Using Think-Pair-Share to Improve Students’ Performance
What if your Grade 9 Chemistry students sit quietly, copy notes perfectly—but still can’t think or answer confidently?
This action research explored whether Think-Pair-Share (TPS) could improve students’ conceptual understanding, exam performance, and confidence, not just classroom silence and note-taking.
PROBLEM IN
CONTEXT
What the Data Revealed
In a Grade 9 Chemistry classroom at the Liberty Campus, students were frequently passive during lectures, hesitant to speak, and often gave surface-level answers. Despite content being taught, assessment results showed that many students were underperforming, especially in questions that required explanation, reasoning, or evaluative thinking.
Why it Mattered
This gap mattered because Chemistry is not a memorisation subject—it demands concept clarity, logical reasoning, and the ability to justify answers. When students lack confidence and participation, their learning stays shallow and their exam performance suffers. If not addressed, students risk losing interest in science and continuing to struggle in higher grades.
This challenge raised an important question: How can we shift Grade 9 Chemistry students from passive listeners to confident learners who think, discuss, and explain? To explore this systematically, action research tested whether using TPS daily could strengthen both academic performance and evaluative skills in a mixed-ability classroom.
A performance target was established: students would show measurable improvement in post-test scores and increased participation during lessons after TPS implementation.
Research Question
How does active learning through the Think-Pair-Share (TPS) strategy contribute to deeper content mastery and enhanced evaluative skills in Grade 9 Chemistry compared to traditional lecture-based methods?
INTERVENTION TIMELINE AND ACTIVITIES
FINDINGS AND IMPLICATIONS
If you’re interested to learn more about the intervention, methodology, resources or the results, click on the relevant button below to access the full research report.
Here’s the report podcast if you’re interested.

Victoria Arshad
Teacher
Victoria teaches Grade Nine and Ten Matric Chemistry and General Science. As a reflective researcher, she applies active learning strategies such as Think-Pair-Share to increase participation, confidence, and understanding. By using evidence-based practices, she creates student-centered lessons that strengthen critical thinking and support meaningful learning every day.
