This Action Research Proposal
Will Evaluate the Effectiveness of Improving the Quality of Secondary School
Science and Research in Education Through Advanced Textbooks and Technology
This
action research proposal will evaluate the effectiveness of improving the
quality of secondary school science and research in education through advanced
textbooks and technology. Specifically, the study will seek a solution to the
problem in order to improve the quality of education with the objective of
helping all of our students increase their MPS (mean percentage score)
performance every year such as DAT (division achievement test), RAT (regional
achievement test) and NAT (national achievement test), as well as ameliorate
their quality of learning through advanced textbooks and technology which is
geared towards focusing on one-on-one multi-classroom textbooks and materials
as their peers. The objective is that by the end of the year the students will
have at least doubled their learning speed in every subject and will have
tremendously improved their 6 facets of understanding, 5 macro-skills,
including verbal and non-verbal skills.
The Advanced Textbooks and Technology program is based on the latest science and research assessments as the best panaceas for effective learning instruction in the classroom and effective solution to ease out problems, especially in some subjects with low MPS performance. Funding, just to have acquired one-on-one multi-classroom books and materials, is requested for student learning and teacher training: to purchase the required books, and to technologically equip the students with computer's software and hardware for the school's benefit in order to increase MPS with 75% passing percentage per subject every year.
To
elaborate further based on the preceding texts, the quality of research
education, textbook and technology needs to be raised. It has been observed by
the concerned principal that there is much to be desired in a secondary level
research in education, along with textbooks and technology. I think this poor
quality stems from lack of textbooks and computers inside the classrooms.
Education is one of the major means which society employs to carry out its
national policies. That's why this learning institution as a science high
school in Cebu south, Division of Cebu Province, must equip the students with advanced
textbooks, including computers in order for them to be competitive and could be
able to cope with the quality of secondary school science and research in
education.
One
of the problems of continuing gradual decrease of MPS results in some subjects
every year and stagnation of professional secondary science research and
technology in education of MNSHS teachers and students is lacking of one-on-one
prescribed textbook, including technological and methodical guides, special
science and research lectures and reviews. Their peculiarities are determined
by the fact that they are designed for those who have taught research and
technology in a science education, have mastered 6 facets of understanding and
thus, need not to be taught systematized fundamental knowledge. On the other
hand, now the work of a science high school teacher requires a continuing
mastering of new operations and processes, renewed theoretical knowledge,
especially under the attack of new information technologies.
Believing
that every individual can contribute to achieve the level of information,
technical and technological base in the majority of teaching standards no
matter how small it is, I introduced and created a firm base to put to practice
one the mostly dynamic technologies using the advanced textbooks, along with
computers to make the students equip with caliber of intelligence and vast
repertoire of science and research experiences.
A
textbook and a computer, as well as the systems of its delivery serve as a
lever, which will allow the research and science of the 21st century to make a
decisive step towards the dream of all enlightened teachers and students: to
have an access to any advanced textbook with written research document in any
point on the globe. Realizing this perspective makes the learning institution
of continuing quality of secondary school science and research in education pay
special attention to training those teaching and non-teaching personnel in this
new technology.
Knowledgeable
and skilled teachers of Minglanilla National Science High School recognize the
significantly greater side effects due to lack of textbooks and computers
inside the classroom that commonly occur when the subject teachers are
recommended solely based on the diagnostic tests, division achievement test,
regional achievement test and national achievement test. However, due to the
inadequacy of textbook, research and technology analysis skills and the
difficulty in teaching these skills well, many science high school teachers
revert to this dangerously simplistic method of choosing old DepEd textbooks
and textbook formulas.
With
regard to computer problems, as what Dr. Carbonell (2009) states "Computer
technology explores the use of computer-aided learning to develop skills among
learners in differential assessment and decision-making, which are crucial to
effective technological practice. Acquiring computers and updating them will
tremendously help a lot, thus, making "self-study software"
incorporate computer-aided learning and interactive databases" (p. 136).
Part of advanced planning to be fully equipped with capabilities of such
software includes training users on how to:
Make intelligent and wise decisions on the basis of programs and
unlimited information.
Identify when available information is inadequate for making
reliable decisions.
Assess and single out the best available solution among a limited
set of options.
Identify complex patterns (textbooks and computer-related problem
clusters) having probabilistic rather than deterministic structures.
Recognize the significance of a wide range of possible solutions
and subsets of the textbook definitions and patterns.
The
study has significance because both teachers and students will benefit when the
students become more responsible in their actions, and equip them with caliber
of intelligence and vast repertoire of learning experiences. Students who spend
time to reflect on their actions have possibility to change their self-concept,
and fight for what they think is right to have been supplied with 1 textbook
per student, furnished with 1 computer per student, and taught through advanced
textbooks with science and research approaches in education for the betterment
of the school.
Our
public education system has a lot of problems, dilapidated classrooms and lack
of teachers among them. But I believe that if there is one thing we ordinary
Filipinos can solve, it is the availability of quality textbooks. In a science
high school like Minglanilla National Science High School, we need quality
textbooks and every student must have 1 textbook and 1 computer. How can we
make quality textbooks available to every school child in this learning
institution? Normally, if you want to write a book, you agree with a publisher
on the topic and sign a contract with them. You, the author, are in charge of
writing the content, while the publisher assigns a team composed of editors,
illustrators, and proofreaders to make sure that the final manuscript is
correct before it gets printed. During the creation phase, only you and the
publisher's team have access to the manuscripts. When the manuscript is ready,
it is given to the printing team who turns it into a book. For public school
textbooks, a little more care is applied. To ensure the quality of textbooks, the
Department of
Education (DepEd) has a four-step evaluation process, involving a
few more evaluators and authorities.
This
was already in place before a schoolteacher Antonio Calipjo Go discovered.
After 10 years of studying textbooks, Mr. Go came to the conclusion that half
of the public school textbooks in English, Filipino and Social Studies were
"defective." In 2002, he found 400 errors in a single public science
high school textbook. And only June of last year, he again uncovered a lot of
errors in seven Social Studies textbooks. Mr. Go came out with his findings.
DepEd's process is failing and we need a different approach to ensure the quality of
public textbooks .
In
order to solve these emerging problems regarding lack of quality textbooks and
computers, as the principal of this learning institution, I have to source out
funds from the PTA, LGU and the rich people in the community to purchase
computer-units for computer lab, including quality textbooks. Aside from this,
in order to have quality of education, in-service retraining should likewise be
upgraded from time to time in order for the teacher to be fully equipped with
caliber of intelligence. The program is a must since computer science teacher
certification is a recent development, thus, most of these teachers were
trained in another field. This project is composed of a sequence of courses
which will teach the core principles of computer science to these MNSHS
teachers.
According to Dr. Buenaventura (2003), "A teaching framework extends the
traditional problem textbook-solving method in computer science education in
order to increase student motivation. It replaces textbook-computer problems by
so-called challenges and in particular emphasizes the learning situation and
inspiration of the students. Furthermore it combines several pedagogical
principles and applies them in a process of how students learn in a motivating
and self-regulated way. In order to justify the necessity of a new concept,
problems in the traditional textbook-problem solving approaches in a science
high school education are significant" (p. 45). In order for addressing
students' motivation changes are necessary, the ensuing change in students may
eventually lead to important changes as well in the country and in the world,
for it is these students who will one day dictate the course of events in the
future. The principal and teacher preparations, the teaching facilities,
equipment and materials, and the teaching strategies are among the necessary
factors to the quality of instruction, thus improving the quality of secondary
school science and research in education through advanced textbooks and
technology.
On
the other hand, to pave the way for theoretical framework, and to improve the
quality of secondary school science and research in education through advanced
textbooks and technology, it is categorically stated that the present study is
anchored on the theory of Lado and Orleans (2000) that the
technologically-adapted-structured lessons based on macro-skills learning
performance can attain more developments in intellectual aspects and
acquisition of language. This is a valuable resource in assimilating with peers
and adults in developing a sense of personal growth and in finding a place in
social, technological and economic life adapted to this capacity and personal
preference. Attaining the language skill requires the mastery of a system that
takes literally years to learn.
It
has become an established fact that the language facility can raise student's
intelligence as measured by intelligence tests. This is so because of the
language facility can be determined through speaking and writing. The teacher
has to find ways to teach all his students properly because if they are taught
properly, the latter can learn technological skills and concepts necessary to
effectively function in modern society.
The
difference between excellent teaching and acceptable classroom performance is
no more than the ability to take advantage of opportunities which develop in
the context of the classroom, and which cannot be anticipated by even the most
talented and skillful authors. The teacher who can make the most of these
opportunities will be the one to dominate the materials he/she teaches and to
implement a vast repertoire of techniques and procedures for classroom
management. The language program should take into account the cognitive and
socio-cultural needs of the students, the community in which the school is
located, the training, language ability and personality of the teacher, and the
present and foreseeable future needs of the society in which our learners are
living or planning to live (Makalinao, et al., 2001).
In
English for Special Purposes (ESP), the desirable goal to strive in language
teaching is general communicative competence. Language teaching has a definite
purpose, teachers of ESP teach only the requisite for a particular purpose, be
it an occupation (business English), or a domain (English for Science and
Technology). Thus, before English is done, the baseline experiment on needs
analyses is imperative, specifically doing analysis of situations where pilot
students will likely find themselves and carefully selecting the English
necessary for them to meet the language demands of these restricted domains and
contrasting approaches to education (Widdowson, 1998).
Learning
is indispensable on the part of students who undergo rigid studies of the
language, but teaching involves much more than knowledge of methods. However, a
well-versed teacher maybe in psychological and linguistic theories, in techniques
and methodologies, this knowledge alone will not assure success. And even more
basic ingredient of good teaching is the teacher's attitude toward his students
and his work. More than ever, we must recognize the teacher's compassionate,
intelligent, individual approach to his work as the essential factor in
successful language teaching.
According
to British Education theorist Peter Newsam (2005), the essential factor in
successful language teaching as well as a considerable diversity of views exists
among analytic and linguistic philosophers regarding the nature of conceptual
or linguistic analysis. Some are primarily concerned with clarifying the
meaning of specific words or phrases as an essential step in making
philosophical assertions clear and unambiguous. Others are more concerned with
determining the general conditions that must be met for any linguistic
utterance to be meaningful; their intent is to establish a criterion that will
distinguish between meaningful and nonsensical sentences. Still other language
analysts are interested in creating formal, symbolic lingua francas that are
morphological in nature. Their claim is that philosophical problems can be more
effectively dealt with once they are formulated in a rigorous logical language.
Alcantara,
et al. (2002) quoted the importance of speech improvement as saying that in
teaching, skill in oral communication is recognized as a very important part of
the qualification of a teacher. It is axiomatic that instruction can be
efficiently and effectively carried out only within the context of effective
communication. Hence, good speech, which is basic in communication, is an
important concern of every teacher not only as a practical tool but also as a
fine art. By implication, speech improvement is both desirable and imperative
in teaching, and for that matter, in every human endeavor. The kind of speech
improvement designed to achieve good speech, is that which takes into
consideration not only linguistic principles but also makes use of corrective
techniques firmly based on scientific facts and principles. In the Philippines,
every vowel in the Visayas dialect is stressed. This explains why children read
in a sing-song manner. There are only five (5) sounds for the five vowels. In
English, there are various sounds for each of the five (5) vowels. For a
alone, a varies in sound in words: can, star, lake, chair. There are
strong stresses at regular intervals. The weak-stressed syllables are observed
and the final sound of each word is blended with the initial sound of the one
following within the same unit. These differences call for sufficient
aural-oral preparation before actual speaking of English is done.
In
teaching English, many teachers make their student commence with the language
activities at the same time in their desire to follow the minimum requirements
without considering the children's developmental stage. They fail to realize
that some students develop slower than the others. For example, writing for
training is similar to writing for reinforcement, but it differs in that it is
not limited to the reinforcement of grammatical structures (Marquez, 1999).
According
to Lado, et al. (2000), for purposes of training, writing presents students
with patterns of linguistic and rhetorical forms that might be new to them and
gives them practice in using and manipulating these new patterns: for instance,
"students may be asked to change a general statement: "Thermometers
measure temperature," into a definition "Thermometers are instruments
which measure temperature." The speed and frequency of international
communication have outstripped the speed of teaching and learning languages and
demand more effective methods of teaching. With the need for more effective
teaching of language goes the need for more effective testing of their use.
Communication
Arts in English is not taught in a vacuum. Although its objective is to develop
in the students the language skills in listening, speaking, reading and
writing, the teacher uses content materials in the pursuance of the skills'
objectives. In teaching English, the teacher is guided by the assumption that
language is trimodal. This means that language is composed of three components
or hierarchies which interlace with one another. There are three components of
language: phonology, structure and lexicon. The first component is phonology.
Phonology is the science that deals with sounds. It has two divisions, namely:
phonetics and phonemics. Phonetics deals with separate sounds or phones. Its
three branches are articulatory phonetics which deals with speech production,
auditory phonetics which deals with speech reception, and acoustic phonetics
which deals with speech transmission. Phonemics is that branch of structural
linguistics which has for its subject matter the organization of phones with
groups of faculties of sounds called phonemes (Preece, 2005).
Leon-Ladera,
et al., in their Speech Communication and Creative Expression for English
Teachers (2005), emphasize the importance of aspects of linguistics. There are
many different ways to examine and describe individual languages and changes in
languages. Nevertheless, each approach usually takes into account the
language's sounds (phonetics and phonology), word structure (morphology), and
sentence structure (syntax). Most analyses also treat vocabulary and the
semantics (meaning) of a language. Any human being learns language starting
with the use of mind but he hears the sounds first before he uses them.
Listening is very important in learning a language, for learning them at the
start wrongly, the individual gets a shaky foundation of the language he is
speaking. Learning
is
seen to be a natural, gradual process, through which student's progress at
their own rates. At first it is expected that students will speak or write
imperfect English. Through a combination of sensitive error-correction
strategies (such as the teacher repeating correctly a student's faulty
utterance) and continued practice, the learner's interlanguage will
increasingly conform to the target language.
The
choices of teachers remain to be like those of the artists. Artists' choices
are not at random. They are driven by what artists are trying to achieve and
they are assessed by the artists every step of the way to assure that the
choices being made are congruent with their purpose. Art teachers can help art
students become aware of the options they have by having them study art history
to review the choices others have made. They can also help by making their
students perfect their technique. But it is incumbent upon the artists
themselves to create their unique blend that is their own special contribution
to others (Mu±oz, et al. 2000).
It is
similar with teaching, according to Patron (2002), teachers must be familiar
with the various methods, approaches, and techniques in the teaching and
learning not only of language but also of literature to bring out the potential
benefits of literature--linguistically, culturally, and aesthetically. Only
those who are intimately acquainted with the situation, with the students and
with themselves can have the choices they are uniquely suited to make. It is,
after all, only the teachers who will be there to assess the outcome of the
choices they make. It is only the teachers who are there to make sure that they
know why they are doing what they are doing.
Simultaneous
in learning the sounds of the language the learner uses structure. This is the
second component, otherwise known as grammar. This has something to do with
structural patterns. A language works in a pattern. It has its own structure
which is meaningful to its own speakers. It operates within its own recurring
patterns or arrangements which are meaningful to its speakers. In English the
sentence structure begins with the subject, followed by the predicate. It is
exactly the opposite of Cebuano-Bisaya-sentence that begins with the predicate
followed by the subject (Gurdiel, 1992).
There
is a need to comprehend the ways to teach the English (the target language must
be associated with technology-driven skills for the students), particularly in
first year High School at Minglanilla National Science High School, Poblacion
Ward I, Minglanilla, Cebu. It is important that teachers should provide their
students with authentic examples of language to study. It appears clearly that
one aspect of authenticity resides in natural, spontaneous speech which has
normal irregularities, hesitations and simplifications so that the students are
trained to listen for cues that will be present in normal speech and not just in
that particular brand of speech spoken only to foreigners.
According
to Pahang (1995) in her dissertation entitled "A Correlative Study of the
Mental Ability and Language Achievement," this study has something to do
with the freshman's actual needs in English. The question is how students can
later on develop essays and other literary forms after attending English
classes. Some of them will later enjoy reading newspapers and write letters.
But others will become tourists, immigrants, hotel clerks, and stewards on
cruise ships, journalists, and diplomats , participants in domestic and foreign
conferences. Such people will need to be able to communicate orally, write
legibly, read with comprehension and understand with other when he speaks. If
speech is unintelligible, the act of communication has failed; the person who
is supposed to receive the message would fail to respond or if ever a response
is made, this may be inappropriate.
It is
also supported by Gabison (1991) in her study entitled "A Correlative Study
of the Mental Ability and Language Achievement," it is worth-noting that
these structural lessons are dependent upon the data gathered from the language
inventory tests responded to by the learners. For theoretical specificity,
these structural lessons consider the four (4) areas of English language
teaching, namely: listening, speaking, reading and writing as sequenced in the
lessons. The lessons are more on the difficulties and needs of the freshmen as
identified by the students and their teachers. Those studying English may be
aware of the importance of oral and written communications. The students who
are second speakers of the English language expend their efforts to acquire
proficiency in this particular language.
Students
need to be able to communicate orally. That is, a learner needs to comprehend
the other fellow when he speaks and vice versa. If speech is unintelligible,
the act of communication, needless to say, has failed. The student who is to
receive the message fails to respond inappropriately. Thus, it is very
important that one should learn to speak as intelligible as possible '"
not necessarily like native speakers '" but well and clear enough to be
understood. Communication needs constant practice despite the barrier of the language
made culturally diverse from the others. Difficulty of the language is
inevitable on the learner who is not native speaker of the language. That is
why structured English lessons are a must in the step-by-step study and
in-depth analysis done by the students themselves in order to pan out both in
oral and written communications in English (Navarro, 2001).
There
are some techniques suggested to improve the teaching of English language among
non-English speakers. A few include 1) the grammar translation approach, which
teaches the learner using the mother tongue, 2) the direct approach, which
attempts to integrate more use of the target language instruction, 3) the
reading approach, which is intended for people who do not travel abroad and
reading is the one usable skill in a foreign language, 4) the audio-lingual
method, which uses the principles of the direct method, 5) the community
language learning, which is patterned after the counseling technique, 6) the
silent way, which uses verbal commands, 7) the functional-notional approach,
which breaks down the global concept of language into units of analysis in
terms of communicative situations in which they are used, and 8) the total
physical response, which combines information and skills through the use of the
kinesthetic sensory system (Jordan, 2001).
Gurdiel
(1992) said that English is one of the learning areas that develop the
learners' confidence and ability in using the language for effective
communication and critical thinking. The macro-skills to be developed are
listening, speaking, reading and writing in English.
Briones
(2003) compared the oral and written English proficiency of the senior
secondary students of the University of Southern Philippines, Lahug Campus and found out that the students who are
good at oral communication may not at all times be good at written
communication. In the same school but in a different campus, Bandajon, et al.
(2003) found out that among the first year secondary students, the girls have
higher scores than boys in literal comprehension and application in the English
subject.
Widdowson
(2003) assessed the communication skills need of the high school students and
found out that speaking and listening skills, together with related micro-skills
such as conversational, oral presentation and telephone conversational skills
are most useful and applicable in the job setting and recommended for
reinforcement of English communication skills in major subject areas.
The
foregoing literature has clearly shown the factors that facilitate the learning
of English language for non-speakers of English--learning said language must be
associated and supplied with advanced textbooks and provided with computers in
order for the students to become computer-literate. Besides, the teacher
preparation, the teaching facilities, equipment and materials, and the teaching
strategies are among the necessary factors to the quality of instruction.
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