beliefs,
behaviors or characteristics of acceptance the
difference and similarity (Vogt, 1983; Zakin, 2012).
It means that the students are able to control their
disagreement attitude by not judging others merely
from their one point of view. To do so, students
should be exposed to various and diverse point of
views that is integrated in classroom learning.
Students get a chance to deliver their opinions and
also they have to listen what others say about a
particular topic (Zakin, 2012).
3 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
This research is a qualitative study with an
ethnography design that employed some instruments
to collect data namely classroom observation and
interview with teacher. It was conducted for three
months in the first semester of eight grade class in one
of junior schools in Bandung. The researcher
observed classroom practices done by a teacher who
addressed herself using Higher Order thinking skills
(HOTS) concept as a basic of her teaching practice.
Meanwhile, interview with the teacher was also
implemented to see a correlation between teacher’s
thoughts about teaching and its practice in classroom.
To get deeper information about the learning process,
the teacher was interviewed using a semi-structured
interview so that the questions can be naturally
elaborated during conversation and based on
teacher’s response. Data were then transcribed and
coded referred to principles of HOTs that appeared
during learning process. Furthermore, it also
observed to what extend students are able to deliver
their ideas and opinions and how they show their
tolerance toward others’ response during group
discussion.
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4 FINDINGS AND DISCUSSION
Data obtained from classroom observation and
interview show that the teacher used short story
entitled “The True Story of the Three Little Pig” and
“The ant and The Grasshoppers” to teach English and
students’ thinking skill. Some strategies were
implemented by the teacher such as brainstorming,
multiple-intelligences, role playing, guessing game
and open-ended questions to exercise students’
thinking skill. Each strategy gave students’
opportunity to involve actively in learning process
while the teacher acted out as a facilitator who
stimulated students to think in a higher level.
Regarding the use of strategies, teacher
acknowledged in the interview that students’ active
involvement and independency were very important
in creating HOTs learning process. Thus, the teacher
attempted to select classroom activities that give
students a chance to be independent in their thinking.
Meanwhile, a spoon-feed method that requires
students to remember, recall, or only comprehend the
materials were extremely avoided by the teacher. It
is in line with the principle of promoting HOTs in
young adolescents classroom stated by Yang et al.
(2016) that an active learning-environment is a
strategic atmosphere to give students an access
toward higher order thinking skills. By creating this
environment, it stimulates students’ engagement in
classroom activities and they are encouraged to share
their ideas, opinions, and arguments that they have in
minds.
After giving the story, the teacher asked students
to have a discussion within a group about the story.
For students, a group discussion provides several
benefits, those are to raise their speaking confidence
in a group rather in a class, explore ideas, share
opinions and motivate them to speak. The teacher
believed that HOTS learning should bring students’
prior knowledge and experience to the class and
connect it with the materials, thus a grouping work
will help them to explore their personal experience
easier rather than in a big classroom. The teacher said:
It is important to connect what students’ have including
their personal experiences and knowledge with the
material in classroom. However, some students may
feel uncomfortable to speak in front of other students in
classroom that’s why I prefer students to work in group
so they can get a closer engagement with their friends
in a group and share what they have.
The short story was delivered through storytelling
combined with role-playing by the teacher. As
recorded from the observation, teacher involved some
students to act out as characters in the story
meanwhile the teacher functioned as a narrator. In
addition, several pictures were also served on screen
to improve students’ understanding toward the story.
By giving modeling through these techniques,
students can understand the story better from some
clues given in multiple modes such as teacher’s
mimic expression, their friends’ gestures, and
pictures. Students try to observe, analyze, and guess
language meaning since the teacher fully used
English in delivering the story. These activities were
contradictive with traditional teaching in which
teacher literally deliver all material to the students
and ask them to remember or recall it (Lengkanawati,
2016).
In discussion time, students were asked about
their opinion related to the story they were learning in
the classroom. As many people thoughts, students put
their positive judgment to the ant as a protagonist
actor and negative judgments to the grasshopper
based on their characteristics. When the students were
asked about the ant’s characterization most students
agreed that the little ant was diligent, smart, kind, and
hard worker. Meanwhile, in their point of view, the
grasshopper was quite lazy, arrogant, and childish. To
change this stereotype, the teacher used HOTs
principle that allowed students to re-question any
facts delivered in the story through analyzing,
evaluating, comparing, and contrasting (Collin,
2014). In this case, the teacher applied some open-
ended question to discuss more deeply about the text
so that the students could think in different way.
Some questions given by the teacher were why, how,
why if, how if, what if. These questions provide
students with the opportunity to express opinions,
arguments, comments, reasonable reasons related to
the story discussed.
Another set of questions were also distributed to
observe the story from different perspectives. The
teacher invited students to re-question some decisions
made by the characters in the story either the ant or
the grasshopper. It was done to uncover reasons for
their action and decision that may have never been
discussed before through traditional teaching. The
teacher’s questions can be seen in the following
extracts:
Why does the grasshopper play the music?
How do people feel when listening to the
music? Are they happy?
Do people know what happens before the
grasshopper plays his music?
What would you do if you were grasshopper?
The purpose of using that kind of questions is to
make students’ aware related to another perspective
of someone’s decision before they judged people
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113
from their one point of view and categorize others to
be in good or bad side. It is in line with, Setyarini
(2018) who cited that open-ended questions can
enhance various alternative and relative answers
which are more encouraged and rewarded than single
fixed answer. From the questions, the students could
respond freely. It had created a space for them to see
connections across their personal experiences, and
explore the meaning of the text more deeply. In fact,
they tried to leave the stereotype of the grasshopper
and see the grasshopper from another positive side.
They guessed some possibly answers that might be
the reasons for the grasshopper to do his action. The
students also learned how to give a solution for
problems appeared without forcing their answer to be
completely accepted.
The small group discussion also benefits students
from being confident to share their opinion although
they found it different with their friends. Negation
process among students also can be found when the
group had to come to one decision. They listened to
their friends’ answer and reasons behind that.
Generally, students displayed an increase in being
tolerant, particularly when they came to give negative
judgment to others. Through HOTs strategies applied
in classroom, students are encouraged to observe,
analyze, evaluate before they come a decision making
and problem solving.
5 CONCLUSION
Considering the findings above, integrating HOTs in
EFL classroom may promote students’ awareness of
being tolerant, particularly using short stories. The
result revealed that delivering stories through using
several strategies namely brainstorming, role playing,
and giving open-ended questions is effective to
exercise students’ thinking process. by doing so,
students also learn to re-question stereotype by
analyzing, comparing, and evaluating before making
a comment or judge to others. In addition, the analysis
result of the interview clearly referred that the
students gained some exposures of becoming a
tolerant, respectful, and appreciative person in their
real life. Besides, they enjoyed their learning because
they got good opportunity from the teacher to present
their ideas think critically and not only one. It can be
concluded that teaching students to be tolerant can be
done through integrating HOTs in English learning.
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