Block1 502
Block1 502
Block1 502
(D.El.Ed.)
Block -1
Learning and Teaching Process
Dear Learner
The National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) is an autonomous organization under the
Government of India, Ministry of Human Resource Development(MHRD). It is the largest open
schooling system in the world with around 2.02 million learners currently on roll at the
secondary and senior secondary level. NIOS has national and international network with more
than 15 Regional Centres, 2 Sub-Centres and about 5,000 study centres for its Academic and
Vocational Programme within and outside the country.It provides access to learner centric
quality education, skill up-gradation and training through open and distance learning mode. The
delivery of its programmes is through printed material coupled with face to face tutoring
(Personal Contact Programmes), supplemented by use of Information and Communication
Technology- Audio/Video Cassettes, Radio Broadcast and Telecast etc.
NIOS has been vested with the authority to train the untrained teachers at Elementary Level. The
training package for D.El.Ed. Programme has been developed by the NIOS in collaboration with
other agencies working in field. The Institute offers a very innovative and challenging Two-year
Diploma in Elementary Education Programme for in-service untrained teachers in different
states according to RTE 2009.
I take the pleasure of welcoming you all to this Diploma Course in Elementary Education
Programme of National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS). I appreciate your contribution in
elementary schooling of the children of your state. As per RTE Act 2009, it becomes essential
for all school teachers to be professionally trained. We understand that your experience as a
teacher has already given you requisite skills needed to be a good teacher. Since it is now
mandatory by law, you will have to complete this course. I am sure your knowledge and
experience, so far accumulated by you, will certainly help you in this Programme.
This D.El.Ed. Programme is through Open Distance Learning (ODL) mode and provides you
ample opportunity to be professionally trained without being disturbed from your regular
working as a teacher.
The self-instructional materials developed specifically for your use would be helpful in creating
understanding and help you in becoming a good teacher apart from becoming qualified for your
job.
Best of luck in this great endeavour!!
S.S. Jena
Chairman (NIOS)
Credit Points (8=6+2)
Block Unit Name of Unit Theory Study Practical Study
Hours
Content Activity
Block-1: U1 Learning and 6 4 Identification of the role
Learning Teaching during of a teacher as
and Early Schooling facilitator from your
Teaching own experience
Process
U2 Approaches to 8 5 Identification of the
Learning and characteristics of child
Teaching centred approach from
the behvaiour of your
colleagues
U3 Methods of 7 4 Differentiation amidst
Learning and different methods (as
Teaching mentioned) in the kdf of
learning and teaching
U4 Learning and Learner 9 7 Seminar on classroom
Centred Approaches managerial problems in
and Methods using different
approaches mentioned
in the unit
Block-2: U5 Management of 6 3 Identification of
Management Classroom Processes material and
of Learning- demotivating actions
Teaching taken in the classroom
Process by teacher-colleagues
U6 Teaching and 7 3 Separation of TLM in
Learning Materials various concepts from
different subject areas
U7 Management of 8 5 Development of
Multi-Grade and activities in different
Multi-Level subject areas in
Situations multigrade classes
U8 Planning Learning 5 3 Development of Anmial
Activities calendar of scholastic &
co-scholastic activities,
lesson class & lesson
note
Block 3: U9 Integrated Learning- 5 2 Development of
Emerging Teaching Process activities integrating
Issues in concepts from different
Classroom subject areas.
Learning U10 Contextualizing 5 2 Collection of folk-
Learning Processes materials and its use in
and Materials teaching-learning
process
U11 ICT in Learning 6 3 Development of ICT
tools for transacting
lessons
U12 Computer-assisted 6 3 Computerised analysis
Learning of learners’
achievement in different
subjects
Block-4: U13 Basics of 7 3 Conducting CCE in any
Learning Assessment and one of the subject area
Assessment Evaluation
U14 Tools and Strategies 8 5
of Assessment
U15 Using the results of 7 3 Development unit test
assessment for in different subject
improving learning areas
U16 Learning and 7 3 Analysis of question
Assessment paper on different
subject areas
Study of different ways
of sharing result of
student performance
with various
stakeholders
Tutoring 15
Total 122 58 60
Grand Total 122+58+60=240 hrs.
Block 1
Block Unit
Unit 1 Learning and Teaching during Early Schooling
Unit 2 Approaches to Learning and Teaching
Unit 3 Methods of Learning and Teaching
Unit 4 Learning and Learner Centred Approaches and
Methods
BLOCK INTRODUCTION
As a learner, you will study block 1 : Learning and Teaching Process. This block consists four
units related to learning teaching process. Every unit is divided into sections and subsections.
Unit-1 : This unit will provide you understanding about the concept and process of learning. It
will detailed the factors which affect learning as every child is unique and learn in his/her own
way. There are many ways to learn, for example imitation, observation, trial and error,
participation, inquiry and learning through construction of experiences. This will empower you
to understand the various dimensions of learning and teaching.
Unit-2 : This is the unit which will empower you to explain different approaches related to
learning and teaching. Teachers centered approach and subject centered approach, both are
considered as traditional approach. Competency based and child centered approaches are modern
approaches of learning and teaching, NCF 2005 emphasis on constructivist approach as each and
every child is the constructor of knowledge.
Unit-3 : This unit will make an attempt to provide you a thorough understanding of different
methods of learning and teaching. There are some methods which are based on instructions for
example lecture method, demonstration method, inductive and deductive method. There are also
some methods which are learner friendly i.e. play way method, project method, problem solving
method. For effective learning and teaching process, there is a need to choose the best
combination.
Unit 4 : You will be able to understand the various approaches to learning which are as follows
learner centered approach, cooperative learning, collaborative learning etc. Further you will be
acquainted with activity based approach, the nature of learning activities and its elements
activity based approach is considered as an important approach at elementary level.
CONTENTS
Structure
1.0 Introduction
1.1 Learning Objectives
1.2 Learning Process
1.2.1 The Concept and Process
1.2.2 Factors Affecting Learning
1.3 How children learn
1.3.1 Imitation
1.3.2 Observation
1.3.3 Trial and Error
1.3.4 Participation
1.3.5 Discovery / Inquiry
1.3.6 Problem Solving
1.3.7 Learning as Meaning Making
1.4 Process of Teaching
1.4.1 Teaching for Behaviour Modification
1.4.2 Teaching for Development of Cognition
1.4.3 Teaching for Construction of Experience
1.5 Let Us Sum Up
1.6 Model Answers to Check Your Progress
1.7 Suggested Readings and References
1.8 Unit-End Exercise
1.0 INTRODUCTION
Learning and teaching are two processes with which you, as a teacher, are very familiar,
because you are engaged in teaching children to learn. You normally expect that all
children in your class will excel in acquiring maximum learning experiences as per their
potential. While all the teachers have similar expectations i.e. maximizing the students’
efforts to acquire new experiences, each individual teacher does not approach this
goal in the same manner.
Notes Situation 1: In class V, Mr.Raman was teaching his pupils to learn the different
parts of a plant. He was explaining various parts of the plant such as; root,
stem, branch, leaf, flower, fruit, seed etc. with the help of a figure of a plant
drawn on the black board. He was occasionally asking questions to ensure
whether the students understood the concepts. Sometimes he was humorous
with the students and sometimes he was calling on the inattentive students
to focus on the figure drawn on the board. At the end, he concluded the
class by asking some students to show different parts of a sample plant he
had brought to the class.
Situation 2: In another class,Ms. Seema was teaching the same topic i.e. the
identification of different parts of a plant in a different way. She had earlier
instructed each student to bring a sample of a plant from home to the class.
She divided the students into small groups of five and asked them to draw
the figures of the five plants on a piece of paper, color them and label the
different parts of the plants. After the groups completed the task, they
displayed their sheets on the wall for others to see. At the end of the class,
when Seema asked to label different parts of a diagram of a mango tree,
there was competition among the student to perform the task.
Can you identify the differences in the styles of teaching-learning process followed in
the two classes?
The similarities in the two situations are :
(i) the teacher planned the activities, and
(ii) both used some materials to teach.
However, the differences are as follows:
● In the first situation, the class was entirely teacher dominated. The teacher planned
the lesson, arranged teaching-learning materials, explained the concepts, asked
questions and did other classroom activities. The students were passive and were
expected to be obedient to teacher’s instructions.
● In the second situation, the students in the class were actively engaged in learning
activities than merely driven by the instruction of the teacher. They brought the
materials with them, prepared charts, labelled the parts, displayed the chart and
willingly took part in the evaluation task.
It seems that the differences between the two ways of teaching are due to attitudinal
differences of the teachers towards the students. In fact the underlying belief in the
practices of teaching and learning was different. While Mr. Raman was guided by the
belief that the students are young and inexperienced and the facts for learning have to
be provided, Ms.Seema believed that the students have acquired experiences of the Notes
world around them before coming to the class and those can be utilized by the students
themselves to build new experiences.
Thus beliefs and assumptions about students, the role of teachers, the processes of
classroom interaction and the modes of evaluation influence the actual teaching learning
processes and practices. Some teachers emphasize on teaching and learning for
modifying observable behaviour of the students, some try to develop intellectual
(cognitive) abilities while some others believe that the students can be helped to build
their own knowledge. As a teacher you need to be aware of the various practices and
their underlying beliefs and this is what you will learn in this unit. You will know about
the nature and characteristics of the learning process, the ways children learn, and the
different trends of teaching guided by the dominant beliefs. The theories and practices
of teaching-learning processes following three dominant approaches, namely, teaching
and learning for (i) behaviour modification, (ii) problem solving and (iii) construction of
experience, will be discussed. For young children these methods have been found to
be meaningful. It is believed that when learning becomes meaningful to a child, he/she
loves learning and continues to learn. After all it is important to help children for lifelong
learning.
While studying this unit you need to keep in mind such children, who are in the beginning
grades of a primary school and to complete and comprehend different concepts in the
unit, you will need 12 (twelve) hours of study.
E2. State any two reasons as to why intrinsic motivation is better than extrinsic
motivation for learning.
ACTIVITY-1
Notes
Prepare a list of activities a normal child aged 6 years and coming to the
school for the first time usually performs.
Mr. Binay, a teacher like you in a primary school observed and interacted with a newly
entrant child named Jhumpa and listed the following activities which she could perform
with ease.
● She expresses her feelings in simple sentences.
● She speaks using proper tense of the verb appropriate to the subject.
● She answers simple questions like “What have you taken in your lunch?”, “Which
game do you like?”, “Who came to your house yesterday?”
● She is curious and asks a lot of questions.
● She understands and obeys teacher’s commands like “stand up”, “move to your
left”, “close your eyes”, “come to the black board” etc.
● She sings some songs according to her liking.
● She plays games with other children in the class strictly following the rules of the
game.
Notice that the list is quite long. Every normal child can perform such activities. But
how did Jhumpa learn to perform so many activities correctly and with ease? Although
there were several individuals around her in the family and neighbourhood, no one
deliberately taught her so many activities she is performing.
Clearly school is not the only place for learning, and one can acquire a wide range of
experiences from the world around him/her. If we know the processes that help one to
gather experiences in a natural way, we can use those processes in the classroom for
making school learning more natural, meaningful and easier to adopt and internalize.
Let us understand some of the basic processes of acquiring new experiences which
are usually used by children and others as well for learning in a very informal way.
1.3.1 Imitation
Much of human learning is a function of imitating and observing the behaviour and
action of others and these are also the main processes through which children acquire
new experiences and behaviour. Imitation is copying or reproducing others’ actions or
behaviours. One does not imitate everybody one comes across. One chooses
consciously or otherwise a person for imitating some of his/her behaviours or actions
that attract him/her. Such a person becomes a model for imitation. The model can be
a person with whom the child/individual has direct contact like the parents, siblings,
teacher, or any other adult member with some quality to be imitated. There are other Notes
persons with whom the child has no direct contact but can be models for imitation.
Examples of such models maybe great men from history and mythology like Ashoka,
Shivaji, Akbar, Gandhi, Nehru, Mother Teresa or Sri Ram, Sri Krishna, Mirabai,
Jesus or popular film stars, players, artists etc. Even the characters from popular
comics are sometimes imitated by young children. Such models are called symbolic
models. Very often, parents, siblings and teachers project before the child well-known
persons of eminence. Such models either real or symbolic are called exemplary models.
It is to note that all imitations are not learning unless the imitated action becomes
relatively permanent behaviour of the child. When you observe a child is imitating a
positive and desirable action, how can you strengthen the recurrence of this imitated
action to be learned behaviour? There are possibly three ways to strengthen imitations.
These are:
● Providing direct praise or incentives: Statements like “He is solving the
problem like an expert!”, “She is singing very well like Lata Mangeshkar”,
or “What a shot you played! It is just like the shot played by Sachin
Tendulkar” encourages the child to repeat the imitated action.
● Satisfying consequences: If through imitation the child acquires a socially
acceptable behaviour or achieves a desired goal, then he/ she likes to repeat it.
For example when a child imitates her mother saying “milk”, she would like to
repeat saying this word if in response she gets milk to drink.
● Vicarious reinforcement: Sometimes, a child imitates behaviour by observing
that others are imitating it without getting any direct incentive or any satisfying
consequence. It rests on the logic that others are imitating it as they might be
getting some benefit/satisfaction out of it. Choosing a brand of dress or cosmetic,
talking in a particular style or singing an odd tune are some such vicarious imitations.
Effects of imitation: Superficially, imitation is merely copying the behaviour of a
model. A closer examination of the responses involved, suggests that there are three
categories of imitative behaviour: the modelling effect, the inhibitory dis-inhibitory effect,
and the eliciting effect.
● The modelling effect involves acquiring new behaviour as a result of observing a
model.
● The inhibitory effect is concerned with suppression of deviant behaviour of the
model usually as a result of seeing the model punished for engaging in the same
behaviour. The dis-inhibitory effet is the opposite of it. It occurs when a child
observes the model engaged in the previously learnt deviant behaviour being
rewarded for it.
● The eliciting effect is related to responses of the model not to his/her behavioural
characteristics per states. An illustration of the eliciting effect is the mass behaviour.
Notes In any sporting event, one person’s clapping or booing might elicit similar behaviour
from others in the crowd. Sometimes, many in the crowd do not know why they
behaved in the way they imitated.
As a teacher, what can you do in the classroom/school to use imitation for enabling
young students to acquire positive and socially desirable behaviour? Well, you can do
the following:
● Try to be a model for imitation by your students. Demonstrate positive aspects of
your behaviour to your students. A teacher’s positive practices like cleanliness,
punctuality, truthfulness, and fairness to all have immense impact on the students
to imitate. Nevertheless, do not expose your weaknesses to your students.
● While teaching history, social science, literature and telling stories to children,
always highlight the positive aspects of the important characters for imitation by
the students.
● When any student imitates positive behaviour, try to recognize it and provide
verbal praise encouraging him/her to repeat it.
1.3.2 Observation
Learning from observation is a common and natural method of human learning.
Observational learning (also known as vicarious learning, social learning, or modelling)
is a type of learning that occurs as a function of observing, retaining and replicating
novel behaviour executed by others. Observational learning is a key learning method
for children when acquiring basic tasks such as language and cultural norms. But it is
different from imitation in which the observer copies and reproduces the behaviour of
the model. In observational learning we think and judge and learn not only how to do
certain things but also what the consequences of our action are likely to be. Therefore,
learning through observation is not exact reproduction of the model’s behaviour but
developing behaviour based on the observed behaviour.
According to Bandura (1977), following four distinct processes are involved in
observational learning:
Notes (ii) the observer must represent the observed behaviour cognitively, store it and
rehearse it;
(iii) the observer must reproduce and refine the observed behaviour if he/she has
required capabilities; and
(iv) the observer must perform the learned behaviour under appropriate motivational
conditions.
E4. State your role as a teacher in helping your students for observational
learning.
E5. State any two ways to motivate your students to perform in observational
learning.
law of disuse. The first relates to the strengthening of the connection of stimulus
(cause) and response(the behaviour) by repetition and the second, the opposite
of the first, relates to the weakening of connection when not used frequently. Notes
● Law of Effect: Of the several responses, that occurs just before a satisfying
state of affairs tends to be learned easily. Those that occur before an annoying
state of affair tend to be forgotten or rejected. In other words if the consequence
to a behaviour is satisfying, then the behaviour is likely to be learnt. In this
connection the role of reward and praise have positive effects of strengthening
the learned behaviour whereas punishment and rebuff have the opposite effect
on the behaviour being learned.
● Law of Readiness: Effective learning takes place when the student is ready to
learn. The educational implication of this law is quite clear. A child who is ready
for a specific type of learning is far more likely to profit from such learning
experiences than another who is not ready. Earlier in this unit, we have discussed
about the importance of readiness to learn and the teacher’s role in understanding
children’s readiness.
These laws of learning drawn by Thorndike from his experiments have influenced
classroom practices even though several researchers found limitations of these laws in
their practical uses.
E6. Considering trial and error method of learning, give an example that you
have experienced as a teacher.
1.3.4 Participation/Doing
Learning by doing or through participation is considered as effective means for
meaningful learning. Doing gives the real experience of solving real life problems. It is
a way of combining thinking and reasoning with the practical act of manipulating objects
for solving a problem. Undoubtedly it promotes self-learning and self-assessment which
are the ultimate goal of learning process. But, in classroom situations, individual work
cannot always be conducted. Therefore, encouraging students for participation in small
group work always proves beneficial for learning. Research findings consistently show
that the more pupils are involved as active participants in small group activities, the
better they do. The more provisions for group activities are arranged in the classroom
situation, the more participation is expected from the students. What are the benefits
of participation in enhancing learning? Well , it promotes:
● Active and meaningful learning in a contextual situation;
In this example the discovery learning was a group effort. Discovery learning can also
be individualistic.
Notes
How can you encourage discovery learning?
● You should not tell your students about what they ought to know. Always pose a
problem before them or considering any issue encourage students to identify
problems. When you tell them the problem and the methods to solve it, you are
depriving students of the excitement of doing their own finding and the opportunity
for increasing their power as students.
● Your main goal of teaching for inquiry is to engage students in those activities
which promote the process of defining, questioning, observing, classifying,
generalizing, verifying and applying. The outcome of these processes is
‘knowledge’.
● Your lessons should develop from the responses of the students and not from a
previously determined, so called, logical structure. The ‘content’ of your lesson
plan should be the responses of the students. Therefore, do not get frustrated by
their ‘wrong answers’, false starts, irrelevant directions.
● Your basic mode of interaction with the students should be questioning, using
both convergent (single/fixed correct answer) or divergent (multiple correct answer)
questions. But the latter is more preferred as it encourages inquiry and acts as a
means to engage young minds to probe unsuspected possibilities.
● You should encourage multiple responses from students. Do not ask for ‘the
reason’ but for ‘reasons’, not for ‘the cause’ but for ‘causes’, and never ‘the
meaning’ but ‘meanings’. When you insist on a single and definite answer, the
students would stop searching for other possibilities and their mind would stop
enquiring further.
● You should encourage ‘student-student’ interaction more than the ‘student-teacher’
interaction. In the traditional classroom interaction, students look for the teacher
for the ultimate correct answer. When they seek teacher’s response, they stop
further searching for possible answers thus blocking their inquiry mind.
● You should measure the success of your lesson in terms of the changes in the
inquiry behaviour of your students like the frequency with which they ask questions,
the increase in relevance of questions, conviction in challenging opinions of other
students, teacher and textbooks, the relevance and clarity of their challenges, the
willingness to modify or change their position when data warrants it, increase in
tolerance for diverse answers, increase in their skill in observing, classifying,
generalizing etc.; their ability to apply generalizations, attitudes and information to
novel situations.
● You should never try to conclude the lesson by summarizing the findings of the
students. Any form of conclusion tends to have the effect of ending further thought.
You may summarize the findings without closing the issue. You may say, “We Notes
have arrived at this position which has further possible extensions which
you may search for in next class.”
● Whether you like to promote discovery/inquiry mind in your students is entirely
up to you. If you want it then you have to demonstrate it through your actions and
beliefs. You need to be a student with an inquiring mind working along with your
students.
From the above situation it can be inferred that problem challenges students to find a
solution using previous knowledge. The problem should be put forward in clear words
and should be according to the understanding and experiences of the students. The
student does analysis and synthesis of the problem with the help of the teacher and
tries to find out the solution.
Thus we can say that problem solving involves the following features:
● A goal to be reached;
Situation 6: Ms. Sushmita, the English teacher, was helping her students in
Class VI to write an essay on ‘The Rainy Season’. To initiate it, she asked a
simple question to the students to react, “What comes to your mind when I
say ‘It is raining’?” Everyone in the class was eager to respond. Some of
the responses are as follows: “I love to dance in the rain.”
“It’s muddy and nasty everywhere.”
“Rain brings flood and misery.”
“It’s green all around in the field.”
“When rain drops fall on our tin roof, it is music for me and I begin to hum
with it.”
“Mosquitoes, flies, insects are all around along with several diseases. I only
wish rain is not there.”
“It’s so cool and comfortable after the heats and sweats of summer.”
“Can see colourful umbrellas in my street, I love to have one.”
“Can see variety of colourful flowers, little frogs and paper boats; what a
fun when it rains!!”
“Cold with running nose, fever, head ache come with rain.”
“Cloudy sky with sun not visible, it is very gloomy.”
The list of responses is never ending. Do you notice any incorrect or irrelevant response
in all these statements? Each statement is about rain and reflects the perception of the
individual child. If you try to draw a meaning of rain, you will surely fail. You can ask
for the meaning of anything and you will receive as many responses as the number of
respondents but all different responses. What are the reasons for such differences in
meaning of an object or a concept?
Well it is perception which varies from person to person. Perception of an individual
can be understood from the way he/she acts. When it is raining, some people will run
for the shelter while others will enjoy walking in it. Although, there is no disagreement
on ‘It is raining’, their actions indicate differences in their perceptions, and the meanings
they make of the incident. Thus different people perceive different things about the
same situation. But more than that, we assign different meanings to what we perceive.
What we perceive is largely a function of our previous experiences, our assumptions
and our purposes (needs). We do not change our perceptions until and unless we are
frustrated in our attempts to do something based on them. If our purposes are met by
our meaning (perception) of things and processes, we do not change those even if
others tell those to be “incorrect”. Only when the meanings or perceptions we hold
Notes about something do not help us to understand new things or to solve new problems,
then we search for alternative meanings which work for achieving our purposes. The
ability to learn is seen as the ability to change or reject inappropriate perceptions and
to develop new and more workable meaning. In short, learning is meaning making –
changing old ones in favour of workable alternative meanings. When learning is meaning
making, students are the meaning makers. The learning process in this context is student
centred entirely dependent on the student.
In the traditional teacher-centred, syllabus-driven teaching, we consider all the students
in a class to be of same or similar ability level and have nearly similar meaning of
objects and events. Hence, the belief with which we teach in the class is that all learning
in the class occurs in the same way. This is not true when we consider learning as
meaning making. The meaning maker has no end to his/her educative process. He/she
continues to create new meanings, to make new transactions with his environment.
To facilitate meaning making learning, your role as a teacher is as follows:
● Before initiating any learning activity in the class you should have a clear knowledge
of the previous experience of each student relating to the activity.
● Besides the previous knowledge, you should have intimate knowledge of the
interests, attitudes and typical personality characteristics of the students which
have bearing on their perception.
● You need to create a congenial environment in the classroom and school in which
the students would feel free to express their viewpoints on the issues being
discussed.
● You should record each student’s perceptions on the issue on the black board so
that all the statements are visible to all students.
● You need to create opportunity for each student to explain his/her viewpoints so
that in the process everyone could understand the perception of others and would
get chance to assess his/her own position on the issue and may like to modify or
change the meaning so far held by him/her.
modification: the first phase is concerned with making sure the elicited or emitted
behaviours occur again and again as and when required and the second is to continue
Notes the process of modification to refine the existing and acquired behaviours to acquire
more and more new behaviours. The process of habituating the child (or for that
matter any organism, human being, or animal) to repeat and modify both the types of
behaviours is called conditioning by the psychologists. There are two major types of
conditioning depending on the two types of behaviours: Classical conditioning i.e.
conditioning of elicited behaviours, and Operant conditioning for conditioning the
emitted behaviours.
Classical conditioning: Ivan Pavlov, a Russian physiologist, did pioneering work
on classical conditioning (around 1890s). He noticed that in his laboratory, hungry
dogs began to salivate when they were about to be fed, even before they could see or
smell the food. Strangely, they seemed to be salivating at the mere sight of their keeper
or even when they heard his footsteps. This simple observation led Pavlov to a series
of carefully designed experiments involving ringing of a bell or sounding a buzzer –
neither of which ordinarily leads to salivation - and immediately presenting dogs with
food, a stimulus that does lead to salivation. After considerable number of such
combined presentations of sounding of bell and then food, the dogs salivated with
sounding of the bell even if food is not presented.
In Pavlov’s experiments, the bell is referred to as a conditioned stimulus (CS), the
food is a natural or an unconditioned stimulus (UCS); and salivation in response to
food is an unconditioned response (UCR), whereas salivation in response to the bell
or buzzer is a conditioned response (CR). Initially, ringing of the bell or sounding of
the buzzer is a neutral stimulus (one that does not lead to a response) for salivation.
In general terms, a stimulus or situation that readily leads to a response can be paired
with a neutral stimulus to bring about classical conditioning. This is also called respondent
conditioning because the elicited behaviour occurs in response to a stimulus.
Classical conditioning is very much perceptible in classroom practices, virtually at all
times, irrespective of the other kinds of learning going on at the same time. And it is
largely through these unconscious processes that students come to like or dislike schools,
subjects, and teachers. For example, a school subject is a neutral stimulus that evokes
little emotional response in the beginning assuming that it is new to students. The teacher,
the classroom, or some other distinctive stimulus in the student’s immediate environment
may act as a conditioning stimulus. This conditioning stimulus might be pleasant (like
well-ventilated and comfortable classroom, a friendly teacher) or unpleasant (like dark
and hot room, a hard teacher with threatening voice). Following successive pairing of
subject matter with the distinctive stimulus, the emotions and attitudes associated with
conditioning stimulus becomes classically conditioned to some aspects of school.
Learning to dislike mathematics is a typical case of adverse case of classroom processes,
and an example of classical conditioning. Love for mathematics learning (at least the
emotional part) can also be created with similar process of classical conditioning.
by the way a student thinks, reasons and processes information. Some major
characteristics at the four stages of cognitive development are provided in Table 1.
Notes
Table 1 Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development
● Inability to conserve,
● Understanding of numbers,
● Development of reversibility in
thought.
Piaget’s theory tells us that the child is born with a mental/cognitive structure which
develops and attains maximum growth around the age 14 or 15 years. The major
trends of the cognitive development during the four stages are as follows:
● During the first two years of life, the child performs activities mostly driven by
sense organs and some motor activities. For an infant at this stage, objects exist
when they can be seen, heard, touched, tasted or smelled and when they are
removed from the infant’s immediate sensory experience, they cease to exist.
Notes
● Towards the end of this sensorimotor period, the child can identify the objects
around him/her and can imitate several actions of others. And at a later stage, the
child can imitate the actions in absence of the actions or objects (called deferred
imitation). This indicates that the child can observe the action minutely, internalize
the actions and reproduce it signifying the early form of intentional action. Intentional
actions are also part of intelligent activity.
● Piaget defines ‘operations’ as mental activities subject to certain rules of logic.
According to him, operations in true form do not appear before 7 years of age.
But with development of language ability, the child tries to reason out in a crude
way during the pre-operation period. These reasoning are mostly pre-logical –
egocentric (everything moving around the self), and intuitive, mostly driven by
emotion and passion.
● The intelligence as is commonly understood begins to appear towards the end of
the pre-operation stage i.e., around age of 6 or 7 years (incidentally this is the
beginning of schooling). It is during the concrete operation period i.e. from 7 – 11
or 12 years of age, children make a fundamentally important transition from a
pre-logical form of thought to logical thinking that apply to real, concrete objects
and events. Three important mental abilities develop during this period with
manipulation of concrete objects and events. They are conservation,
classification and seriation.
Conservation is the realization that quantity or amount does not change when nothing
has been added to or taken away from and object or collection of objects, despite
changes in form or arrangement in space. For example, to test the conservation of
number, expose the children to two collections of marbles/beads as shown below.
(a) (b)
Fig. 1 Arrangements of Marbles
● In your strategy of teaching you have to strike an optimal balance (in Piaget’s
language ‘equilibration’) between using previous experience, old learning and
Notes behaviour (assimilation), and making new changes (accommodation). Striking
balance or equilibration helps the child in adapting the change in behaviour and
action.
● While providing learning experiences, maturation levels of the children have to be
recognized. Maturation unfolds the hereditary characteristics which helps us to
make appropriate learning provisions. You cannot ask a child to sing a song
loudly when she has not developed full control over her speech-producing organs
which develops in course of maturation.
● Cognitive development depends directly on the child’s day to day activities and
experiences with real objects and events. Provision should be made for a relatively
large amount of activities, both physical and mental, relating learning to real objects
and events, especially before the formal operations stage.
● Social interaction i.e. interaction with others is fundamental to the development of
notions about others, about things and about self. Such interactions, predominantly
verbal in nature, help in development of language abilities and understanding
relations both of which are crucial for cognitive development.
● Understanding children is important on the part of a teacher. When a child
responding to the task shown in Fig1 earlier states that in Fig.1 (b) there are
more number of marbles, we cannot understand the child’s intention clearly if we
just conclude that he/she has committed an error. Rather, if we probe as to why
the child thinks it to be correct, then perhaps we can understand his/her capabilities
better than suggesting the correct response directly. In this way we can know the
strengths and limitations of the students and make appropriate strategies for
development of their cognition.
● Language is the primary symbolic expression of our thought. Therefore, giving
children more chance to speak freely is not only helping to develop his/her cognition,
but also to understand the child better through his/her expressions.
Notes ● Facilitating students in their efforts to learn without directly instructing them on
any new concepts.
● Being sensitive to the previous experiences of each and every student in the class.
● Providing authentic (real-world and contextual) tasks.
● Providing as many materials and experiences from the immediate environment as
possible. Manipulating materials and events so that the students can gather more
experience.
● Providing real-world, context-based learning environments rather than
predetermined instructional sequences for making learning more realistic, relevant
and contextual.
● Focussing on realistic approaches to solve real-world problems.
● Providing or/and encouraging the students to come out with multiple representations
or alternative solutions when engaged in solving a problem.
● Allowing students to ask questions and encouraging them to raise intelligent
questions.
● Fostering reflective practice. By encouraging raising intelligent questions, indirectly
put pressure to think reflectively.
● Supporting cooperative and collaborative learning in the classroom.
● Connecting the activities in the school with those outside the school.
● Encouraging self-analysis and self-assessment of their learning progress.
● Maturation, environment, readiness to learn, and motivation are some of the factors
that affect learning.
Notes
● Children learn through various methods like imitation, observation, trial and error,
participation, discovery, and problem solving. Meaning making through perceiving
objects is also a powerful method of learning.
● Besides the traditional instructional process of teaching, behaviour modification
approach has several impacts on the classroom teaching-learning processes.
● Learning for cognitive development and learning to construct knowledge have lot
of potentials towards learning of children specifically for those in the primary
schools.
formed thus we also modify our experience or gather new experience. Thus
perception shapes our learning.
Notes
E11. By variation of providing reinforcements.
E12. Negative reinforcement provides relief as the unpleasant stimuli is removed
and thus strengthen the occurrence of the desired behaviour. On the other
hand punishment is unpleasant and hinders in occurrence of the desired
behaviour.
E13. Concrete operations are strengthened by manipulation of variety of concrete
objects, hence during the primary school years (age 7 – 11 years) provision of
more teaching-learning materials is necessary.
E14. Group learning provides scope for more social interactions which is necessary
for healthy cognitive development.
E15. Previous experience connects similar elements/concepts from the new situation
and helps in new construction.
Structure
2.0 Introduction
2.1 Learning Objectives
2.2 Approaches to Learning and Teaching
2.2.1 Teacher-Centered Approach,
2.2.2 Subject-Centered Approach
2.2.3 Learner-Centered Approaches
2.2.4 Competency-Based Approach
2.2.5 Constructivist Approach
2.3 Comparison of Approaches
2.4 Let Us Sum up
2.5 Model Answers to Check Your Progress
2.6 Suggested Readings and Reference
2.7 Unit-End Exercises
2.0 INTRODUCTION
In the first unit of this course, you have studied the concepts, processes and factors
associated with learning and teaching. From your experience as a teacher, as well as
what you have learnt in the earlier unit you will agree that every child is different from
another child and has his/her own ways of learning. Depending on the place and time,
the child may adopt different methods of learning. Hence, to teach a group of children
in a classroom taking into consideration their diverse ways of learning, is a very
challenging task which you might have experienced. No single method of teaching can
equally facilitate learning of each and every child in a group. To overcome this challenge,
you need to know how to combine different methods and make suitable variations for
fulfilling the learning needs of every child in your class. In other words there are various
approaches of learning and teaching like Teacher-Centered Approach, Subject-
Centered Approach, Competency-Based Approach and Constructivist Approach. In
this unit these approaches will be explained so that you can adopt appropriate methods
and approaches in your classroom transactions for effective learning of your students
by addressing to their learning needs.
Notes
For understanding the concepts dealt in this Unit, you may need approximately 14
(fourteen) study hours.
You might have similar experience like Ms.Sushmita that although you plan your daily
lesson to teach a particular topic using one definite method of teaching, sometimes you
change it depending on the situation prevailing in the classroom during that period.
Considering the three major aspects of classroom activities, there are broadly three
major categories of approaches: Teacher-centered, Subject-centered and Learner-
centered approaches. Apart from these there are two other approaches i.e.
Competency-based approach, and Constructivist approach which are increasingly
been used in recent times particularly in primary schools.
Try to visualize the following three classroom situations 2, 3, and 4:
Situation 3: Mr. Amir is teaching language in class V. His only source is the
Notes
language text book prescribed for the class. He is holding the text book in
one hand and a piece of chalk in the other. He is reading out loudly a portion
from the topic he intends to cover in that period. He made the students to
repeat reading loudly exactly the way in which he was reading. . He explained
the main points of the topic and then asked questions given at the end of the
chapter. When any student asked any question, Mr. Amir advised them to
refer to the related paragraphs to find the answer. At the end of the class he
gave assignments from the exercises given in the textbook. He never went
beyond the prescribed text.
E1. Which of the above three situations is/are more controlled by the teacher?
E2. In which situation the students feel free to act with a purpose?
In the first situation, the teacher is in full control of the class. Literally, she is either
conducting the activities or directing students to perform the activities. Everything in
this class depends on the teacher and the students have little say in any matter. This is
an example of a classroom where teacher-centered approach is adopted.
In the second situation both the teacher and the students perform activities strictly
confined to the prescribed contents/ textbooks in the subject being taught demonstrating
a subject-centric approach.
The last situation demonstrates a situation where the children were driven by a purpose
and willingly associated themselves in choosing to perform different activities from
which they could learn several things. This is an example of child-centered or learner-
centered approach.
Let us discuss each of these three approaches in detail.
Activity 2.1:
Observe at least five classes when the teacher is teaching and list the
characteristics of these classes in terms of what the teacher and students
are doing. List the advantages of this type of teaching by asking the teacher
teaching in the class following this approach.
If you have completed your activity compare your observations with the list given
below.
Characteristics of Teacher Centered Approach:
Some of the important characteristics of the teacher-centered approach of teaching-
learning are:
● Transferring knowledge, information and skills from the matured and experienced
persons (teachers) to the younger generation (students) is very often argued to
be beneficial for students as many successful students who have come out of Notes
traditional settings, have also proved their talents.
● There are quite a large number of new, unfamiliar or abstract concepts for the
learner which cannot be learnt easily when left to the students themselves. Direct
explanation of these concepts by the teacher is a better way to facilitate
understanding of the students.
● There are materials, instruments and situations which might be harmful or dangerous
for the young students to handle. In such cases, it is always advisable that the
teacher demonstrate the experiments or activities using such materials or
instruments.
● In a large size classroom where there is large number of students, teaching in
mass becomes the only feasible method.
Limitation of Teacher Centred Approach: This approach has large number of
limitations. Some of them are:
● Since the teaching is very often imposing facts and ideas by the teacher, children
do not like and tend to loose interest.
● If the knowledge of the teacher is limited, then he/she cannot meet the needs of
individual children.
● There is no scope for debate and discussion among the students.
● Individual attention is hardly taken into account in large sized classes and in multi-
grade situations.
● The teacher never gives room for developing the thinking skill of the students.
Thus it retards the creativity of the children.
● Evaluation is mostly summative in nature. There is no scope for continuous and
comprehensive evaluation which is the call of the present times.
● The teacher is confined to completion of the course.It matters little if the children
do not understand the concepts.
Now check your progress and answer the following:
E4. Which of the following statements is/are TRUE for the teacher-centered
approach?
A. Courses prescribed for a class can be completed in time.
B. Students can develop proper reading ability.
Notes Give at least one reason for your response to each statement.
Let us consider the comments made in the National Curricular Framework, (2005):
This highlights the following in the context of subject-centred approach :
● Text book is the only source and main source for the teacher.
● Word by word, phrase by phrase the matters are presented before the students.
● The content/subject matter of the text book is itself a guide to the teachers to
decide his/her methodology.
● Insistence on the students to memorize the facts by repeated reading.
● Questions given at the end of the chapter are to be asked to the students for
assessment of learning.
● The students answer the questions both orally and in written form by copying
from the book.
● They may produce their answers orally or in written form by reproducing the
exact content.
E5. Some statements are given below. Indicate which is/are appropriate for
the Subject Centered Approach:
a) Teacher rarely uses the textbook in the class.
b) Questions given at the end of the chapter are answered by the students.
c) Emphasis is given on the real life experiences.
d) Students always try to memorize the content.
e) Textbook is considered as the main source of learning.
● The teacher tries to motivate the learner before he/she starts teaching-learning
process.
Notes
● Teacher is a facilitator in the teaching-learning process and not an instructor.
● Students often ask questions to the teachers for clarity of the concepts
Doing activities with students in the class is considered very essential for learning. As
such Activity- Based Learning (ABL) is now being increasingly adopted in primary
schools across the country particularly in lower grades.
But, the learner centred approach is not free from criticism. Even if this approach is
used, it is difficult to increase the achievement level of all the students on average
within a limited period of time. Without competent and committed teachers the approach Notes
will not work. It requires teachers who are very sensitive to the needs of the students.
Unless proper learning climate is created in the schools, use of learner- centred approach
is not possible.
A brief comparison between the two major approaches to teaching and learning is
given in the following table.
Table 2.1 Comparison between Teacher Centered Approach and
Learner Centered Approach
Indicators Teacher Centered Approach Learner Centered Approach
Course objectives ● Teachers cover topics as per the ● Students achieve learning
syllabus. objectives as fixed by the
teacher.
How students learn ● Students learn passively by ● Students learn by integrating
listening and reading. new learning into what they
already learnt before.
● They take to independent ● Learning by doing is the base.
learning, for securing good
scores.
Pedagogy ● Based on delivery of information. ● Learning by doing based on
engagement of students
through different activities.
Course delivery ● Lecture method is applied. ● Active learning
● Assignments and exams are ● Cooperative learning and
based for summative purpose. Problem based learning is in
practice.
● No unit planning and unit test.
Role of the teacher ● Sage on the stage and what is ● Assignment is given for
dictated must be followed. practice. Unit test is
administered.
Effectiveness of ● Teacher pass information and ● Teacher is a facilitator and he/
teaching students learn by rote she works with the students.
memorization.
● As students learn by rote, ● Teacher engages students
effectiveness of methodology through learning activities.
cannot be judged rationally. ● Teachet helps all students
achieve learning objectives.
● Performance indicates
mastery of learning objectives.
● Assessment is done to
improve standard of the
students.
Notes E6. Why most of the teachers do not follow the learner centred approach?
Which of the following is/are the answer(s) to the above question?
i) They lack required knowledge and skill competencies to plan for classroom
transaction following the approach.
ii) They are not willing to give up the habit of traditional approach.
iii) Learner centred approach is difficult to follow.
● The wording of the statement of competency is such that it can be clearly understood
by everyone concerned including the teacher and the learner (communicability).
Notes
● It can have different standard or level depending on the characteristic levels of
the learner (appropriateness).
Here are some examples of the competencies at the primary school level:
Language competencies:
– ‘Speak with correct pronunciation.’ (Cl.III)
– ‘Read print and handwriting freely.’(Cl.V)
– ‘Take dictation with all punctuation marks.’(Cl.V)
– ‘After reading a text, be able to answer questions using ‘because’ and/or ‘since’.’
(Cl.IV)
Mathematics competencies:
– ‘Counts from 1-20 using objects and pictures.’ (Cl.I)
– ‘Uses unitary method to solve simple daily life problems.’ (Cl.V)
– ‘Finds average height from the given data.’ (Cl.V)
– ‘Draws angles of different measures with the help of a protractor.’ (Cl.IV)
Environmental Studies competencies:
– ‘Shows due courtesy to elders, peers, etc. in the family and among the relatives
and neighbours.’ (Cl.I)
– ‘Lists the occupations engaged in producing various articles of daily need.’ (Cl.III)
– ‘Identifies distribution of main physical features on map and describes them.’
(Cl.V)
– ‘Conducts simple experiments to purify drinking water.’ (Cl.IV)
Are you confused by the two key terms used in competency-based education namely
‘skill’ and ‘competency’? .
Well, skill refers to a task or group of tasks performed to a specific level of proficiency
which often use motor functions and typically require the manipulation of instruments
and equipment. Some skills, however, such as ‘adding correctly and quickly’ and
‘appreciating the need for orderly behaviour at home, school, and public places’
are knowledge- and attitude-based.
For attaining competency, mere acquisition of skill in not sufficient, one has to perform
at a prescribed level of efficiency. In other words one has to attain mastery (high
E7. State at least three differences between teacher centred approach and
Competency Based Approach?
Limitations
● The content knowledge of the teacher is very important to help the students
achieve the competencies. If the teacher is not proficient the approach may not
work.
● The learning climates in all schools are not equally conducive for optimizing learning
and as such not equally effective for attainment of competencies within the stipulated
time.
● As pace of learning varies from student to student, it is very difficult on the part of
the teacher to help the students to achieve the competencies within the stipulated
time.
● All teachers are not equally competent enough to provide remedial treatment to
the low achieving students. Achieving competencies at the level of mastery is a
crucial task for the students and especially for the first generation students.
● As competencies are broken into detailed sub-competencies, it is observed that
all the details do not find places in the assessment.
● Designing activities and test items for the detailed list of competencies/sub-
competencies may not be always practicable.
Now check your progress before moving ahead:
E8. Indicate which of the following statements are correct and which are wrong:
a. Competency is a learning objective.
b. All the competencies are not achievable.
ACTIVITY – 2
Prepare a list of activities a child of 6 years of age usually does just before
coming to school.
How does he/she learn all these activities? Does anyone teach him/her to learn all
these things or he/she learns by himself/herself? How could he/she learn without
anybody’s help?
Let us consider a situation:
Situation7: Once Mr.Rabin, the english teacher told a story in the class and
then he repeated it for the second time. When he asked the students to
reproduce it, seventy five percent of the total students could do that. Is there
any newness? Does it encourage thinking?
But when he asked the students if they can tell a story, hardly two or three
students raised their hands. Then he showed them a picture and hung it on
the wall so that all could see it very clearly. He then asked them to write a
story using the picture. After 15 minutes some students could write stories.
But no two stories were alike. All the stories were different
Then he gave some key words and asked the students to write a story using
the words.
Again the students wrote different stories by themselves.
How was it possible to write different stories based on the same elements (picture or
key words)? The students have heard stories from their grandparents, parents and
Notes uncle. When they started to write a story, they recalled their previous experience.
They made a link of the prior knowledge, with the new knowledge, tried to make
sense of it to reformulate new ideas.
In a teacher centered class room the students are passive listeners. But it does not
happen in a constructivist class room. Constructivist learning and teaching considers
student as an active learner and teacher facilitates the process of knowledge construction
by the students.
As the constructivist class room is learner-centred, maximum freedom is given to the
students.
On the basis of the above discussions answer the following questions.
E10. Which one of the following is not based on the constructivist approach?
i) Learner’s previous knowledge plays an important role in the construction of
knowledge.
ii) Learning is an active meaning making process.
iii) A learner’s strong memory power is the basis of his construction of knowledge.
As a teacher you use your own style and methodology in your class. You also tell
stories to the students. Have you ever tried to develop a story with the help of your
students?
Here is an example to illustrate how students can also develop stories.
Once in the class room the teacher wrote some words on the black board. His
purpose was to build a story with the help of students. He wanted the students to
tell a story using the words. He asked if any one of them can start the first
sentence. When the first sentence was stated by a student, the teacher asked
individual students to speak out a sentence which links to the previous sentence.
Within a very short time twenty sentences were written on the black board. Then
the teacher changed the direction of the story and added two sentences of his
own. Again he asked the students to continue. After five sentences were added
to the story he asked the students if they wanted to conclude the story. When the
students agreed to stop there, then he asked the individual students to give a title
to the story. Interestingly there was not a single title, but the students came out
with a number of titles.
Now answer the questions on the basis of above example.
Who started the story?
What did he do to extend the story?
How was the story built?
ACTIVITY -3
Here is a story. Use it in your classroom and discuss in the following manner.
Lalita was a little girl. She was studying in class V. She was not very clever,
but she was sweet and good. Everyone loved her. One day Lalita’s school
teacher said. “I am going to give a special prize this year”. “What is the
prize for” asked all the pupils? “I am not going to tell you” said the teacher;
“you must try to do your best at everything. At the end of the year I shall tell
you what the prize is for”.
Then the story will be extended in form of conversation among the students.
At last the teacher declares the reason for giving the special prize. (Last
sentence of the story)
After the story is told the following questions will be asked and further
activities will be taken up.
1. Which characters do you like and why?
2. Identify yourself with the character you like and prepare dialogue taking
another characters.
3. Let the student deliver the dialogue in the class.
4. Alternate dialogues in the group.
From the above activity, you will observe that it is a class room where students work
in groups, interact among themselves and the role of the teacher is a facilitator. The
students connect their past experiences with the new experiences. Since they worked
in groups, there is exchange of ideas. The students under this situation pass through the
following stages:
I. Relate their previous experiences to the new situation.
II. Make sense of the story.
III. Contribute their own ideas.(new)
IV. Ask questions to one another.(inquire)
V. Think why they liked the character.(judgment).
All these processes are aimed at construction of knowledge and hence the approach
adopted is known as Constructivist Approach.
Notes
Constructivist Approach to teaching and learning is based on a theory called
constructivist learning theory. According to this knowledge is built upon the prior
knowledge of the learner. Students actively construct their own knowledge by
connecting new ideas to the existing ideas on the basis of materials or activities
presented to the students.
Constructivism
Constructivism is a school of philosophy whose genesis is traced to
Giambattista Vico an Italian philosopher of early eighteenth century. In
recent times it has emerged as a philosophy of education largely due to the
contributions by the Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget (1896-1980) and the
Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934).
Radical Constructivism based on Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development
stresses that knowledge is actively constructed by the learner, not passively
received from the environment. ‘Coming to know’ is a process of adaptation
based on and constantly modified by the learner’s experience of the world.
Vygotsky’s work on cognitive development inspired the Social Constructivism
which emphasizes on the construction of knowledge through individual
adaptation of environment supported by the social interaction. This social
interaction may be in the form of peer activity, interaction with teachers,
parents, and other adults.
E11. Which of the following does not come under constructivist approach?
a. Students make meaning from their own experiences. Notes
b. Assessment of outcome of learning is more important than the learning process.
c. Teacher facilitates learning rather than instructing children to learn.
Give reasons for your answer
In the constructive class room, students work primarily in groups where learning and
knowledge are interactive and dynamic. One cannot find it in a traditional class room
in which students work alone. In that situation learning takes place through repeated
practice and the students mostly depend on the text book. But in constructivist class
room students conduct experiments and do some projects work. They start the work
individually but come together in a group to discuss the results. They also go outside
the class room to observe something in the school garden or in a museum. After
recording observation they come with their individual observations which they discuss
in the group. Group discussions play a very important role. The activities are based on
debate, intellectual participation and drawing conclusion.
Another example of learning task:
After the completion of the story, ask the students to enact the story and
continue discussion among the student on the role play according to the
Notes
characters. Teacher may help the students to prepare dialogue cards. At the
end ask some open ended questions.
Observe the performance of the students. Among the students whose
performance is satisfactory praise them.
Do you notice the ways through which students construct knowledge?
activity. It is because each one contributes his/her idea to the learning activity. So,
students have ownership what they learn. Now think do such things take place in a
traditional class room? Notes
Limitations: The teachers are not competent enough to structure a class room based
on constructivist principles. In absence of proper guidance it will not work. If the
teacher is not proficient, it will not work and if the teacher is proficient but students are
at a lower level, the purpose of the constructivist class room may be defeated.
E5. b and e
E6. i and iii. Notes
E8. A
E9. a,c, d,f,and g are correct and b,e are wrong.
E10.iii
E11. B
STRUCTURE
3.0 Introduction
3.1 Learning Objectives
3.2 Effective Methods of Learning and Teaching.
3.2.1 Classification of Methods.
3.3 Instructional Methods.
3.3.1 Lecture Method
3.3.2 Demonstration Method
3.3.3 Inductive and Deductive Method
3.4 Student- Centred Methods
3.4.1 Play-way Method
3.4.2 Project Method
3.4.3 Problem solving Method
3.4.4 Discovery Method
3.5 Let Us Sum Up
3.6 Model Answers to Check Your Progress
3.7 Suggested Readings and References
3.8 Unit-End Exercises
3.0 INTRODUCTION
In the previous unit you have learnt the concept, process and different approaches to
teaching and learning. However, to make the teaching-learning effective in classroom
transaction process there are several means and techniques which being a teacher you
may be familiar with. In this Unit different techniques and methods used in classroom
teaching-learning process are discussed with a view to highlight how these can be
made contextually appropriate and relevant.
For understanding the concepts and methods discussed in this Unit, you will need
approximately 14 study hours.
You may have used several methods in your classes. With respect to any method that
you have used recently, reflect on the above questions and judge the effectiveness of
your teaching. This will help you to have an idea about the characteristics of an
effective method of teaching and learning which are as follows:
Notes
● Creates interest in children so that they will participate actively in the teaching
learning process and can continue to learn more.
● Matches the mental ability and needs of the students.
● Gives emphasis on students’ experiences.
● Provides a scope for peer learning.
● Provides a scope for learning something by doing.
● Encourages students to think independently and construct knowledge of their
own.
● Develops creative thinking of the children.
● Provides a scope for development of life skills in children.
● Flexible i.e., instead of following a single method for teaching of all topics, different
methods may be followed during the teaching learning process.
● Inexpensive.
3.2.1 Classification of Methods
Let us consider two different classroom situations.
Situation-2: Mr. Ramesh was teaching Science in class -III .The topic was
on ‘Pollution of water’. The students were sitting in rows in the classroom.
Mr. Ramesh was standing in front of the students and explaining the causes
of pollution of water. While explaining, he showed different pictures to
indicate the causes of water pollution at different sources. He never tried to
find out whether the students could make any sense out of that. Then he
asked some questions to the students. Some of the students were able to
answer the questions. At the end of the class he gave homework from the
exercise given in the textbook.
Situation-3: Ms. Sarita was teaching the same topic in other section
altogether in a different way. She divided the students in different groups
and asked each group to sit in circle. She provided pictures to each group
indicating causes of pollution of water at different sources. Then she
instructed to the students to observe the pictures and write down the causes
of pollution of water at different sources by discussing among themselves in
groups. Ms. Sarita was watching whether each student was participating in
the discussion or not. Then the group leader of each group presented the
theme assigned to them. While one group was presenting, the other groups
were listening to them and after presentation they were giving their opinion.
Finally, Ms. Sarita consolidated the theme with the help of the students.
Write down the role of the teacher and the role of the students in both the situations.
Situation 2 Situation 3
Notes
Role of the teacher Role of the students Role of the teacher Role of the students
Situation 4: Ms. Lilima is teaching a Science topic i.e. ‘Our Food’ in class
IV. She is explaining different types of food we eat and their components
.She is writing the main points such as protein, carbohydrates, and fats on
the blackboard. The students are listening with attention and writing down
the main points written on the blackboard. After explaining the topic she
starts asking some questions to the students. Some students answers the
questions while some remain quiet. She corrects the wrong answers of the
students where necessary and praises those who give correct answers.
● Students are passive listeners. Their activities during the lecture period, at best, is
taking down some notes and responding to occasional questions of the teacher.
Notes
● Within a single period, the teacher may unwittingly present more information than
students can absorb, and the method provides no accurate means of checking
student progress. Teacher presents the subject matter at his own speed.
● Content is presented as a whole and the students learn through listening and
memorization.
ACTIVITY-1
Write the merits and demerits of lecture method. Discuss and share the same
with your fellow students and tutor at the study centre.
This method can be successfully used in imparting factual information, explaining the
theoretical points which cannot be demonstrated, summarizing and recapitulating certain
topics etc. in higher classes. But this method seems to be not relevant for teachers and
students of elementary classes.
Notes Situation 5: Ms. Sheela, the science teacher, was to teach ‘Absorption of
Water by Root’ in Class V. For this, Ms. Sheela thought of doing a simple
experiment and collected the required materials like flowering twigs (e.g.
balsam plants), glass tumbler, water in the tumbler, and ingredient for
colouring water. She demonstrated the experiment by inserting the root of
the flowering twig in red coloured water kept in the glass tumbler. She did
the experiment by explaining its process simultaneously. During her
demonstration, she wrote some key words and drew a labeled diagram of
the experiment on the blackboard. Then she asked the students about what
they observed when the roots of the twig was dipped into red coloured water
for some time and what conclusion they arrived at from this experiment.
ACTIVITY-2
From the above example list the steps involved in the Lecture-cum-
Demonstration method. What do you think is the criteria for good
demonstration in the classroom?
● Introduction:
– Motivate the students to arouse interest in observing the experiment keenly Notes
and to accept new concepts after the demonstration.
– Introduce the lesson as a ‘problem’ or an issue, so that the students understand
the importance of the lesson.
● Demonstration:
– Keep the curiosity of the students alive during the demonstration.
– Take care to ensure that the students are able to follow the demonstration.
– Relate the demonstration with the life experiences of the students.
– Handle the instruments safely, and arrange them in their respective places
for the demonstration.
● Blackboard Usage:
– Write the objectives clearly on the black board to make the students
understand the significance of the demonstration method
– Draw relevant pictures and write the key concepts and the results of the
demonstration immediately on the black board.
– Ask the students to write the key points, draw the diagram and finally the
results in their notebooks.
– Check their notebooks while they are writing.
Besides the above mentioned points, you need to take care of the following aspects:
● Do tell the purpose of the demonstration to the students but do not tell the
inferences or conclusions in advance.
● Seek the help of students in arranging, and performing the experiment. Quality of
demonstration is better when you along with your students actively participate in
it.
● Be well versed in the handling of apparatus and arrange those for the demonstration
in a definite order which the students can clearly observe.
● Check that the demonstration is clearly visible to all students in the class.
● Ensure that the demonstration is simple and according to the mental level of the
students.
● Supplement the demonstration with other teaching aids to make it more real and
interesting.
● Ask reflective questions to stimulate the interest of the students.
ACTIVITY - 3
(a) Go through the elementary level science text book for any one class
and list out the concepts which can be taught by using lecture-cum –
demonstration method effectively.
(b) From your list take any one concept or a few concepts and describe
how you will teach those by adopting this method
● The formula for calculating the perimeter of a rectangle is 2 (a+b) where a and
b are the length and breadth of the rectangle respectively.
Notes
● The sum of the angles measures of a triangle is equal to two right angles.
● V=s/t where V =speed , s = distance covered, t= time taken to cover the distance.
…………………………………………………………………………………………………
…………………………………………………………………………………………………
…………………………………………………………………………………………………
As a teacher you or your colleagues might have been teaching these formulae in
elementary classes. How do you teach these formulae? Find out from your colleagues
who teach mathematics and how they teach these formulae.
There are some methods for teaching these formulae /rules / principles. Let us discuss
these methods with examples.
Consider a classroom situation as given below.
of these similarities in a number of concrete cases. In the above example, the elements
of similarities are the measures of opposite angles in a triangle and the condition is that
Notes the triangle is an isosceles triangle and the concerned angles are the opposite angles of
the two sides of equal length.
Let us consider another situation:
ACTIVITY - 4
Select any one concept from the elementary Mathematics textbook and
describe how it can be taught through both inductive and deductive methods.
E2. What are the differences between Inductive and Deductive methods of
teaching?
E3. Some statements about inductive and deductive methods are given below. Read
the statements carefully and write ‘I’ for Inductive Method and ‘D’ for Deductive
Method against the statement concerned. Notes
a) It starts with formulae / rules / concepts etc and ends in solution of the problem.
b) It starts with examples and ends in formulae /rules / concept.
c) It encourages actual observation particular instances and thinking
d) The method is suitable for lower classes of primary education
e) This method is applicable in solving problems
f) It is more time consuming.
From the above discussion, we can conclude that induction method leads the student
to draw a conclusion after generalizing the relations observed in the concrete events/
objects or statements. Whether the conclusion drawn through induction is correct or
valid cannot be verified by employing induction again. Rather it can only be ascertained
by deduction. Through induction you help your students to discover the relationships
or new concepts and through deduction you help them to verify the truth of the
discovered relationship or concepts. Thus for effective learning both the methods should
be used together as one is not complete without the other.
Work and play are different. What is ‘work’ for one person may be a ‘play’ for
another. Maintaining a garden is the work of a gardener for his livelihood; whereas the
Notes same work becomes a hobby for a young student to satisfy his/her creative urge.
Given below is the differentiation between work and play.
Work Play
It is considered difficult. It gives pleasure.
It is imposed by others. Voluntary acceptance with involvement.
Physical work brings tiredness. Physical work turns into an enjoyable
experience.
More concentration on work More concentration but no
makes tired. tiredness.
It is controlled. There is freedom.
ACTIVITY - 5
Write down the name of a game you had played during your childhood. List
out the rules involved in that particular game. Describe the process of playing
that game stepwise. State the points that you learnt from playing the game.
ACTIVITY - 6
List out the concepts in different subjects which children can learn by way
of playing. Discuss this with your fellow students in the study centre to add
more points to the list.
Concept in Concept in Concepts in
Mathematics Language Environmental
studies
You can analyze any familiar game and think individually or in groups with other teachers
regarding curricular concepts that can be integrated in the game so that the students
can enjoy playing the game and can simultaneously learn the concepts. This way of
teaching is known as “play way method”.
Notes
What elements are there in a game due to which children learn many concepts easily
even in your absence? Reflect and list the elements.
………………………………………………………………………………………………..
………………………………………………………………………………………………..
………………………………………………………………………………………………..
…………………………………………………………………………………………………
Compare your list with the elements shown in Fig 3.2 below:
Spontaneous Challenging
action Interesting
Utmost freedom
in action Intrinsic
Elements Motivation
of
Informal a Game
environment Self-imposed
Discipline
Working Cooperation and
Without Fear Collaboration
Thus we can say that play way method has the following advantages:
● Playing games is a natural instinct with the young children. They not only participate
in the games spontaneously, given freedom, they can organize the game effectively.
● Children can create new game; they devise the rules for playing the game and
observe strictly the self-created discipline.
● This helps to nurture the creative skills of children along with the development of
several life skills like problem solving, leadership, rational thinking, self-expression,
communication skills, cooperative learning, group living etc.
● Learning becomes natural, joyful and energizing experience.
● It provides sufficient scope to the children to fulfill their physical, emotional and
cognitive needs.
● It helps to build healthy student-teacher and student-student relationships.
through play and play way method employed imaginatively promotes growth of
creativity in children.
Notes
● Principle of responsibility: Play enhances the sense of responsibility among
children. In course of play children realize that playing randomly without any
rules and discipline is not satisfying whether playing individually or in groups.
Therefore, the child seeks others help in devising rules or develop in group and
assume responsibility for adhering to rules during play. Thus, through play way
method the children learn to be more responsible than through obeying any direct
instruction.
Therefore, if you are going to use this method in your class, you have to plan in the
initial stage to fulfil the needs of every child of your class and act accordingly in the
classroom.
Visualize the two classroom situations given below:
Seating arrangements
– He supplied the atlas and some flash cards which contain the names of
some places of India to each pair of groups.
– He gave the following instructions:
– One group of each pair will show one of the flash cards to opposite
group and the opposite group will locate the place in the Atlas in a
limited time.
– Again the 2nd group of each pair will show a flash card and the other
group will locate the place in the Atlas. The game will continue in this
way.
– He gave one point for each correct item and total points of each group
were calculated. The winning group was congratulated.
ACTIVITY - 7
i) Take any concept of mathematics of any class describe how you will
teach that concept in play way method. Discuss with your tutor/ peers
at the study centre for feedback and improvement.
ii) List the role of teacher in the use of play way method.
From the above example, you can deduce the steps of conducting a project. The
steps are
1. Providing a situation
2. Selecting a problem
3. Planning the project
4. Executing
5. Evaluating
Some examples of Project:
● By visiting various public institutions the students can prepare a report on various
functions of those institutions i.e. Post Office, Hospital, Bank. Police Station etc.
● They can prepare a report on the occupations of the people in their locality.
● They can prepare a report on the food habits of the people in their locality.
ACTIVITY -8
Select any one project and describe step-wise how you would organize the
students to conduct it.
● The student enjoys full freedom in conducting a project. This develops self-
confidence to act and also promotes a sense of responsibilities among the students.
Notes
● The student gets acquainted with the types of work which he/she is expected to
perform in future. Thus, the project method helps the student in his/her preparation
for a future life.
● The student gets the scope to imbibe several social qualities like cooperation,
and team work, group affinity, and sacrifice through project work.
● Interest and motivation for the project activities are spontaneously created and
no external persuasion or force is needed to attract the students toward learning.
● Completion of the project gives individuals a sense of accomplishment which in
turn encourages the student for further learning.
ACTIVITY-9
List out some problems you have solved recently faced. Write down how you
have solved one of those problems specifying the steps of solving it in a
proper order.
Situation 11: Mr. Saumya was teaching “Different parts of a plant” in class-
VI. First he divided the whole class into small groups, gave a piece of ginger
to each group and put a question to the whole class which was a problem
for the students to solve.
Q – “Which part of a plant is ginger”?
The students understood the problem as ginger being a part of a plant and
they have to find the part. Some ideas about ginger came to their mind such
as:
● Its colour is brown,
● It grows under the soil.
● We take ginger as food,
● New ginger plants are grown from a piece of ginger etc.
The students could have collected this information from different sources
(books, by asking question to others etc.) also. From this information they
might have anticipated that:
Ginger may be
● a root Notes
● a fruit
● a stem
Then the students collected the information about the characteristics of
root, fruit and stem and compared with that of ginger and found that ginger
has the same characteristics as that of stem (presence of nodes and
internodes, leaves grow from its nodes etc..). The students hence concluded
that ginger is the stem of a plant and it grows under the soil. They were able
to give other examples of stems which grow under the soil like onion,
potatoes etc.
One frequently-used model of the problem solving process is shown in figure below:
Succeed
Fail
This model identifies a basic sequence of three cognitive activities in problem solving:
● Representing the problem includes (i) calling up the appropriate context
knowledge (previous knowledge), and (ii) identifying the goal and the relevant
starting conditions for the problem (Introduction).
● Solution search includes refining the goal (alternative solutions/hypotheses) and
developing a plan of action to reach the goal.
● Implementing the Solution includes (i) executing the plan of action and (ii)
evaluating the results.
As a classroom teacher, while following the problem solving method, you are advised
to consider the following steps:
● Anticipate or identify problems.
● Use information from diverse sources to arrive at a clearer understanding of the
problem and its root causes.
● Generate alternative solutions.
● Evaluate strengths and weaknesses of alternatives, including potential risks and
benefits and short- and long-term consequences.
● Select an alternative that is most appropriate to goal, context, and available
resources.
● Establish criteria for evaluating effectiveness of solution or decision.
ACTIVITY - 10
Select any topic from the subject you are teaching and develop a plan
following the problem solving method.
Problem solving method involves reflective thinking reasoning and results from the
achievement of certain abilities, skills and attitude. You should provide such situations
and activities from which a problem emerges. It involves a definite procedure of Notes
confroning the problem, finding out its solution inductively and lastly testing the adequacy
of the generalization by deductive approach. As this method involves reflective thinking
and reasoning it is not usually used for lower classes.
Situation 12: Ms. Minakshi was to teach the ‘change in the state of matter’
in Environment Studies in class IV. The objective of the lesson was: “The
students learn that a solid changes into liquid and liquid changes into gaseous
state when heated”.
She proceeded as follows:
● Preparations for the lesson: She collected lac, candle, sugar, rock salt,
aluminium plate, water, kerosene, petrol, incense sticks, camphor, piece
of wood and butter. She asked each student to select any one of the
above things, and to note the name of the thing and its present state.
● Identifying the Problem: She posed the question whether the selected
material would change its present state to other state or not.
Notes
● Pupils Activity: (Experiment and Observation) - A candle was lighted
on the table to heat the selected material with the help of the necessary
instrument. Every student heated the material, observed the changes
and noted down the results. For example,
– Rima heated lac in the candle flame and observed that the solid lac
turned into liquid state and when withdrawn from the candle flame
the liquid lac again became solid.
– Mr. Santosh placed a few drops water on an aluminum plate and
heated in the candle flame to observe that the water on the plate
changed to gaseous state.
– Ms. Rama with the lighting the incense stick observed that it turns
into gaseous state directly.
● Drawing Conclusions (Problem Solving): Ms. Minakshi, asked each
student to read out their noted results/observations and noted regarding
the change in the state of different matters when heated. She drew a
table on the black board/ on a drawing sheets as shown below and entered
each student’s observation in it.
Sl.No. Name of the State of the State of the Change in
Material Material before Material after State
Heating Heating
Then she asked the students to draw conclusions regarding the change
of state of different kinds of material when heated by observing the
entries in the table.
From the above table, students learnt that heat is necessary for a
material to change its existent state to another state.
● Evaluation: Ms. Minakshi then wrote the names of different materials
in small bits of paper. She neatly rolled the paper sheets and placed it on
the table. Each student was called to select one paper placed on the
table. And to read the name of the material aloud and tell the existent
state of the material and its changed state when heated.
From the above situation, recognize some characteristics of the Discovery (Heuristic)
method.
However you may face certain difficulties in classroom transaction using discovery
method such as:
● All the students may not participate in the teaching learning situation.
● Very few of them may ask questions related to the problem given.
● Sometime the students may stop questioning.
● Sometime the students would need some reference materials.
● Sometime the students would need some apparatus / equipments to conduct an
experiment.
● Sometime the students may not formulate hypotheses relating to the problem.
E8. Some statements about the Discovery Method are given below. Tick
against the statements as True (T) or False (F), giving reason for your
choice.
1. In discovery method emphasis is given on observation and reasoning power.
2. This method is suitable for the students of lower classes.
● Discovery method can be applied where the students have to find out a scientific
cause. The teacher assigns a problem to the students and the students find out the
cause by collecting data through putting questions or by going through reference Notes
materials, then interpreting the data, formulating tentative hypotheses and arriving
at conclusion.
● A concept can be taught by folowing different methods individually. Some concepts
can be taught by the combination of different methods simultaneously.
Notes – It fosters the art of testing patiently, observing keenly, and conducting
experiments neatly, cleanly and responsibly.
– It develops self effort, self-confidence, self-reliance and self-determination.
– This method provides enough training to prepare them for life.
– As the students learn facts through their own labour, learning becomes
more effective and permanent.
STRUCTURE
4.0 Introduction
4.1 Learning Objectives
4.2 Approaches to learning
4.2.1 Learner-Centred Approach
4.2.2 Learning-Centred Approach
4.2.3 Cooperative Learning
4.2.4 Collaborative Learning
4.3 Activity-Based Approach
4.3.1 Learning activity and its elements
4.3.2 Classroom Management of Learning Activities
4.3.3 Advantages of Activity
4.3.4 Issues and Concerns Associated with Activity Based Approach
4.4 Let Us Sum Up
4.5 Model Answers to Check Your Progress
4.6 Suggested Readings and References
4.7 Unit-End Exercises
4.0 INTRODUCTION
In the earlier two units, different methods and approaches for learning and teaching
process were discussed. You might have observed that in all classroom interactions
more emphasis is given on learning than on teaching. As a teacher you are to facilitate
the child to learn. In other words, learner and his/her learning would be the centre of
your entire endeavour as a teacher.
In order to focus on learner, this unit elaborates on learner-centred approaches like
collaborative and cooperative learning methods which provide better opportunities
and more scope for learner’s involvement and facility in the teaching-learning process.
Further activity-based approach which you may be acquainted with will also be
discussed to strengthen your knowledge of the nature of learning activity its elements
Notes and characteristics along with the principles of practicing activity-based methods in
your classes.
For completing this unit you may need 20 hours of study time.
In such a teacher-centred classroom situation, the students are less interested in what
the teacher is doing in the classroom.
E2. Given below are few statements. In which, the need of the learner(s) is
given more importance? Put (?) mark.
a) Teacher explains difficult words to the students by using dictionary.
b) Students ask questions to the teacher to clarify their doubts.
c) Teacher asks the students to come in front of the class individually and point out
different places on the map hung on the wall.
d) Teacher conducts an experiment in the laboratory and asks the students to watch.
e) Students are allowed to go outside the classroom for some time, observe the
nature and narrate any three things they have observed in their own language.
Gardener’s analysis of specific mental abilities suggests that learners have different
kind of abilities and potentials and accordingly you have to select diverse learning
tasks to develop these abilities. You can influence the quality of learning of learners and Notes
can enhance the intellectual capacities of learners. Read the following situation:
Situation 3: When Gutty was two years old, she used to call all kites as
birds. Her total perception and understanding (schema) of kite was essentially
influenced by her previous experience (assimilation) ‘a small thing that flies
in the air.’ Later on, she gradually observed that the shape of a kite is more
regular than that of a bird; a kite flies in a different way from a bird;
sometimes she could hear a rustling sound when it flies and make out a
string attached to it, which seems to control it. Her schema , which so far
had only the feature “small things that fly” ,now added these new features
which helped her distinguish between kites and birds.With this change ,she
now had two different objects in her schema of small flying things: ‘birds’
and ‘kites’. In short, she was accommodating a new concept by modifying
her earlier schema.
Now Gutty is about eight years old and you can imagine how much more
complex her schema for flying objects has become. She knows about all
kinds of planes, parachutes, rockets, satellites, flying lizards and bats. She
also knows that there are birds that don’t fly.
ACTIVITY -1
Considering the above situation,try mapping all that in a schema! You will
need a very large piece of paper and coloured pencils.
E3. Give any two reasons why understanding the learner is considered
important in the learner-centred approach.
E4. State any two differences between the divergent and convergent learning
styles.
f) Home and Cultural Background: The culture of school, home, peer and social
environment as a whole influence how children learn. The cultural influences on
learning can be due to cultural experiences, the mediation of language and
learning dispositions.
Cultural Experience: The previous experiences of the learner are strongly
influenced by the culture, knowledge, values and ideas of the social group in
which the learner is situated. These provide the initial framework for understanding
the new concept and thus influence the new learning
Language: The medium of thinking and learning is language. Language also
embodies the cultural tools through which new experiences are interpreted and
mediated when learners interact in their communities and societies. Language as
a ‘cultural tool’ and medium of learning influences the new learning, i.e. the process
of making sense.
Learning dispositions: are acquired from and affected by interactive experiences
with the environment, significant adults and peers. It is noticed that when a child
understand the purpose of an activity, he/she takes active participation in it and
the rules and the logic of the activity begin to make sense to him/her. This helps
him/her to learn the concepts involved. For example, for Shakeel, calculating
profit, loss and the prices of newspapers is not just a ‘mental’ exercise which
comes out of a textbook. He is in the street, participating in the buying of the
newspapers from the agent and then trying to ensure that he can sell as many as
possible because the money is needed for his family. On the contrary when Neetu,
a 12-year-old child, studying in Class 5, was asked by her teacher to solve the
following problem from a school textbook:
“A shopkeeper buys ten pencils for 1 rupee and 50 paise each. What will be his
profit if he sells them for 2 rupees each?”,her response after a lot of thinking was,
“Do I add or multiply? If you tell me then I can solve.”
It is evident that Shakeel and Neetu have different cultural circumstances affecting
their learning disposition. The characteristic of children’s dispositions is that they
are environmentally sensitive—meaning they are acquired, supported, or weakened
by interactive experiences in an environment with significant adults and peers.
Influence of family in terms of ‘emotional capital’ is the most significant factor in
influencing learning. The learner’s cultural circumstances due to the family structure
and support vary widely.
Peers: In designing learning experience it is most important to consider the influence
of peers in school settings. Peer group culture is important to learners as a way of
learning, enjoying and adopting to school life. All secondary stage boys and girls
tend to form separate social groups. Within a school or even a class, sub-cultural
Notes groups based on language, region, religion, caste, social class and educational
achievements are also formed. Such peer group influence achievement and self-
esteem of students. Some peer cultures favour school attainment and are likely to
reinforce teacher efforts towards a positive approach to learning. Other peer
cultures derive meaning from alternative values and students influence by such
cultures approach school with minimum expectations.These students still construct
understanding and make sense of learning material but it may not be of the type
the teacher would have aimed at.
The School: Each school has its own distinctive culture but a closer inspection of
school culture would reveal that there are many sub-cultures in the school. These
cultural groupings among teacher and students may be based on region, language,
religion, caste, socio-economic status which influences the classroom practices
and learning achievement of learners.
E5. What are the two dimensions of Kolb’s model of learning styles?
E6. State the importance of peer groups in acquiring new experiences.
Observer and diagnostician of learner: You must constantly watch the behaviour
and activities of learners in and out of the classroom so as to estimate and diagnose
strengths, weaknesses, learning needs, and learning dispositions. This would help you Notes
in shaping and providing appropriate learning environments and learning activities for
the learners.
Provider of the environment for learning: Once you diagnose the various learning
needs of the learners, it becomes your primary duty to plan a learning environment that
is conducive so that each learner would find enough scope and opportunity to fulfil his/
her needs.
Facilitator of learning: You always need to look out for occasions to help the
learners while they are engaged in learning. This is more challenging than directly teaching.
As we know that each learner has a distinct learning style, variations in learning
dispositions, we have to provide support at the appropriate situations during their
period of learning. Further, you need to encourage the learners to be engaged in learning
activities whenever you find them remaining inactive.
According to Weimer (2002) there are five practices that need to change to
achieve learning centred teaching:
– Help students develop a way to learn through the contentand make meaning
out of the content.
ii) The role of the teacher: The teacher creates an environment that:
– Designs activities in which students interact with the material, the teacher
and each other,
iii) The responsibility for learning: Although the responsibility of learning is shared
between the teacher and the students, it is expected that the students take the
overall responsibility for learning and assessment. As a consequence, students:
– Integrated assessment,
iv) The balance of power: It is the students, more than the teacher, who has the
control over their own learning. Therefore, the teacher needs to make deliberate
efforts to empower the students to assume control over their learning.
Notes
Aspects Teacher-centred Learner-centred Learning-centred
Nature of Knowledge exist prior Knowledge is discovered Knowledge is
Knowledge to the learner by the learner constructed by the
learner
Roles of teacher Teacher active and Teacher makes learner Learner acts and teacher
and learner learner passive active facilitating learning
Dominant Instruction, Direction Designing learning tasks Facilitating learning
Teacher function and teaching supporting
Situation Not situation specific Lerner friendly Natural and contextual to
(situation independent) learning
Control Entirely teacher Shared teacher and learner Dominantly learner
controlled (Rigid and control (Partially flexible ) controlled(Flexible and
totalitarian) democratic)
Inputs Bits of facts and Competencies and Techniques and strategies
knowledge experiences of learning
Methods and Mostly lecturing and Play-way and joyful Activity-based
approach demonstration, methods scaffolding
Authoritarian approach
Curriculum Prescribed Developmental Emergent
Evaluation Objective-based Activity-based formative Authentic assessment and
summative self-analytical
Discipline Imposed Shared, Participatory Self-controlled
1. Positive interdependence:
Notes – Students must fully participate and put forth effort within their group
– Each group member has a task/role/responsibility therefore must believe
that they are responsible for their learning and that of their group
2. Promoting Face-to-Face Interactions:
– Members promote each other’s success.
– Students explain to one another what they have or are learning and assist
other with understanding and completion of assignments.
3. Individual Accountability
– Each student demonstrates master of the content being studied.
– Each student is accountable for their learning and work.
4. Social Skills
– Social skills are necessary for successful cooperative learning to occur.
– Social skills include effective communication, interpersonal and group skills
like
(i) Leadership (ii) Decision-making (iii) Trust-building (iv) Communication
(v). Conflict-management skills
5. Group Processing
Every group must assess their effectiveness and decide how it can be improved.
For student achievement to improve considerably, two characteristics must be present
a) Students are working towards a group goal or recognition, and
b) success is reliant on each individual’s learning.
When designing cooperative learning tasks and reward structures, individual
responsibility and accountability must be identified. Individuals must know exactly
what their responsibilities are and what they are accountable to the group in order to
reach their goal. Positive interdependence among students in the group for the task
should be there and visible for effective learning. All group members must be involved
in order for the group to complete the task. For this to occur each member must have
a task that they are responsible for which cannot be completed by any other group
members.
Guidelines for Using Cooperative Learning:
● Limit group size to three to five students.
● Compose groups heterogeneously by mixing students considering academic
achievement, sex and race.
● Give each student in the group a specific role, responsibility or task that contributes
to the success of group.
Notes
● Use cooperative learning as a supplemental activity for review, enrichment or
practice, allowing student in the group to help one another master material. Groups
can also complete project such as reports, presentations, experiments and art
work.
● Consider room arrangement, task materials and time frame as you plan cooperative
activities.
● Grade individual students’ contributions.
● Consider providing a group reward to students in the group.
● Vary group composition so that no student feels labelled by being in a ‘slow’
group and all students have an opportunity during the school year to work with
every other student in the class.
● For cooperating learning groups to function effectively, collaborative social skills
must be taught, modelled and reinforced regularly.
The roles of a teacher at different phases of the cooperative learning are summarized
in the Table 4.2.below:
Table 4.2 Teacher’s Role in the Cooperative Learning Model
Phase 1 : Present goals and Teacher goes over objectives for the lesson and establishes
learning set the learning set.
Phase 2 : Present information Teacher presents information to students either verbally or
with a text material.
Phase 3 : Organize students Teacher explains to students how to form learning teams and
into learning teams helps to groups make efficient transition
Phase 4 : Assist team work Teacher assists learning teams as to do their work
and study
Phase 5 : Test on the materials Teacher lists knowledge of learning materials or groups
present results of their work
Phase 6 : Provide recognition Teacher finds ways to recognize both individual and group
effort and achievement
Notes ● Cooperative learning methods are usually equally effective for all ability levels.
● Cooperative learning is effective for all ethnic groups.
● Student perceptions of one another are enhanced when given the opportunity to
work with one another.
● Cooperative learning increases self-esteem and self-concept of the learners.
● Differences among learners arising out of gender, social category and physically/
mentally challenged barriers are broken down allowing for positive interactions
and friendships to occur.
However, cooperative learning has many limitations that could cause the process to
be more complicated than perceived. Due to the fact that cooperative learning is
constantly changing, there is the possibility that teachers may become confused and
lack complete understanding of the method. Teachers implementing cooperative learning
may also be challenged with resistance and hostility from students who believe that
they are being held back by their slower teammates or by students who are less
confident and feel that they are being ignored or demeaned by their team.
E10. State any two differences between cooperative and collaborative learning.
In the above two situations, the teacher tried to engage the children. The first situation
was totally controlled by the teacher, without considering why the child did the work
and whether the child had interest in it or not. The students did the work as directed by
the teacher.
The second situation was different in the following ways.
● The teacher changed the plan looking into the interest of the student.
● Group work was planned in such a manner that children interacted freely among
themselves.
Notes
● Children have adopted the skill of questioning by discussing among them.
● Children cooperated with each other.
● Children enjoyed achieving the goal.
You may notice that in this activity neither physical work was done nor song, dance,
and storytelling were done. Still children were involved actively and achieved the
objective deriving pleasure.
Observe and go through the activities given below in Table 4.3.
Table 4.3 Examples of Activities
ACTIVITY - 1
Elements of Activity: When you enter into activity based classroom, what are the
aspects that convince you that activity is going on properly? Well you ought to notice
the following:
● Children are totally involved in doing work without being disturbed by your
presence.
● They are talking among themselves, manipulating materials, trying different
arrangements and ways of solving the problem.
● If you asked about what they are doing, they could clearly state the objectives
and cause of doing that activity.
In other words activities are engaging and encourage students to achieve the learning
objectives. However, should the activity be too hard or too easy for the student?
If the activity is too easy, the student loses interest in it and if the activity is too hard the
student avoid getting involved in the work. The students engage in such activities where
they are able to perform the work. The activity is designed in such a manner that the
student individually or discussing among themselves or taking help of teacher tries to
ACTIVITY Objectives
Qualities of an
activity To initiate the struggle
with a problem
Interesting To practice a
concept/procedure
Meaningful Can be done by
To practice development
Providing
of an ability (e.g. subtraction).
opportunity for a range
of skills/abilities. To concretely illustrate a
concept
Challenge and The child alone
struggle To experience ‘the need’
Teacher and single
for an idea (e.g., a standard unit,
Scope for thinking child/small group of
standard symbols for numbers
children
etc.; often arising in social
Group of children contexts).
Teacher and the To provide opportunities
entire class for horizontal elaboration and to
Children and develop/invent new procedures,
community skills and strategies.
difficult which is within the capability of the students to solve but with concentration
and with a little more effort.
Notes
● Spontaneous Involvement: A good activity is such that it attracts the students
immediately when it starts and they join in it out of their own interest without
anypersuation or compulsion.
● Joyful: The test of the efficacy of the activity is when the studentderives a sense
of satisfaction after its completion. The very nature of a good activity is that it is
interesting for the students to conduct and it brings a sense of achievement, provides
joy, which ultimately becomes the source of intrinsic motivation for the students
to go for the next activity which might be more challenging.
These elements are not independent of each other, they are mutually interdependent. A
schema for ‘activity’ is given in Fig 1.
ACTIVITY - 2
conduct of activities. Some important points which are a must for successfully using an
activity as a learning task are:
Notes
● Management of available space: Space available in the classroom has to be
planned properly for conducting activities. Some space is to be marked for storing
teaching-learning materials, placing and using black board(s) and display boards,
some for placing racks/shelves to keep records and portfolios of the students.
For students to sit, move freely and perform activities in groups, quite a larger
portion of the classroom space is needed. Specifically, you need to plan in advance
the minimum space required for group activities and accordingly you have to
decide about the number of groups to be formed, the space for movement of
students as well as for your movement in the classroom.
● Material management: Sufficiently ahead of the commencement of the activities,
you need to have quite a large stock of materials in the Teaching Learning Material
(TLM) corner in each class. You might be aware that the TLMs are mainly of
two categories: i) basic materials like dice, marbles, sticks, flash cards, seeds,
pebbles etc. which have multiple uses in various activities and ii) specific materials
for use in particular activities. You need to have sufficient (TLMs) of the first
category stored separately and required number of TLMs appropriate to the
specific activities for different subject areas. Selection, collection and proper
storing of materials should be done much in advance, preferably at the beginning
of the academic session. You need to review the activity in advance to make sure
you have the materials needed for the class. The students may be involved in the
selection of materials so that they can bring the materials from the TLM corners
at the appropriate time. This helps in spontaneously introducing relevant activities.
Simple games may be kept handy to be used by those students who finish their
work earlier and get bored sitting around. It should be made a regular practice to
reassemble the materialsafter use in each period and to keep them back in their
appropriate places in the corner. The students should be given full charge of
doing this job.
● Students’ involvement in activities: Learning is facilitated through the
involvement of students in the activity. Therefore, the following points need to be
taken care of at the time of conducting activity.
– Nature of activity: While selecting an activity fora topic,decide the nature
of activity considering its relevance and appropriateness in the context of
the topic as well as the cognitive levels of the students. You have to decide
whether it should be individual or group or whole class activity, whether it is
a warm up activity, or a relaxing activity, or an activity dominated by physical
actions, or an activity for thinking and reflecting.
– Presentation of activities: The activity must be introduced with clear
instruction on how to proceed. Instead of using long verbal explanations, a
simple illustration or example conveys the idea more clearly. Additional rules
approach. Some of the issues often raised by the teachers are worth considering.
Think about them and try to answer the questions following them.
Notes
1. For a teacher it is a difficult and time consuming task to prepare an activity.
Suggest what a teacher may do to overcome the difficulty?
2. To design an activity from a particular concept is easier in case of experienced
and expert teacher rather than a fresher in teaching.
State the steps to be taken by a teacher to develop an activity based approach
on a concept or a group of concepts.
3. Time management is a pertinent problem associated with activity to be transacted
in a classroom. Generally a period is meant for 40 to 45 minutes. It is difficult to
conduct an activity during this period .Also the syllabus cannot be completed
within the stipulated time.
What can a teacher do to follow activity based learning?
4. It is quite impossible on the part of a teacher to sing a song, to dance, to role play,
to tell story, to draw diagram and pictures and to prepare a model.
Suggest the ways to deal with such a problem.
5. A large number of TLMs are required for conducting an activity in the classroom
and preparation or collection of TLMs is very time consuming.
Suggest ways to overcome the issue.
It is believed that the Activity-based Approach is a great approach in learner-centred
teaching- learning process. The teacher who is familiar with teacher- centred approach
requires an attitudinal change to practice activity based approach. When a teacher
adopts activity based approach regularly in the classroom, he/she will be convinced of
its advantages for providing adequate scope and opportunities to students for learning
in a meaningful manner which can be sustained for a longer period of time. Moreover,
by promoting peer and self-learning, this approach helps the teacher to focus his/her
time for developing more interesting and challenging tasks for enhancing the quality of
learning.
● The teacher has three critical roles in learner-centred approaches which are:
Notes (i)an observer and diagnostician, (ii) provider of the environment of learning, and
(iii) facilitator of learning.
● Learning-centred education focuses on the learning process with its primary
concern on the learning of the students. It is basically learner-centred, but includes
teachers in the process of learning in a classroom situation.
● Cooperative learning is a specific small group approach that incorporates
democratic processes, individual accountability, equal opportunity and group
rewards. The cooperative learning model aims at achieving at least three important
instructional goals: academic achievement, acceptance of diversity and social
skill development.
● Collaborative learning is a method of teaching and learning in which students and
teachers team together to explore a significant question or create a meaningful
project. Collaborative learning refers to methodologies and environments in which
learners engage in a common task where each individual finds on and is accountable
to each other.
● Activity is a goal oriented task in which learner gets spontaneously involved and
derives pleasure in achieving the learning objectives. There are four major elements
of an activity, namely, focused, challenging, spontaneous involvement, and joyful.
● If managed properly in the classroom, activity has several advantages in facilitating
students learning in a more contextual, relevant and meaningful manner.
to solve problems, (ii) those with divergent learning style look at things
from various perspectives while those with convergent learning style are
more focused on practical values. Notes
E5. (a) observer and diagnostician of learners, (b) provider of environment for
learning, and (c) facilitator of learning.
E6. (i) Grasping experience and (ii) transforming experience.
E7. (i) construct understanding through mutual interaction, and (ii) derive contextual
meaning from alternative values.
E8. Any three for Weimer’s five practices
E9. With the mutual help in the group and positive outlook of cooperation than
competition one builds self-confidence.
E10. Any two differences may be stated.
E11. Focused, challenging, spontaneous involvement, and joyful.
E12. Memorization is a way mechanical repetition which has none of the four
characteristics of an activity.