The Borneo Post

Encourage children to develop thinking, analytical habits at early age — Manyin

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KUCHING: Nurturing and developing thinking and analytical habits in children should start at an early age.

It can be done in the classroom and at home, Minister of Education, Science and Technologi­cal Research Dato Sri Michael Manyin Jawong suggested.

“If our actions are repeated, gradually it becomes a habit and after months and years, extending beyond ourselves, it becomes a culture,” he said.

“We can’t jump into a culture. We must build the habit first and with more and more people doing the same thing, it becomes normal and will sustain the culture of thinking,” he added, while urging teachers and educators to rethink the teaching and learning approach in helping children form thinking habit starting from the classroom.

Manyin highlighte­d this when declaring open the National Conference on Thinking Culture (NCTC 2017) held at the Teachers Education Institute, Tun Abdul Razak Campus ( IPGKTAR) at Kota Samarahan here yesterday.

Themed ‘Empowering Higher Order Thinking Culture Through 21st Century Education’, the three- days conference was organised by IPGKTAR’s Excellent Thinking Skills Centre in collaborat­ion with the Education Department, Malaysia Teachers Education Institute and Ministry of Education, Science and Technologi­cal Research.

“Implementi­ng high order thinking skills ( HOTS) as early as possible is the starting point of building a thinking culture among our people,” he said.

“We hope teachers attending this conference can pick this up and start incorporat­ing these practices into the classroom so children can learn the habit,” he added.

While the Malaysian Education Developmen­t Plan emphasises on HOTS among students, Manyin observed weaknesses in the education delivery system which he noticed as too academic-oriented.

“Our curriculum is excellent, I have no complaint on that but our education system can be changed a little bit (to help children build strong traits and characters),” he shared.

“Our education system is too examinatio­n- oriented at the moment in which schools and teachers are focused on helping children get good academic results because that is what parents and industries want or demand,” he said.

“This is the dilemma faced by schools and educators. Good academic results determine your employabil­ity but they never ask if you can think or not or how good you are,” he added.

Meanwhile, IPGKTAR director Hamsiah Abdullah Masni hoped that all participan­ts of the conference would pick up knowledge on HOTS to generate better pedagogica­l practices to create thinking classrooms, hence producing students who fulfil the aspiration­s of Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013-2025.

Quoting an American philosophe­r and educationa­l reformer John Dewey, Hamsiah reminded that ‘If we teach today’s students as we taught yesterday’s, we rob them of tomorrow’.

 ??  ?? Manyin (third left) accompanie­d by Hamsiah (left) checking out the students’ robot creation during a tour around the mini exhibition.
Manyin (third left) accompanie­d by Hamsiah (left) checking out the students’ robot creation during a tour around the mini exhibition.
 ??  ?? State Immigratio­n Department officers take their integrity pledge during the ceremony. – Photos by Muhammad Rais Sanusi
State Immigratio­n Department officers take their integrity pledge during the ceremony. – Photos by Muhammad Rais Sanusi

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