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Need-analysis on Importance of Health Education Assessment Module for Lower Primary Teachers in Classroom-based Assessment
Author(s) -
Kumaran Gengatharan,
Azali Rahmat,
Szarmilaa Dewie Krishnan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
universal journal of educational research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2332-3213
pISSN - 2332-3205
DOI - 10.13189/ujer.2020.080807
Subject(s) - curriculum , class (philosophy) , workload , medical education , psychology , health education , needs assessment , health assessment , mathematics education , needs analysis , medicine , pedagogy , computer science , nursing , public health , sociology , social science , pathology , artificial intelligence , operating system
This study aims to develop a Health Education assessment module in the classroom for lower primary teachers. The objective of this study is to identify the importance of the assessment module of Health Education in classroom assessment for lower primary teachers. The design used in this study is the design and development research method, which has three phases. The first phase is to analyze the needs, the second phase is design and development, and the third phase is the implementation and assessment of the module. The instrument used in this phase is the questionnaire to identify the importance of assessment material, which is the assessment module for teachers who teach Health Education for lower primary class students in classroom-based assessment. Analysis towards the data of this study was made by using 'SPSS' version 22. Research findings show the importance and the need to develop the assessment module of Health Education for lower primary teachers in conducting the classroom-based assessment. In conclusion, results prove that the Health Education assessment module development is very imperative and essential for teachers in teaching Health Education subject for lower primary students. Not that only, data obtained from the questionnaire show that Health Education teachers felt more comfortable to teach Health Education using the module comparatively as the workload has decreased. The analysis also evidenced that 93.4 percent of teachers think that they can retain the Health Education assessment module as an assessment record. On the whole, this research will be an asset to Malaysia curriculum development.

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