Chew , Cheng Meng and Lim , Chap Sam and Osman, Shuki
(2015)
Primary School Mathematics And Science
Teachers' Stages Of Concern About
The Implementation Of Lesson Study.
The Asia Pacific Journal of Educators and Education (formerly known as Journal of Educators and Education), 30 (1).
pp. 1-14.
ISSN 2289-9057
Abstract
In this study, the Japanese model of Lesson Study was introduced as a teacher
professional development programme to nine low-performing primary schools in
Malaysia. The objectives of this study were to examine to what extent Lesson Study can
improve low-performing primary mathematics and science teachers' stages of concern
about the implementation of Lesson Study in their schools and their teaching quality as
well as student learning performance. The sample consisted of 97 primary mathematics
and science teachers from three types of primary schools: the National School (SK); the
National Type Chinese School (SJKC) and the National Type Tamil School (SJKT).
Before the implementation of Lesson Study, a workshop was conducted in every school
to introduce participating teachers to the concepts of Lesson Study and the research
procedure. After the workshop, the participating teachers were asked to complete the
Stages of Concern Questionnaire (SoCQ) in order to identify their initial stages of
concern about the implementation of Lesson Study in their schools. The SoCQ was
developed based on the Concerns-Based Adoption Model (CBAM). It consists of 35
items, categorising teachers' concerns into seven stages: Stage 0 (Awareness); Stage 1
(Informational); Stage 2 (Personal); Stage 3 (Management); Stage 4 (Consequence);
Stage 5 (Collaboration) and Stage 6 (Refocusing) (George, Hall & Stiegelbauer,
Measuring implementation in schools: The stages of concern questionnaire (2006)). The
same SoCQ was also given to the participating teachers after every Lesson Study cycle to
determine whether their stages of concern changed before and after the implementation of
Lesson Study cycles. In this paper, only the data collected from the first SoCQ given
were analysed. The results showed that the profiles of the SK, SJKC and SJKT teachers'
initial stages of concern about the implementation of Lesson Study in their schools were
quite similar. The SK, SJKC and SJKT teachers' concerns were the highest in Stage 0 and
the lowest in Stage 4, indicating that these teachers had a high level of concern about a
number of other initiatives, tasks, and activities besides Lesson Study and they had quite
a low level of concern about the consequences of implementing Lesson Study for their
students, respectively
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