Teachers’ beliefs about low-achieving students and higher order thinking

Citation:

Zohar A., E., Vaaknin , ו A., Degani . 2001. “Teachers&Rsquo; Beliefs About Low-Achieving Students And Higher Order Thinking”. Teaching And Teachers’ Education, 17, 4, Pp. 469-485. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0742-051X(01)00007-5.

תקציר:

The goal of this study is to characterize the patterns of teachers’ beliefs regarding low-achieving students and instruction of higher order thinking. Subjects are 40 Israeli teachers. Results show that 45% of the teachers believe that higher order thinking is inappropriate for low-achieving students. Findings suggest that teachers’ beliefs in this context are related to their general theory of instruction: viewing learning as hierarchical in terms of students’ academic level was found to be related to a traditional view of learning, i.e., seeing learning as progressing from simple, lower order cognitive skills to more complex ones. Implications for teacher education are discussed.