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  • 1

    CHAPTER 1

    INTRODUCTION

    1.1 Introduction

    Education in Malaysia is an on-going effort dedicated to developing the potential of individuals holistically in an integrated manner so that their development, based on the belief in God, is intellectually,

    spiritually, emotionally and physically balanced and harmonies. Such an effort is designed to produce

    Malaysian who are knowledgeable, possessing high moral standards and are responsible and capable of

    achieving a high level of personal well-being as well as being able to contribute to the harmony and

    betterment of the society and the nation large.

    (Internet website : http:// www.moe.gove.my/)

    Malaysia education attempts to form and nurture a human being to become a whole

    complete and holistic individual in which is belief in God grace and well-equipped with strong

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    humanistic characters that pose an integrated manner rooting from a balance of intellectual,

    spirit, emotion and the physical. All the focuses from national curricular designations till to the

    basic floor foundation of school teaching process must be able to access and embrace the big

    picture of national philosophy.

    As a result, in the 1998 the New Secondary Curriculum (KBSM) as a continuation of

    the New Primary Curriculum (KBSR) was launched. The planning of KBSM is meant to help

    students to develop their intellectual, spiritual, emotions, as well as physical potentials in

    comprehensive and integrated manner with high moral values (Hassan, 1996). However, there

    was plenty of ineffectiveness of KBSM educational execution noted till raising the awareness of

    new planning scheme to shift Malaysia Educational System more aligning with National

    Education Philosophy.

    1.2 Background of research study

    The existing teaching and learning process in school focus on teacher-centered

    instructional design in which teachers emphasize on textbook content memorization, exam-

    oriented exercises and activities. The likelihood of creative element accessible into daily

    teaching and learning practicing in classroom seemed rare and least, though recent of years,

    element of creativity is being pressed and encouraged in many layers of educational system,

    however, the output is farther away from our national educational goals. (Ministry of Education,

    Preliminary report of Malaysia Blueprint 2013-2025, September 2012.)

    1.2 .1 Overview of Malaysia Educational System (KBSM Curriculum)

    The main focus of the KBSM is on an integrated of the both knowledge and moral

    values. Hence, the terms of moral values is incorporated crossing the curriculum through

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    classroom teaching encompassed with intellectual, spiritual, emotional, and physical

    development. Habsah et al., (2006), reported that the core values in the KBSM is aimed at

    eliminating the notion of value-free knowledge and building a morally based educational

    system, thus, the inculcation and infusion of these two important dimensions, belief in God and

    inculcation of core values of the National Philosophy of Education (NEP) addresses the fact that

    character formation based on moral and religious values are deemed important besides academic

    excellence. However, the administration and execution is lacking of the practical effectiveness.

    Rosnani Hashim (2001) stated that many students are unable to apply the content

    knowledge acquired in school to real-world problems. The business sector is complaining about

    the quality of the graduates they received from the universities who sometime could not even

    comprehend instruction manuals, what more the way a piece of equipment works. Most of

    students Malaysia either could not get access to the relevant literature, do not possess the

    learning culture for self-improvement are too busy teaching and preparing students for

    examination or are complacent with their practice despite the declining of educational standard.

    Studies by Asmah (1994), Kartini (1998), Lam (1994), Rajendran (1998), Rosnani

    (2001) and Suhailah (2000) reported that teachers were not prepared to teach thinking and had

    little knowledge and skills in the area of critical and creative thinking. Rosnani (2001) reported

    that teachers have little knowledge of the different dimensions of thinking and the skills

    necessary to teach it. They also lack of the knowledge and skill of the teaching strategies

    required for teaching thinking skills, although they value the importance of creative and critical

    thinking.

    Azlan (1997) studied creative design students pattern of thinking and discovered that

    students in the sample were more inclined toward critical than creative thinking although they

    desired to specialize in creative designing. This is the present trend and practices of recognizing

    critical thinking and not creative thinking ability in school today. Rosnani (2001) reviewed that

    some teachers planned to teach thinking, but not executed for various reasons, mainly the lack of

    time. Students were found to be more critical than creative. She marked her conclusion to

    mention the circumstance in which teachers complained of having too much work and not

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    having enough time for lesson preparation for thinking, but this could also be due to lack of

    training or too much focused on examinations and completing the syllabus.

    There was little emphasis on practical teaching strategies based on subject areas,

    whereas this is what teachers need most. Although the emphasis should be in the infusion

    method, this was not demonstrated in teaching of the particular subject methodology during the

    pre-service course. Therefore, this newly introduced course is not adequate and effective. That is

    why teachers could consider teaching thinking in their lesson plans but could not execute in the

    classroom. Therefore Ministry of Education ought to review the course on critical and creative

    thinking skills being offered in the teachers colleagues for content and teaching approach. It

    should also ensure that instructor who teaches the course should be proper academic

    qualification and experiences in the area.

    It is evident from Rosnani (2001) survey that the biggest problem with teaching of

    critical and creative thinking is teachers lack of understanding and knowledge and the

    accompanying skills on thinking.

    The main problem encountered in the teaching of science and Technology :

    1) The examination-oriented teaching. Practical and experiments are often sacrificed since these

    do not form significant percentage in the overall marks. Thus, teaching learning in the

    classroom in some context becomes largely teacher-centered thereby ignoring the

    development and mastery of science and thinking skills among standards required by the

    curriculum.

    2) Science teachers generally lack the skill of higher order questioning or do not place

    importance on this kind of questioning. Most of the time, teachers rely on pass-year

    examination questions and examination-oriented books, which do on more drilling than

    developing higher cognitive abilities to understand abstract science concept.

    3) However, education officials have observed that in many instances science is still being

    taught in a didactic manner, small numbers of teachers do not do experiments with their students

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    and a handful of them concentrate more on demonstration. Many teachers instruct students to

    carry out experiments following procedures stated in textbook and make conclusion for them

    without having much discussion with them or giving them more room to discover or inquire as is

    required in the inquiry-discovery approach. This has seriously affected the students interest in

    and their ability to engage in scientific inquiry.

    The unsatisfactory state of science teaching-learning has also been reported in the

    Malaysia classroom (Ministry of Education Malaysia, 1993b, 1995d, 1996e, 1997a; Syed Zin &

    Lewin, 1993). The report of the Science Committee on Improving the Quality of Science

    Education in School revealed that many teachers were unable to understand fully the curriculum

    or to translate it effectively into practice in their classroom. Nationwide studies done by Syed

    Zin & Lewin (1993) on secondary science education also reported findings of teaching strategies

    which were not congruent with the inquiry learning advocated in the curriculum. It was reported

    many schools science teachers conceived of science curricular as primarily defined by scientific

    facts few teachers stressed the development of intellectual skills among their students.

    Syed Zin and Lewin (1993) observed that much science teaching was heavily

    knowledge based and teacher-centered with little input of students. They reported that science

    teaching was examination oriented and did not offer many opportunities for students to develop a

    full range of scientific thinking skills. Questions were confined to lower cognitive levels, mostly

    involving the recall of information rather than requiring reasoning and interpretation. Practical

    work tended to be like following recipes. While it provided some hands-on experience, it offered

    little opportunity for minds-on experience.

    1.2.2 Transformational Education in Malaysia

    The Smart School represented the innovation and the very first starting point of

    Malaysia Educational Reformation moving toward on global international standard educational

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    system. Smart school in education was initiated in 1996 and tried out on 90 pilot schools in 1999.

    The goal is to complete the implementation in all Malaysia schools by the year 2010. The idea of

    Smart School is dedicated to the task of regaining excellence in Malaysia education. It

    restructures Malaysian education as evidenced by changing the teaching and learning-

    environments in schools. Thus, curriculum, pedagogy, assessment, and teaching-learning

    materials are the components that the Smart Schools are focused on.

    There are five main goals are declared as the aims of Smart Schools drive to fulfill the

    vision 2020 which is line with the transformational educational system.

    1) To provide all-round development of the individual.

    2) To provide opportunities to enhance individual strength and abilities.

    3) To produce a thinking and technology-literate workforce.

    4) To democratize education.

    5) To increase participation of stakeholders.

    The major concepts in the Smart School are those curriculums, pedagogical process,

    teaching-learning materials, and assessment models. The learning areas represent a very

    important concept in Smart School. They are designed to help students achieve overall and

    balanced development with which the goals are aligned. In Smart School subjects no longer

    stand alone. Rather, they are combined into one area in terms of their meanings. In addition,

    several learning areas may share the interdisciplinary are the characters in the Smart Schools. In

    each learning area subjects are taught through various perspectives of knowledge, skills, values,

    and language.

    Each subject is divided into several levels for students with different learning abilities.

    Therefore, students may learn at to their own pace. An appropriate mix of learning strategies is

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    allowed for students to achieve basic competencies and to promote a holistic development. Thus,

    students-centered learning turns out to be the basis for designing learning activities. As for

    assessment, it is element-based, criterion-referenced, and diagnostic. The assessment system is

    developed so as to measure students achievement in cognitive development, communication,

    social-emotional development, and science technology. (Internet website : http://

    www.moe.gove.my/)

    School-based assessment is the new reform of education system which waiting for more

    establish enforcement and administration that ensure students and teacher for a better learning

    and teaching guideline so that fulfill to the learning theories and thrust towards a better quality of

    teaching and learning process, that an education system with less dependence to emphasis factual

    or concepts recognition. PEKA is a new form of first school-based science assessment

    introduced into our country in order to change the learning style from rigid and facts recognition

    learning style and give an alternation to replace the one-time examination and determine the

    ability strength of a learner. However, there are some inadequate presentations of this new idea

    of education assessment in our country especially the effectiveness of its implementation into our

    school system. There are a lot of flaws and errors that can be obviously identified and

    recognized. (Ahmad, 2000).

    Shamsiah (1990), reported of her research and claimed that the ineffectiveness of

    science learning process of KBSM caused by the shallow experience of teacher and the lack of

    complete set of laboratory apparatus. Accord to Salbiah bt Mohd Som (2000), there was an

    investigation of a case study in a secondary school, Malaysia has been studied and observed on

    subject Biology, which attend to evaluate the accessibility of scientific skills upon toward

    students via PEKA programme. She claimed that in the process of PEKA Biology, there was

    none of any inquiry learning approach happened that support the objective curriculum of

    Biology, which to hope that PEKA able to elicit more scientific skills on its application of

    scientific concept and principle. In words, PEKA in the real-world context of its implementation

    was meaningless.

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    These are the reasons; bring upon formulation of the current Malaysia Educational

    System which meant to polishing or enhancing the literacy of KBSR and KBSM curriculums

    aligning with National Educational Philosophy.

    1.2.2.1 Malaysia New Educational System, KSSR and KSSM

    During the year of 2010, Malaysia Educational Minister, Datuk Muhyiddin announced

    and introduced the new curriculum system KSSR into Primary School, the pioneer batch of

    students under the transformational new scheme of education system are primary one students

    from year of 2011.At the same time, KSSM as the continuation of KSSR was introduced to

    Secondary school, the pioneer batch of secondary students are the Form one students from year

    of 2012. KSSR and KSSM are the new curriculum scheme with more likely interpretation of our

    national educational philosophy and literally contribute a better pragmatic implementation to

    actualize educational goal, whereby it is a formulation in needed to amend the weaknesses of

    KBSR and KBSM which is over exam-oriented and teacher-centered curriculum scheme. This is

    the reason of why it is referred as a transformational educational system in Malaysia. The

    principles of these two curriculums primordially intend to shift from teacher-centered teaching to

    students-centered teaching and emphasis on inquiry-based learning. (Internet website:

    http://www.teslmalaysia.com/tag/kssm)

    Under the system, the public exam for primary school, UPSR and the PMR for

    secondary school will be abolished. All the evaluation and assessment shift from summative

    assessment to the formative assessment. KSSR and KSSM are conductive curriculums to

    enhance the pragmatism of national educational philosophy which pervasively exercise and

    practice in school. The scheme assessment of KSSR and KSSM not restricted to individual

    curriculum performance only, whilst it is embrace the significant of students involvement in

    physical activities as well as the healthiness of psychology. Each student is evaluated and

    improved their performance via criterion-based assessment with six bands, Band 1 (the lowest

    achievement) to Band 6, (the highest achievement). Consequently, the new curriculum of KSSR

    and KSSM demonstrates a blue print document to direct our national education in achieving the

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    principles and goals of our national educational philosophy. (Internet website:

    http://www.teslmalaysia.com/tag/kssm)

    1.2.2.2 Malaysia Blueprint in Education 2013-2025

    The orientation of Blue Print is moving towards international education which aligning

    with the changes wave of globalization. There are five outcomes that the Blue print aspires

    Malaysian Education System as a whole which are including:

    (i) Access: 100% enrolment across all levels from pre-school to upper secondary.

    (ii) Quality: Top third of countries in international assessments such as PISA and TIMSS

    in 15 years.

    (iii) Equity: 50% reduction achievements gaps urban-rural, socio-economic, gender by

    2020.

    (iv) Unity: An education system that give children shared values and experiences by

    embracing diversity.

    (v) Efficiency: A system which maximizes students outcomes with current budget.

    Blueprint dissolves National Education Philosophys principles stand ground on a

    balanced education to view on the formation of student aspiration. On the setting of students

    aspiration emphasis is not just on the importance of knowledge, but also on developing critical,

    creative and innovative thinking skills, leadership skills, characters and values, proficiency in

    Malay language and English language and the strong sense of national identity.

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    Every student trained on their thinking skill to possess a curiosity to find answers and

    the initiation to want learn throughout their lives, so that they are able to integrate the knowledge

    they have learned as a whole comprehensive knowledge. Every student need to master a range of

    important cognitive skills such as creative thinking and innovative thinking, that they are able to

    innovate, to generate new possibilities and to create new ideas and knowledge. By the time

    problem-solving and reasoning develop the ability to anticipate problem and approach issue

    critically, logically, inductively and deductively in order to find solutions and ultimately make

    decision. Elaborate individual learning capacity increase individual learning ability, eventually a

    self-constructive learning process is developed.

    Another component of students aspiration is fostering the leadership skill. Students are

    being able to work effectively with and lead others is critical, especially in our inter-connected

    world. There are four elements focus on the leadership development, which are entrepreneurship,

    resilience, emotional intelligence and strong communication skill. On the other hands, the ethic

    and spirituality be able to prepare every student to rise to the challenge. They will inevitably face

    in adult life, to resolve conflict peacefully, to employ sound judgment during critical moments,

    and to have courage to do what is right. A set of principles that includes strong shared values

    held in common by all Malaysian, such as spirituality, Integrity, and civic responsibility.

    The national identity is an unshakeable sense of National identity, is the necessity for

    Malaysia future to foster unity. Finally focus on the bilingual proficiency as the unique of

    Malaysia with wide diversity of multicultural heritage to provide a competitive advantage to all.

    Therefore, over time, all students of all ethnicities and communities will be encouraged to learn

    at least three languages. (Ministry of Education, Preliminary report of Malaysia Blueprint 2013-

    2025, September 2012.)

    Apparently noted that the Ministry of Education in Malaysia intends to transform the

    traditional exam-oriented educational system into more grounded scheme emphasis on producing

    individual student whom is competence with high humanity value, social responsibilities and

    citizenship obligation beside of the along academic achievement.

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    1.2.3 The Importance of Teachers Epistemology Belief

    Epistemology is the branch of philosophy that investigates what knowledge is and how

    people know whether they know something. Epistemology belief focuses on the manner in

    which individuals come to know and their belief about the knowledge (Bon Jour, 2002).

    Epistemology belief in common speech, a statement of belief simply means any cognitive

    content held as a truth in spite of depletion of any successful or useful proof or even evidences.

    Epistemology beliefs influence their cognitive learning routine result in very different action or

    response illustrated by the following table comparison between two students namely Evelyn and

    Joyce.

    Evelyn Joyce

    Epistemology Belief Science knowledge has a very

    complex structure with rich and

    numerous interconnections.

    Science knowledge is true on the

    basis of observational evidence.

    Science theories are fallible, as

    there is often competing theories,

    and take times takes years to

    work out which theories explain

    the observational evidence better.

    Science knowledge has a very

    simple structure, consisting of

    lists of unrelated facts. People

    know the science knowledge is

    true because the textbook and

    teacher say so. There is only one

    scientific theory on any idea, and

    this theory is absolutely and

    forever true.

    Learning reasoning When studying the cellular

    processes, Evelyn expects to find

    rich interconnections among ideas,

    and she tries to understand them

    when she find them.

    When studying the cellular

    processes, Joyce simply tries to

    memorize each concept

    separately, never realizing that

    the processes are interrelated in

    interesting way. In this way

    beliefs in structure of knowledge

    can influence learning.

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    When conducting the seed

    germination experiment, seed

    sprouts and grow out for while

    even when they are kept in dark.

    So, she realizes the textbook says

    that plant need sunlight to grow,

    this must not apply to seeds. She

    decides that perhaps seeds contain

    their own energy for initial

    growth.

    When conducting seed

    germination experiment, seed

    sprouts and grow out for while

    even when they are kept in dark.

    She thought she must do

    something wrong in her

    experiment because inside

    textbook mention that plant

    need sunlight to grow, thus

    belief about the source of

    knowledge very affect students

    reason about new evidence.

    (Bon Jour, 2002)

    In fact, students ability to understand competing ideas as well as how they act in

    response to these ideas can be affected by belief about the certain knowledge. Similarly,

    teachers epistemology beliefs definitely influence her instructional design and affect her

    principles on delivery science knowledge to students. Hofer & Pintrich, (1997), reported that

    teachers advanced epistemology belief are related to the use of students-centered teaching

    practices.

    Evelyn grown up to be a teacher, greater possibility that she might be a teacher more

    encourage students activities focus on hands-on and minds-on and her instructional design

    prefer to student-centered rather than teacher-centered. Whilst Joyce grown up to be a teacher,

    she is probably be a teacher focus on facts and theories memorization therefore instructional

    design in classroom restricted on textbook, exercises bounded with exam-oriented style, she may

    not concern about the real experimental practicing in laboratory room, instead of theories

    explanation and doing identical or relevant pattern of exam-oriented exercises. Hence, it brings

    very significant meaning of teachers epistemology belief effects on their teaching practicing in

    classroom.

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    Subsequently, epistemological beliefs is unveiled of its importance and implications for

    teaching approaches, this is the reason that epistemology belief have been found to predict

    academic achievement (Schommer, Calvert, Gargliett, & Bajaj, 1997), and may predict teaching

    practices (White, 2001). Therefore, teacher epistemology belief is an important component to

    indicate an ultimate outcome of individual learning and to guarantee a better quality of citizen.

    1.2.3.1 Teachers epistemology belief effect on pedagogical belief and teaching decision-

    making

    Pedagogical beliefs refer to preferred ways of teaching by teachers. These beliefs are

    generally categorized into the knowledge transmission view or knowledge construction view

    (Teo et al., 2008; Wong et al., 2009). Teacher who embrace the knowledge transmission view

    are inclined to prepare and conduct lessons in a teacher-centered and content-oriented manner.

    They prefer didactic instruction and act as the sole provider of knowledge. Students accordingly

    act as passive recipients of content knowledge. By comparison to the knowledge construction

    view advocates that students should actively make sense of their learning experiences while

    teachers design meaningful learning experiences and scaffold students-centered activities that

    facilitate students knowledge construction through active self-reflection, peer interaction, and

    meaning-making process (Wong et al., 2009; Chan & Elliott, 2004).

    The relationship between teachers epistemology beliefs and their pedagogical belief

    have drawn considerable attention from researchers. These researchers generally agree that these

    two constructs usually relate to each other (Pajeres, 1992). Previous researchers have

    demonstrated that beliefs reflect the actual nature of instructional strategies a teacher employs

    while teaching (Chan, 2003; Kagan, 1992; Maggioni & Parkinson, 2008; Pajeras, 1992).

    Maggioni and Parkinson (2008) pointed out that there is a relationship between a teachers

    beliefs characterize the way in which individuals look at the world in order to gain knowledge

    and have been found to influence teachers choice of pedagogical practices.

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    As aforementioned, simultaneously it is a necessity to identify teachers beliefs and how

    those beliefs influence instructional decisions, their students motivation, and ultimately students

    achievement. Teaching requires both cognitive and metacognitive processes as teachers make

    instructional and interactive teaching decisions. These processes play important roles in the

    regulation and application of the skills that are required for successful decision making. With

    that in mind, attention to teacher cognitions and actions to impact what is known about effective

    teaching (Fang, 1996).

    1.2.4 The Importance of Teachers Creativity

    Creative people are highly regarded for their ability to think different and to come up

    with creative solutions to problems. They are valued for their own right in their various fields of

    endeavor. They have good sense of humor and come up with the most unexpected verbal

    comments and repartees. Creative people are witty. They are joy to be with any company.

    Teacher needs to be more creative in facing the complex new challenges confronting us today as

    we are move towards the 21st century. The unprecedented pace of economic, political, and social

    changes occurring in the world today demands that we need to be creative to cope with the

    change (Leo Ann Mean, 2006).

    Torrance (1974), a pioneer in the field of creativity, stated that people prefer to learn in

    creative ways. These ways include questioning, exploring, experimenting, testing, modifying,

    imagination and creating. In short, we may term these ways collectively as discovery or

    experiential learning. Creativity is no longer luxury. It is a necessity to be creative is an attitude

    change. The ability and the opportunity is there. All we need to do is to do it. Simply grab the

    opportunity and apply our innate creative talent. Creative students lead richer lives and, in the

    longer term, make a valuable contribution to society. Surely those are the reasons we should

    practice creativity teaching in the school (Barn Wayne, 2006).

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    1.2.4.1 Creativity in Education is the direction of Now and the Future

    Creativity is the backbone of our economy. Using technology, individuals can be more

    engaged in the global communication and teachers can develop a teaching format that focuses on

    a learner-centered environment, stimulates the childs creativity, and helps them go beyond their

    immediate experiences and observations. Schools need to develop the connectivity students have

    between instructors and other learners. This inner connectivity, or creative partnership, builds the

    individuals creativity, enabling them to better identify the appropriate problems, and how to

    solve them. Furthermore, creativity identifies possibilities and opportunities that may not have

    been noticed by others, reinforcing creativity is the backbone of the economy.

    According to Pink (2005), in the past the future belonged to the person who had the

    ability to function in the well-defined problem-solving world. In the others words, a person with

    an analytical mind that could crunch numbers or the individual who had a propensity to craft a

    contract because he had great skills in English would succeed. When that individual received a

    degree in accounting, law, or became engineer, it gives him solid foothold in the middle class

    system. These are abilities business wanted.

    Today, the logical, linear, analytical, and sequential, and spreadsheet abilities are still

    necessary, but now they are not enough. That is, as Pink (2005) suggests, they still matter today,

    but they matter less. Todays society has gone beyond being able to just the well-defined

    problem and has moved into world of the ill-defined problem. The future now belongs to

    creators, pattern recognizers, artistries, emphatic reasoning, and big picture thinkers.

    Pink (2005) elaborates on the amount of ubiquitous facts students have obtained from our

    school system. However, the students need to move beyond being a store-house of facts and be

    able to put concepts together in a creative way. In the others words, to survive in the fast paced

    global world that is moving faster with each passing day, they need to see the bigger picture.

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    As Pink and Robinson agree, in the 1950s individuals believed if they worked hard and

    went to college they would be able to get job. It worked. Today, because of the fast-paced

    technological movement, Asia, the abundance of materials goods in our society, and automation,

    our society must rethink the current educational structure.

    1.2.4.2 Creativity Improve and Develop Teachers Personality

    As creative teachers, they always search for the new ideas to solve the problems and not

    to be a conformist. They look things and problems in different ways, therefore, practice and learn

    to be creative teachers enable the improvements of individuals personality. Teachers personal

    characteristics played a central role in their creativity. Three categories were particularly

    important personal intelligence, motivation and value.

    a) Personal Intelligence

    In every case, creative teachers demonstrated high levels of personal intelligence, both

    intrapersonal, interpersonal (Gardner, 2001). They know their own (intrapersonal) and others

    (interpersonal) characteristics. Including thoughts, feelings, motivation, and intention, and were

    ready and able to use this knowledge in the service of learning, both their own and their students.

    Equally, creative teachers were aware of a wide range of condition that impacted on students and

    made their responsibility to manage them. (Well, et al., 2011).

    Creative teaching required risk-taking, but security was also important. These creative

    teachers were hardworking, non-conforming, knowledgeable, intuitive, confident, flexible, and

    energetic. A correlation ship study (Reskind, 1967; Reskind&Syndiaha, 2002) showed that in

    comparison to their less creative colleagues, teachers higher in creativity were more dominant

    and higher in social presence and self-acceptance. They were also less concerned with making

    good impressions and lower in self-control.

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    b) Motivation

    All creative teachers in the case studies were intrinsically motivation, persistent, and

    passionate about their work. Their creativity focused on activities that they themselves deemed

    to be important; none refereed to extrinsic motivation such as merit pay or vacations. Most

    teachers were also motivated to make difference. They set their sights on improving the

    community, the educational system, or their students lives and learning. The specific impact that

    they wanted to make reflected what they valued most (Lilly, 2002).

    c) Value

    These were the mainsprings of teachers intrinsic motivation and creativity; they would

    provide a framework that guided teachers decision. Learning and personal development and

    strong interpersonal and community relationship were the most common value. In the words of

    Morgain, a university teacher:

    You also have to make sure that you.address all aspects of the person; mind, body,

    spirit and heart. Mind, in term of learning about knowledge, and cognitive activities;

    body, in term of physical activities, getting people to move around; and spirit, in term of

    looking at values, morals, religions and spirituality.

    (Dagenais, 2003)

    Fernal (1987) speculated that values are indeed important and two recent studies reported

    that general values of self-direction, universalism, and stimulation are correlated with self-

    reports of creative activity in university students. (Dollinger, Burke & Gump, 2007; Koof et al.,

    2007).

  • 18

    1.2.4.3 The Impact on Community/Society through Creativity in Education

    Teachers in community refer to aspects of the community that had an impact on

    teachers by virtue of their membership in it, including the educational community in which

    teachers lived, and society at large. Teachers building community explores teachers action that

    build and strengthened communities for their students and for themselves. It can be as simple to

    explain that the communities to which they belonged shaped their creativity. The educational

    community in which teachers spend most of their time is the classroom, and successful teaching

    depends on adapting to students; thus, students perceived interest, abilities, and needs shaped

    teachers creativity.

    The outcomes of creativity from teachers upgraded the existing systems, curriculums or

    instructional style. There were plenty of outcomes that able to be observed as the products from

    the creativity of the teachers. These many kinds of products were reported, including websites,

    plays, successful business, and various models such as working musical instruments. Often

    students products were notable because it was the first time that the classes had participated in

    such activities. At other times it was quality of the work that stood out, as seen in a teacher who

    worked with a class of special-needs students. In spite of their disabilities, when their work was

    displayed at the school knowledge fair, each student received high marks and praised from the

    judgers. Other observable products included demonstration videos and workshop or conference

    articles and journal articles (Well, et al., 2011).

    Therefore , our teachers creativity more closely resembled the everyday creativity of

    improvising group than that of eminent creators (Sawyer, 1997, 2004). Harringtons (1990)

    speculation that creative individuals are active shapers of their environment. The vital and most

    necessary courses at the top of the pyramid are still vital. However, by adding creativity to mix

    what we taught, a broader view of our educational system that uses innovative paths to reach our

    destination can be achieved. Robert Sternberg said that ,Wise individual balance the need for

    change (creativity) with the need for stability and continuity (intelligence) in human affairs. As

    society looks to the future, the creative person will be individual in demand, making it urgent for

    educators to be role model and a guide that will lead todays students future and not our past.

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    Therefore, educators are those who at the frontline to help individual acquire knowledge

    by leading them to build up more constructive and creative learning knowledge. This is the main

    and paramount reason that a teacher should put effort on training themselves to be more creative

    and innovative, due to cultivate a new generation with more creative mindset. Last but not least,

    creativity seemed importance for us, because a creative student always comes from a creative

    teacher. It is the time we move forward, looking for everyday creativity at the basement of

    national philosophy.

    1.3 Research Problem

    Aspiration and determination from Malaysia Ministry of Educational Department is

    clarified to want a transformational new educational system which able to gain and acquire more

    powerful global competitive ability that possibly generate more creative and integrated young

    new generation. Heading to the aims and goals, teachers described as the grounded unit of

    human resource to help government put out their endeavor to develop and produce more creative

    young new generation.

    Therefore, teachers creativity absolutely played as a key to open more creative teaching

    approaches to generate more creative youngsters, whilst teachers epistemology belief viewed as

    a basic unit of building block affecting teachers cognitive processing that may eventually turn

    into a decisive factor to determine teachers creativity level. On the other words, epistemology

    belief could become the ultimate factor to decide a teachers ability to bring out a creative

    teaching. As a result, it is a need to perceive the relationship between epistemology belief and

    science teachers creativity.

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    1.4 Research objectives

    i. To determine the extent of science teachers epistemology belief.

    ii. To determine the extent of science teachers creativity level.

    iii. To determine the significant of differences between science teachers epistemology

    belief and science teachers creativity.

    iv. To determine the significant relationship and correlation between science teachers

    epistemology belief and science teachers creativity.

    v. To determine the significant of differences among the five factors of epistemology

    belief and science teachers creativity level.

    vi. To determine the significant correlation of the five factors of epistemology belief and

    teachers creativity.

    1.5 Research questions

    The research study on epistemology belief and science teachers creativity arise the

    following questions.

    i. To what extent science teachers epistemology belief is?

    ii. To what extent science teachers creativity level is?

    iii. Will there any significant differences between science teachers epistemology belief

    and science teacher creativity levels?

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    iv. Will there has significant relationship and correlation between science teachers

    epistemology belief and science teachers creativity?

    v. Will there has significant difference among the five factors of epistemology beliefs

    and science teachers creativity level?

    vi. Will there has significant correlation of the five factors of epistemology beliefs

    toward science teachers creativity?

    1.6 Research Hypothesis

    HO1 : There are no significant differences between science teachers

    epistemology belief and science teacher creativity levels.

    HO2 : There are no significant correlation between science teachers

    epistemology belief and their creativity.

    HO3 : There are no significant difference between the factors of science

    teachers epistemology belief and their creativity level.

    HO4 : There are no significant correlation between the factors of science

    teachers epistemology belief and their creativity level.

    1.7 Research Conceptual Framework

    The research conceptual framework (Figure 1.1) was built based on two independent

    variables that are Epistemology Belief Inventory scores and Creativity scores. Respondents EBI

    scores were measured by using Epistemology Belief Inventory questionnaire (Schraw, Bendixen,

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    & Dunckle, 2002), whilst respondents creativity scores were measured by using Torrance and

    Guilford Creative Thinking Test (1974). Both instruments are generally used for quantitative

    data collection.

    This research attempts to identify the significant or not significant differences between

    the EBI level and science teachers creativity level. By the same times, this study intends to

    determine the correlation between epistemology belief and teachers creativity.

    Figure 1.1 Research Conceptual Framework

    Besides, the research also designed to determine the correlation between the science

    teachers creativity and the 5 factors (Simple Knowledge, Certain Knowledge, Omniscient

    Knowledge, Innate Ability and Quick Learning) used to construct EBI questionnaire

    respectively.

    Relationship

    (Regression)

    Nave Epistemology Belief General Epistemology Belief Advance Epistemology Belief

    Strongly Not Creative Not Creative Creative Very Creative

    Significant relation

    Teachers Epistemology Belief Teachers Creativity

    Significant relation

    Correlation

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    Figure 1.2 Correlations between each EBI Factors to Teachers Creativity

    The correlation study used to determine the relationship between two or more

    independent variables. The stronger the relationship yield the higher correlation among the

    variables and the relationship is significant.

    1.8 Rational of research

    Aspiration of Malaysia Ministry Educational Department is trying to transform existing

    inflexible and paradox educational system to more advancing quality international education

    system so Blue print of Education in Malaysia 2013-2025 was proposed, the content detail was

    discussed as aforementioned. Quality education tentatively produces a citizen who is balance and

    harmony with both excellent academic achievement and high behavioral morality regards on

    humanity value. The reformation and transformation of Malaysia education is a change, and

    seemed a breakthrough over its history, due to upgrading the whole system moves from a

    learning output emphasis to a learning process emphasis which aim to work out more efforts on

    holistic development based on intrinsic personal development and enhancing cognitive learning

    ability.

    Simple Knowledge

    Certain Knowledge Omniscient Knowledge

    Innate Ability Quick Learning

    Correlation

    Teachers Creativity

    Relationship

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    Students intrinsic personal development and their cognitive learning ability are two

    important components had been overlooked for the past thirty years, when the execution

    curriculum KBSR and KBSM over stressing on students personal academic performance that is

    literately forming a gap to actualize goals of National Education Philosophy. The gap was

    formed to ignore the more precious learning process and cognitive process skill, eventually the

    system drags down to become a very exam-oriented educational system, and cause the

    stakeholders only concern about the exam result. Therefore, the new scheme of curriculum

    KSSR and KSSM are introduced and soft landing in current school phase by phase, hopefully is

    able to completely replacing the existing system. KSSR and KSSM are the new schemes attempt

    to improve quality of educational system to actualize NEP.

    KSSR and KSSM are the curriculum scheme modeled towards student-centered teaching

    advocating problem-solving and inquiry learning practice, stimulating students constructive and

    creative learning. This is a global educational wave change emphasizes on thinking skills

    development that shifting paradox science curriculum to Entrepreneurial Science Curriculum.

    Entrepreneurial Science Curriculum is the combination of science thinking skills and creativity.

    Nor Aishah & Lilia (2007), reported that Malaysia need to produce entrepreneurial scientist who

    were originally academic scientist to have the inclination to go beyond just turning their

    discoveries in science based research into technology but into commercial aspects of their

    discoveries and even participate directly in the creation of entrepreneurial venture.

    Therefore, a quality creative teaching and learning should land on the ground of

    cultivating a quality creative teacher, on the other word, a quality creative science teaching rely

    on teachers creativity and her epistemology belief. Quality teachers in fact comes from

    individual who has more advancing personal epistemology belief, so a teachers epistemology

    belief needs to be identified due to guarantee a quality creative science teaching. In addition,

    teachers pedagogical belief intrinsically motivate teachers using more creative instructional

    design in classroom and both are affected by their epistemology belief, thus, the study attempt to

    determine the relationship between science teachers personal epistemology belief and science

    teachers creativity.

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    1.9 The Importance of Research

    According to Preliminary report of Malaysia Blueprint 2013-2025, reported that

    Malaysian performance in TIMSS indicates that students performance has fallen from 1999 to

    2007. The most recent TIMSS 2007 results in comparison to other systems shows that relatively

    few of Malaysian students are excelling. Only 2-3% of Malaysian students perform at highest

    benchmark level, in comparison more than 30% of students in Singapore scored at advanced

    level. TIMSS result also marked that up to 20% of Malaysian students did not meet the minimum

    benchmark in science. These students were shown to understand basic science concept but

    generally struggled to apply this knowledge.

    This report rose an alarming to urge Malaysian education system to change of its

    didactic application into more flexible and constructive application. KSSR and KSSM definitely

    a transformation for higher quality of Malaysian education system that emphasize on students

    learning performance by introduce school-based-assessment system. However, international

    research shows that teacher quality is the most significant school-based factor in determining

    students outcomes. The quality of a system cannot exceed the quality of its teachers.

    In Malaysia, a 2011 research study found that only 50% of lessons are being delivered

    in an effective manner. This means that the lesson did not sufficiently engage students on higher

    order thinking skill but followed a more passive, lecture format of content delivery. These

    lessons focused on achieving surface-level content understanding. This statistics is particularly

    challenging as an estimated 60% of today teachers will still be teaching in 20 years times. And

    this may be one of the reasons that majority of teachers in Malaysia opposed on school-based

    assessment system. As majority of these teachers used to lecture format content-based teaching

    strategy rather than try on more creative teaching strategy.

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    The situation is upset and worsens when some researchers reported that Malaysian

    teachers creativity are very low, for instance, Nureffazlin Binti Norjahan (2011), stated that the

    sample study in Pontian, shown teachers creativity at very low level.

    It is useless if Malaysian teachers far apart from the understanding of the meaning of

    Malaysian education system transformation. The new system encourages and hopes for more

    constructive and creative teaching presented by good quality teachers who are competence in

    both knowledge and creativity. Gillian Bram well, et al., (2011), stated that creativity able to

    improve and develop an individual personal intelligence, motivation and value, his groups study

    has confirmed the importance of such relationship and illustrates the way in which specific

    values drive and shape the creative process. And the values often depend on ones belief. Beliefs

    play an important role in how a teacher teaches. Behaviors directly influenced by ones beliefs,

    so that belief in teaching and knowledge ultimately influence how a teacher teaches and plan.

    Therefore, the values drive and shape the creative process may come from factor of

    personal epistemology belief. The study try to find out the relationship between epistemology

    belief and science teachers creativity open another door to help on improving Malaysian

    teachers creativity. Thus, the study of this research will bring beneficial to teachers, schools and

    Ministry of Education.

    The study of this research contributes a platform for teachers to understand about the

    concept of personal epistemology belief, for them to think about the theories of knowledge

    relatively influence their cognitive process skill and finally blocking or stimulating their

    creativity. The finding about the relationship between epistemology belief and teachers

    creativity also open a new room for future investigation about the factors that may influence a

    teachers creativity. Teachers can elaborate on more factors that may pragmatically influence on

    their creativity and taking understand of their personal epistemology belief as a reflection to

    move out the very first step for future improvement.

    The research finding provide another choice and topic for school training programs

    (LDP) to make further and detail discussion among school teachers, hopefully through school

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    programs teachers can generate more ideas about their own personal epistemology belief that

    convince themselves to try on more constructive and creative teaching in classroom.

    The research study suggests an alternative idea to Ministry of Education finalize the

    factors give effect on teachers creativity, so that relevant department able to give more relevant

    meaningful training programs to improve quality of Malaysian teachers. This is important to try

    producing more creative teachers and so more creative new generation competent at international

    scale is possible to be a reality.

    1.10 Research Limitation

    The scope of this study is to determine the relationship between epistemology belief and

    science teachers creativity. Besides, the research was confined to a generality of creativity, not

    included specific pedagogical creativity.

    This study was a small-scale study conducted at one science teachers conference

    organized by Education Department of Johor state (JPNJ) and 5 secondary schools from Kluang

    district. Therefore, only 70 respondents volunteered to give their feedback and answered the

    given questionnaires. As the study only involved very small size of samples, so it is not to over

    generalize the results and the finding cannot be claimed to represent the general population.

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    1.11 Operational Definition

    The following definitions are important and are used in writing of this study.

    1.11.1 Epistemology belief

    These beliefs focus on how individual come to know, their belief about knowing, how

    those beliefs a part of, and influence cognitive process.

    1.11.2 Simple Knowledge

    The knowledge consists of discrete facts and how simple or complex knowledge is. This

    belief influences its believers to decide study strategy.

    1.11.3 Certain Knowledge

    Absolute knowledge exists and will eventually be known and to what degree is the

    knowledge tentative.

    1.11.4 Omniscient Authority

    Authorities have access to otherwise inaccessible to knowledge and to what degree is the

    authorities need to access due to accessible of the knowledge.

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    1.11.5 Quick learning

    Learning occurs in quick or not-in-all fashion. This belief generally influence its

    believers more concern about the grade of study.

    1.11.6 Innate ability

    The ability acquire knowledge is fixed. The believers emphasize on surface learning and

    strategies.

    1.11.7 Teachers Creativity

    A teachers creativity is defined as the ability of a teacher generates imaginative

    approaches, to solve a problem with more interesting and exiting. It is believed to involve

    creating new activities that leads to foster creative learning in students.

    1.12 Summary

    Teachers creativity is an important element to support the realization of Malaysian

    Educational transformation for the coming years. And teachers epistemology belief always

    influences how teachers decide on her instructional planning. These beliefs directly reflect on

    their teaching behaviors. Those teachers hold on more advance epistemology beliefs are better

    well adopt student-centered teaching applications such as problem-based teaching, inquiry-based

    teaching, etc.

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    On the other hands, these teachers are having higher intrinsic values to motivate

    themselves for the trials on more creative science teaching approaches. Thus, it is significant to

    find out the relationship between epistemology belief and science teachers creativity. The

    finding assists on the understanding of the influence of teachers belief as a factor to determine

    their creativity.

    A successful quality educational system depends on the quality teachers. In this chapter

    has discussed about the current transition trend of Malaysian Education System towards the new

    plan of Malaysia Transformational Education System. The urge from the new system truly need

    a batch of good quality teachers to succeed it by transform the existing didactic teacher-centered

    teaching strategy to become more constructive and creative student-centered teaching strategy.

    Again, teachers beliefs play part in such critical moment for them to change and to become

    more creative teachers. So, identify both relationship between their beliefs and creativity is in

    needed.

    Hence, this chapter has discussed about the study objective, research questions, research

    hypothesis, importance of this research, etc. Hopefully this research opens a new door to find out

    the factors that may influence a science teachers creativity.