UNIT.1
INTRODUCTION TO TEACHING SOCIAL SCIENCE
Social science is a major
category of academic discipline, concerned with society and the relationship
among individuals within a society. It in turn has many branches, each of which
is considered as ” social science”. The main social sciences included Economics,
Political Science, Geography, history and Sociology.
Definition:
Beard defines social science as a “body of
knowledge and thoughts pertaining to human affairs as distinguished from sticks
and stones, stars and physical objects
Nature and scope
of social science
·
A unique
combination of various disciplines
·
A study of human
relationships
·
A study of man’s
development through ages
·
A realistic
course of study
·
It forms an
important part of the core curriculum
·
It includes
commitment to action
·
Aims at preparing
the learner for wholesome social living
Evaluation of
social science as a subject
Social science is gathering knowledge
through scientific method. It is facing fact of change from objective based to
process based.
·
Evaluation of
subject matter
·
Evaluation of
gathering knowledge
·
Evaluation of
transaction
·
Evaluation of
methodology
·
Evaluation of
material changes.
Need and
significance of teaching social science in the present context
·
Providing
education for effective citizenships
·
Helping in the
all round development of the personality
·
Developing
awareness about the problems of the society
·
Providing helpful
in developmental projects of the society
·
Deals human
development and his psycho-social and cultural development of an individual
·
It has strong
connection with our regular social life
·
Enable an
individual to live successfully and truthfully in the social context
·
Provides smooth
adaptability with the environment
Social studies as
a core subject and its relation to other core subjects
Core subject is a subject that
should have to learn. In school level all subjects are core subjects except
language. Core curriculum seeks to provide the irreducible minimum regarded as
necessary for everyone to be able to live satisfactorily in a modern society.
It prepares students for living, not to make a living. Common learning and
experiences are emphasized in the core curriculum to make it possible for the
democratic way of living.
Social science is a core subject drawing functional material from
various subject fields its subject matter is “man and his environment” it is to
be taught as a compulsory subject up to the secondary school stage because this
is the final stage of education for the majority of students.
Language and social science go hand in hand.
While social studies deal with man and society, language provides man with a
vehicle of expression and communication. While social studies contain a record
of the deeds of men, literature is the record feelings, emotions imagination
and the thought of man. Social studies are very much reinforced by language. The curriculum of sciences and
social studies are, in fact, interdependent. The life and work of eminent
scientists of the world are as much a part of social studies curriculum. In
following ways social studies related with mathematics.
1. Use of quantification in society
2. Meeting basic needs through mathematics
3. Use of mathematics in social life
4. Use in household
Social studies vs.
social sciences
Social science is a generic term covering the scientific study of man.
Social studies is a field of study which deals with the man and his
environment. Its content is drawn from several social sciences.
Similarities
·
Shares common
body of content
·
Both are related
to society and have same aims and objectives
·
In both centre of
focus is man’s relationship to man and to his environment
·
Both emphasis on
inculcating good qualities
·
Both helps to
understand the various aspects of the society and utilize them
Differences
·
Social sciences
are those areas of knowledge dealing with man and society in the development of
civilization. Social studies drawn its content from social sciences
·
The focus and
emphasis of both are different
·
Social sciences
represent an adult approach, while the social studies represents a child
approach
·
Social sciences
are the theory part of human affairs
while social studies are the practical part of human affairs
·
Social sciences
are far larger than social studies
·
In social science
social utility is the primary objective. In social studies instructional
utility is the primary objective
UNIT.2
AIMS, OBJECTIVES AND VALUES OF TEACHING SOCIAL
SCIENCES
Social science is a major category of academic discipline, concerned
with society and the relationship among individuals within a society. It in
turn has many branches, each of which is considered as ” social science”. The
main social sciences included Economics, Political Science, Geography, history
and Sociology. The teaching of social sciences has many aims. It has given as
follows;
General aims
·
Acquiring
knowledge
·
The development
of reasoning power and critical judgement
·
Training in
independent study
·
Formulation of
habits and skills
·
Training in
desirable patterns of conduct
Aims of teaching
SS at secondary stage
Secondary stage students are adolescence. It is considered as problem
age. So teaching of social science to this them is very important. The main
aims of teaching social sciences in the secondary stage are given as;
·
Inculcating
social values, personal values, constitutional values…
·
Makes responsible
citizenship
·
Citizenship
training
·
Students get
aware of national integration
·
Socialization
·
International
understanding
·
Socio-familiar
responsibilities
·
Cultural
preservation, transmission and transformation.
Objectives of
teaching History, Geography, Economics and Political Science
History:
·
To inculcate
attitudes of historical-mindedness and scientific and such other attitudes as
will aid in training for citizenship
·
To develop
cultural interest
·
To accumulate
certain definite knowledge of the past
·
To attain noble
ideals and high concepts of loyal to
one’s self and to one’s fellow men by teaching the cost of the elements of
civilization during the past
Geography:
·
To identify the
varieties in the distribution of physical and economic phenomena over the
surface of the earth
·
To analyze the
way of life of the people all over the world
·
To develop an
appreciation of interdependence of various geographical regions
Economics:
·
To teach modern
economic principles by observation and through understanding of current
practices
·
To apply sound
economic theories to everyday life
·
To develop a
thorough appreciation of economic problems and a clear insight by the pupil
into the social and economic environment
Political
science:
·
To provide the
information about social arrangement to maintain peace and order
·
To develop
democratic values
·
To make ability
to analyze political system and behavior
Conceptual,
inquiry, skill and affective objectives of social science
Objectives of the social
science range from broad goals for the total program to specific instructional
objectives in teaching plans. The four main types are;
Conceptual:
Conceptual outcomes are being
defined In terms of concepts, themes and generalizations they may be developed
in the social science.
·
Roles,
interaction and interdependence of individuals at home, in the community in
state and nation
·
Functions of such
institutions
·
Contribution of
men and groups to changing cultural heritage
·
Environmental
problems and concerns, causes and effects of pollution and steps to ensure
environment
Inquiry:
To develop competence in using
modes, methods and processes of inquiry, including the ability to:
·
Use such inquiry
processes as recalling, observing, comparing, classifying, interpreting,
defining, generalizing, synthesizing, inferring, predicting, hypothesizing and
evaluating.
·
Make plans for
investigating topics and problems, collecting data, organizing and processing
data, deriving conclusions and assessing outcomes and procedures of inquiry.
Skill:
·
Social skill
·
Study skill and
work habits
·
Group work skills
·
Intellectual
skills
Affective:
To identify, describe and demonstrate in individual behavior and group
activities, values and feelings of individuals who are possessing such
qualities like open mind, responsible…..
Bloom’s Taxonomy
of Educational Objectives
The word Taxonomy has derived
from the Greek word Taxis which means a system of classification. Bloom
and his associates set up following three domains of educational objectives.
Cognitive domain:
It is concerned with the intellectual aspect
of internal process or cognition. The different categories of instructional
objectives in this domain are;
·
Knowledge: related with the acquisition of different
types of information received by the learner as part of instruction
·
Comprehension: result of mental process of the learner
which enables to transform the different forms of information acquired to a
more comprehensive format
·
Application: the learner applies knowledge that has been
acquired and comprehended into new and similar situations.
·
Analysis: it is an intellectual process by which the
learner is able to analyze the acquired comprehended and applied knowledge into
its constituent parts or elements
·
Synthesis: the mental ability of the learner to
integrate the acquired, comprehended, applied and analyzed knowledge
information to a comprehensive whole
·
Evaluation: Judgment
about a value of a material and methods for given purposes
Affective domain:
Objectives which
emphasize feelings, emotion …… The different categories of instructional
objectives in this domain are;
·
Receiving: awareness, willingness to respond and
attention
·
Responding: acquaintance in responding, willingness to
respond and satisfaction in response
·
Valuing: acceptance of value, performance for a value,
commitment…
·
Organizations:
conceptualization of value,
organization of value system
·
Characterization:
generalized set
Psycho-motor
domain:
Related with purposive
actions. The different categories of instructional objectives in this domain
are;
·
Perception: sensory simulation
·
Set: mental and physical readiness
·
Guided Reponses: overt behavioral act of an individual under
the guidance of the instructor
·
Mechanism: micro analysis in which each step is
properly examined
·
Complex
overt response
·
Adaptation
Specification: The specified overt behavior of learner is
called specification
Revised Boom’s
taxonomy
RBT was developed by Anderson
and Krathwohl. Bloom’s taxonomy is based on objective based learning while
RBT is based on learning of process or content. RBT is based on knowledge dimension
(factual, conceptual and Meta cognitive) and process dimension (procedural
acquisition of knowledge).
In each knowledge dimension learning
can be taken place through six procedures. They are:
·
Remembering
·
Understanding
·
Applying
·
Analyzing
·
Evaluating
·
Creating
Features:
·
Based process
based learning
·
The procedural
dimensions are titled in action verb
·
The level
synthesis is avoided
·
The highest level
is creating
Values of
teaching SS
·
Social
sensibility
·
Acquires social
experiences
·
Develop Problem
solving ability
·
Co-operative
thinking
·
Helping mentality
·
Adjustability
·
Personal values
·
Thinking and
reasoning
·
Integrated
thinking
·
Democratic sense
·
Secular sense
·
Patriotic sense
UNIT.3
SOCIAL SCIENCE CURRICULUM
In education, a curriculum is broadly defined as the totality of
student experiences that occur in the educational process. The term often refers specifically to
a planned sequence of instruction, or to a view of the student's experiences in
terms of the educator's or school's instructional goals. The word
"curriculum" began as a Latin word which means "a
race" or "the course of a race" (which in turn derives from the
verb currere meaning "to run/to
proceed").
Definition:
According to Alberty A and Alberty
E, Curriculum is the some total of student activities which the school
sponsors for the purpose
W.Robert Beck and
W.Walter Cook define
curriculum as “the sum of the educational experiences that children have in
school
Curriculum,
syllabus and textbook
curriculum
|
syllabus
|
broad
|
narrow
|
explains all the process, activities and
life of the course
|
Discusses the subject and its content
|
flexible
|
rigid
|
Able to manipulate
|
Difficult to manipulate
|
Text book:
A textbook or course
book is a manual of
instruction in any branch of study. Textbooks are produced according to the
demands of educational institutions. Schoolbooks are textbooks and other books used in
schools. Although most textbooks are only published in printed format, many are
now available as online electronic books.
Principles of
curriculum construction
·
Principle of
child centeredness
·
Curriculum should
provide a fullness of experiences for children
·
It should be
dynamic
·
It should be
related with everyday life
·
It must take into
account the economic aspect of life of the people to whom and educational
institution belongs
·
It should be real
and rationalistic
·
It should
emphasize on learning to live rather
than living to learn
·
It should help in
reserving and transmitting our cultural tradition
·
Flexibility
·
Use of
technological device
·
Well integration
Fusion,
integration and correlation in SS curriculum
Fusion
means very close joining of things. In curriculum construction, it means close
joining of content matters of different subject together.
in fusion, SS curriculum gathers its
content from various disciplines. All this content put together with a single
identity to perform as a perfect curriculum.
Integration means mix freely with other groups in a
society. In curriculum construction, it means desirable mixing of different
subjects to construct the SS curriculum. Through integration reciprocal contact
between subject content is occurring. Integration helps broad way of curriculum
construction. Integrated curriculum may be flexible curriculum
Correlation means mutual relationship or connection
between two or more subjects. It is a link or association or tie up.
All subjects are related. Fusion,
integration and correlation are related.
Organizing SS
curriculum
Once the content and learning
experiences are identified and selected, the next step in the construction of
SS curriculum is to organize the content. There are several approaches to
organize curriculum. They are;
Topical approach:
A curriculum construction based
on blend of topics is called topical approach. The content in the curriculum
will be arranged topic by topic. It is the type of juxtaposition.
Features:
·
Easy to construct
·
Provides through
information
·
Organizes all
related contents in one topic
·
Organizes the
content according to the level of learners
Spiral approach:
It means continues connection of
content from lower level to upper level.
- The spiral approach is a technique often used in
teaching where first the basic facts of a subject are learned, without
worrying about details. Then as learning progresses, more and more details
are introduced, while at the same time they are related to the basics
which are reemphasized many times to help enter them into long-term
memory.
- . Basic idea behind spiral progression approach - to expose the learners
to a wide variety of concepts/topics, skills and attitudes that are deemed
of “continual concern of everyone “until they are mastered.
- . A spiral curriculum design is one in which “key concepts are presented
repeatedly throughout the curriculum, but with deepening layers of
complexity.”
Unit approach:
The curriculum designed based on
the content units. One content unit may include five or more sub content units
or lessons. This approach helps teachers to provide easy method of curriculum
transaction.
Approaches to
curriculum construction
Grass root
approach:
All part and practice of curriculum
are framed by the teacher and that will go to the administration. It is the
curriculum construction from lower level to upper level. Here, grass root of
educational system is teacher. They will design or construct the curriculum
besed on their experiences from society and with students. In this approach the
content, the method of transaction, activities and mode of transaction are made
of teachers.
Administrative
approach:
Administrative approach in
curriculum means an approach of framing curriculum designed by administration.
It is a centralized approach. The design, the pattern, the content, the method
and strategy and all other aspects of curriculum are determined by
administration. It is a curriculum making from up to down. It is comparatively
rigid and less openness. Determining factor is authority.
Demonstrative
approach:
Demonstrative means” to show “how
something works to done. It is broad and natural. In this approach the social
life of the learners exactly taking as curriculum for the schooling. The school
system is almost a part of the social life (de- schooling system)
Modern trends in
SS curriculum
·
Techno centered
teaching
·
Process centered
education
·
Problem- posed
learning
·
Progressive
education
·
Computerized
instruction
·
Critical
pedagogy(Paulo Frier)
·
Learning by doing
Evaluation:
it is the evaluation process of characterizing and appraising some aspect/s of an educational process.
There are two common purposes in educational evaluation which are,
at times, in conflict with one another. Educational institutions usually
require evaluation data to demonstrate effectiveness to funders and other
stakeholders, and to provide a measure of performance for marketing purposes.
Educational evaluation is also a professional activity that individual
educators need to undertake if they intend to continuously review and enhance
the learning they are endeavoring to facilitate.
TYPES OF EVALUATION:
Formative evaluation,
Evaluation done prior to any program,
Objective, Evaluation includes objective types of tests.
Subjective evaluation test items are mostly descriptive.
Summative evaluation
“According to NCERT Evaluation is the process of determining the extent to which an objective is being attained, the effectiveness of the learning experiences provided in the class room and how well the goals of education have been accomplished”.
PURPOSE OF EVALUATION PROGRAMME:
STEPS IN EVALUATION:
Objective
Learning experience
Evaluation techniques
1) Grading students.
2) Maintaining standards.
3) To check effectiveness of the school progrmme and the teacher’s performance.
4) To give appropriate guidance to students’.
5) To motivate students.
6) To improve teaching programme.
7) To modify curriculum.
8) To modify teaching methods
Formative evaluation,
Evaluation done prior to any program,
Objective, Evaluation includes objective types of tests.
Subjective evaluation test items are mostly descriptive.
Summative evaluation
“According to NCERT Evaluation is the process of determining the extent to which an objective is being attained, the effectiveness of the learning experiences provided in the class room and how well the goals of education have been accomplished”.
PURPOSE OF EVALUATION PROGRAMME:
STEPS IN EVALUATION:
Objective
Learning experience
Evaluation techniques
1) Grading students.
2) Maintaining standards.
3) To check effectiveness of the school progrmme and the teacher’s performance.
4) To give appropriate guidance to students’.
5) To motivate students.
6) To improve teaching programme.
7) To modify curriculum.
8) To modify teaching methods
.UNIT.4
METHOD AND MODELS OF TEACHING SOCIAL SCIENCES
1 LECTURE METHOD
It is the oldest procedure of teaching. It is widely used in
schools and colleges. It is a good method its cover a wide topic at heights
level of college or secondary schools and higher secondary classes but its
success depends on the personality and ability of students.
WHY THIS METHOD SHOULD BE USED?
1 To motivate students.
2 To give an overview of a large topic.
To add supplement the students reading.
To make an importance matters understanding.
To provide background of a topic or to introduce the topic
To help the students to use their time wisely
To explain the major concepts of a lesson
To develop reasoning skill of students
To have a classroom discussion
MERITS OF THE METHOD: To establishes face to face contact. It develops attention span. Students develop listening and note taking skills.
Students can prepare the notes. It is easy method for new teachers.
DEMERITS OF THE METHOD: It is a teacher centered method not very good for SS. It is a monotonous tiring and sometimes it becomes a boring method. It brings a lot of burden and reading to the teacher.
It is not an interactive method.
DISCUSSION METHOD:
WHY THIS METHOD SHOULD BE USED?
1 To motivate students.
2 To give an overview of a large topic.
To add supplement the students reading.
To make an importance matters understanding.
To provide background of a topic or to introduce the topic
To help the students to use their time wisely
To explain the major concepts of a lesson
To develop reasoning skill of students
To have a classroom discussion
MERITS OF THE METHOD: To establishes face to face contact. It develops attention span. Students develop listening and note taking skills.
Students can prepare the notes. It is easy method for new teachers.
DEMERITS OF THE METHOD: It is a teacher centered method not very good for SS. It is a monotonous tiring and sometimes it becomes a boring method. It brings a lot of burden and reading to the teacher.
It is not an interactive method.
DISCUSSION METHOD:
The word discussion means exchanging views and
debate. Here the discussion can be among the group of students as a whole
group.
WHERE AND WHEN CAN YOU USE DISCUSSION METHOD?
1 the teacher of S.S. can use this method when he is using a project method.
2 when he has to share information and ideas from a large group.
3 when one needs to solve a problem, or do thinking and analytical activity in the class.
4 when one obtain information and ideas from a large group of students.
5 when one needs to check or evaluate students’ progress.
FORMS OF DISCUSSION: Formal, debate, classroom, informal, panel, symposium.
THE PROCESS OF DISCUSSION:
The process can be different depending upon the type of discussion.
1 the ideas are initiated by the teacher than there is exchange of ideas opinions observations comments etc
2 this is a co-operative learning.
WHERE AND WHEN CAN YOU USE DISCUSSION METHOD?
1 the teacher of S.S. can use this method when he is using a project method.
2 when he has to share information and ideas from a large group.
3 when one needs to solve a problem, or do thinking and analytical activity in the class.
4 when one obtain information and ideas from a large group of students.
5 when one needs to check or evaluate students’ progress.
FORMS OF DISCUSSION: Formal, debate, classroom, informal, panel, symposium.
THE PROCESS OF DISCUSSION:
The process can be different depending upon the type of discussion.
1 the ideas are initiated by the teacher than there is exchange of ideas opinions observations comments etc
2 this is a co-operative learning.
STEPS OF DISCUSSION
1 Preparation:
To make discussion a success the teacher as well as the student must make a careful preparation. The teacher should do in depth reading of the topic. She should do critical reading, should understand the arguments well and know the gist of the lesson.
CONDUCTING DISCUSSION:
In this stage the teacher initiates the discussion. He controls process and keeps the students disciplined and keeps the discussion under control or on the right tract.
MARITS OF DISCUSSION METHOD:
• It is based of differences.
• It emphasizes independent study.
• It develops reasoning.
• It develops study habits.
• It is activity oriented.
• It teaches how to study purposefully.
• It helps the teacher to find leadership quality among students.
• It helps in clarifying ideas, issues etc.
• It creates better understanding of the topic, issues, events, ideas or concepts.
DEMARITS OF DISCUSSION METHOD
• It is time consuming method.
• It needs some training • Why students do not benefit from this activity.
• Sometimes only a few students dominate.
• There can be some necessary argument and can lead to some major problems.
ROLE PLAY AND DRAMATIZATION METHOD: Role playing, socio drama or creative dramas are used to present a specific situation for study and discussion. There is no prepared script. It is unrehearsed, speaking parts are not memorized and minimum properties are used.
Role play is a way of bringing situation from real life into the classroom.
A role in other words, they pretend to be different person.
A situation they pretend to be doing something different both a role $ a situation.
In role play, students improvise the situation is fixed but they make up the exact as they go.
ROLE PLAYS ARE USE TO TEACH
to clarify social values.
to focus attention on a specific central ideas.
to extend vocabulary.
to gain grater insight into the problems of others.
It develops social skills, communication skills and team spirit.
They provide excellent basis for discussion and evaluation.
FOLLOWUP ACTIVITIES AFTER THE ROLE PLAY
Role Play should be followed by discussion about the theme of the role play.
Students can be interviewed about their role.
The audience can say about each role. They can also do the role play by other group of students.
1 Preparation:
To make discussion a success the teacher as well as the student must make a careful preparation. The teacher should do in depth reading of the topic. She should do critical reading, should understand the arguments well and know the gist of the lesson.
CONDUCTING DISCUSSION:
In this stage the teacher initiates the discussion. He controls process and keeps the students disciplined and keeps the discussion under control or on the right tract.
MARITS OF DISCUSSION METHOD:
• It is based of differences.
• It emphasizes independent study.
• It develops reasoning.
• It develops study habits.
• It is activity oriented.
• It teaches how to study purposefully.
• It helps the teacher to find leadership quality among students.
• It helps in clarifying ideas, issues etc.
• It creates better understanding of the topic, issues, events, ideas or concepts.
DEMARITS OF DISCUSSION METHOD
• It is time consuming method.
• It needs some training • Why students do not benefit from this activity.
• Sometimes only a few students dominate.
• There can be some necessary argument and can lead to some major problems.
ROLE PLAY AND DRAMATIZATION METHOD: Role playing, socio drama or creative dramas are used to present a specific situation for study and discussion. There is no prepared script. It is unrehearsed, speaking parts are not memorized and minimum properties are used.
Role play is a way of bringing situation from real life into the classroom.
A role in other words, they pretend to be different person.
A situation they pretend to be doing something different both a role $ a situation.
In role play, students improvise the situation is fixed but they make up the exact as they go.
ROLE PLAYS ARE USE TO TEACH
to clarify social values.
to focus attention on a specific central ideas.
to extend vocabulary.
to gain grater insight into the problems of others.
It develops social skills, communication skills and team spirit.
They provide excellent basis for discussion and evaluation.
FOLLOWUP ACTIVITIES AFTER THE ROLE PLAY
Role Play should be followed by discussion about the theme of the role play.
Students can be interviewed about their role.
The audience can say about each role. They can also do the role play by other group of students.
PROJECT METHOD:
STEPS OF PROJECT METHOD:
Project method is a direct outcome of pragmatism, especially of John Dewey’s educational philosophy. Pragmatism believes in reality. It is scientific and empirical. It is based on the principle of learning by doing.
Being influenced by John Dewey, Kilpatrick tried to give project method in 1918. This method is democratic in nature and it emphasizes social skills and team work.
WHAT IS A PROJECT METHOD?
It is a progressive approach of teaching. It is a purposeful act it provides the learner with learning experiences.
Here the teacher acts like a guide assigns the projects to groups of students.’
Each group works on different topics or problems. They work together to prepare the project.
The students work together as a team, they learn by discussing, reading, and exchanging ideas. Then they take the help of a teacher wherever they difficulties or have questions.
The project method covers the content of many different subjects and the teacher tries to integrate the information to the main topic.
This method gives complete freedom and choice to students.
ADVANTAGES OF PROJECT METHOD:
It gives freedom and creativity.
Here the teacher and students both grow.
Students can link the subject to real life.
It motivates students.
DISADVANTAGES OF PROJECT METHOD:
It is expensive method.
It is time consuming.
It needs lots of resources.
Some projects cannot be done at school.
SOURCE METHOD:
There are three types of sources in this method.
1 Material resource: Ideas, machines, weapons etc…..
2 Oral resources: Songs, folk stories, traditions, customs etc...
3 Written and printed resources: Records, reports, letters etc….
Source method is an activity oriented method. It is generally used in social studies subject also.
Generally sources mean a person, books or document or picture or actual objects that can provide information for learning. It is learning directly from the actual sources for examples for social studies they can be- A contract with the bank – or studying the sample of stone collected from the moon or an object found from any ancient place can also be studied. One can also take students to museums to find the objects to study.
ADVANTAGES OF SOURCES METHOD:
It provides direct, firsthand experience.
It develops a sense of reality
It creates motivating and interesting ambience in the class.
It develops skill of data collection, thinking skill and observation skill.
It makes the subject meaningful.
Reflective learning strategies:
STEPS OF PROJECT METHOD:
Project method is a direct outcome of pragmatism, especially of John Dewey’s educational philosophy. Pragmatism believes in reality. It is scientific and empirical. It is based on the principle of learning by doing.
Being influenced by John Dewey, Kilpatrick tried to give project method in 1918. This method is democratic in nature and it emphasizes social skills and team work.
WHAT IS A PROJECT METHOD?
It is a progressive approach of teaching. It is a purposeful act it provides the learner with learning experiences.
Here the teacher acts like a guide assigns the projects to groups of students.’
Each group works on different topics or problems. They work together to prepare the project.
The students work together as a team, they learn by discussing, reading, and exchanging ideas. Then they take the help of a teacher wherever they difficulties or have questions.
The project method covers the content of many different subjects and the teacher tries to integrate the information to the main topic.
This method gives complete freedom and choice to students.
ADVANTAGES OF PROJECT METHOD:
It gives freedom and creativity.
Here the teacher and students both grow.
Students can link the subject to real life.
It motivates students.
DISADVANTAGES OF PROJECT METHOD:
It is expensive method.
It is time consuming.
It needs lots of resources.
Some projects cannot be done at school.
SOURCE METHOD:
There are three types of sources in this method.
1 Material resource: Ideas, machines, weapons etc…..
2 Oral resources: Songs, folk stories, traditions, customs etc...
3 Written and printed resources: Records, reports, letters etc….
Source method is an activity oriented method. It is generally used in social studies subject also.
Generally sources mean a person, books or document or picture or actual objects that can provide information for learning. It is learning directly from the actual sources for examples for social studies they can be- A contract with the bank – or studying the sample of stone collected from the moon or an object found from any ancient place can also be studied. One can also take students to museums to find the objects to study.
ADVANTAGES OF SOURCES METHOD:
It provides direct, firsthand experience.
It develops a sense of reality
It creates motivating and interesting ambience in the class.
It develops skill of data collection, thinking skill and observation skill.
It makes the subject meaningful.
Reflective learning strategies:
Reflection is the result of learning. (Return to experience). There are many
reflective learning strategies.
Meta cognitive learning strategy:
Metacognitive strategies refers to methods used to help students
understand the way they learn; in other words, it means processes designed for
students to 'think' about their 'thinking'.Teachers who use metacognitive
strategies can positively impact students who have learning disabilities by
helping them to develop an appropriate plan for learning information, which can
be memorized and eventually routine. As students become aware of how they
learn, they will use these processes to efficiently acquire new information,
and consequently, become more of an independent thinker. Below are three
metacognitive strategies, which all include related resources, that can be
implemented in the classroom:
Think Aloud:Great for reading
comprehension and problem solving. Think-aloud help students to consciously
monitor and reflect upon what they are learning. This strategy works well when
teachers read a story or problem out loud and periodically stop to verbalize
their thoughts. This allows students to follow the teacher's thinking process,
which gives them the foundation they need for creating their own strategies and
processes that can be useful for understanding what they are trying to
comprehend.
Checklist, Rubrics and Organizers:Great
for solving word problems. These organizational tools support students in the
decision-making process because they serve as an aid for planning and
self-evaluation. Typically they ask what students know and need to know to
arrive at an answer, and emphasize the need to reread the problem and
self-check responses.
Explicit Teacher Modeling:Great
for math instruction. Explicit teacher modeling helps students understand what
is expected of them through a clear example/model of a skill or concept. When a
teacher provides a easy to follow procedure for solving a problem, students
have a memorable strategy to use for approaching a problem on their own.
UNIT.5
MODELS OF TEACHING
A teaching model is a
design of teaching. It is a plan for teaching based on carefully selected
psychological theory. A teaching model explains how to transact a content based
on the strategies of instruction according to a learning theory. Joyce & Marsha Weil defined teaching model as a pattern or plan that teacher can use to
design face to face teaching in classroom or instructional setting and shape
instructional material.
Features:
·
Based on one or
more psychological theories
·
Instructional
design
·
Goal oriented
·
Description of
learning environment
Families of Models
Bruce
Joyce and Marsha Weil have identified four main families of models
1. Information Processing Family
Main
Focus:
Help students in the mastery of methods of inquiry; mastery of
academic concepts and facts; development of general intellectual skills such
as the ability to think more logically .
Eg:
Concept Attainment Model
Advance
Organizer Model
Biological
Science Inquiry Training Model
Cognitive
Development Model
Synetics
Model (to develop creativity)
2. Behaviour Systems Family
Main
Focus:
To change the behavior of the learner; to transmit culture by teaching skills
and knowledge
Eg.
Direct Instruction Model
Contingency
Management Model
Mastery
Learning
Learning
from Simulations
Model
to develop the six varieties of performances identified by Gagne
3. Social Family
Main
Focus :
To help students work together to identify and solve problems; to develop
skills in human relations,: to become aware of personal and social values
Eg:
Jurisprudential Inquiry Model (learning to think about social policy)
Cooperative
learning
Group
Investigation
Role
Playing
4. Personal Family
Main
Focus:
To increase the students’ sense of self-worth; to help students
understand themselves more fully; to help students recognize their
emotions and become more aware of the way emotions affect other aspects of
their behavior; to help them develop goals for learning; to help students
develop plans for increasing their competence ; to increase the students’
creativity and playfulness and to increase the students’ openness to new
experience.
Eg:
Awareness Training Model
Classroom
Meeting Model
Non-directive
Teaching Model
Concept Attainment model
What
is Concept Attainment?
Concept
Attainment is an indirect instructional strategy that uses a structured inquiry
process. It is based on the work of Jerome Bruner. In concept attainment,
students figure out the attributes of a group or category that has already been
formed by the teacher. To do so, students compare and contrast examples that
contain the attributes of the concept with examples that do not contain those
attributes. They then separate them into two groups. Concept attainment, then,
is the search for and identification of attributes that can be used to
distinguish examples of a given group or category from non-examples.
What
is its purpose?
Concept
attainment is designed to clarify ideas and to introduce aspects of content. It
engages students into formulating a concept through the use of illustrations,
word cards or specimens called examples. Students who catch onto the idea
before others are able to resolve the concept and then are invited to suggest
their own examples, while other students are still trying to form the concept.
For this reason, concept attainment is well suited to classroom use because all
thinking abilities can be challenged throughout the activity. With experience,
children become skilled at identifying relationships in the word cards or
specimens. With carefully chosen examples, it is possible to use concept
attainment to teach almost any concept in all subjects.
Advantages:
helps
make connections between what students know and what they will be learning
learn
how to examine a concept from a number of perspectives
learn
how to sort out relevant information
extends
their knowledge of a concept by classifying more than one example of that
concept
students
go beyond merely associating a key term with a definition
concept is learned more thoroughly and retention is improved
concept is learned more thoroughly and retention is improved
How do I do it?
Steps
of Concept Attainment:
Select
and define a concept
Select
the attributes
Develop
positive and negative examples
Introduce
the process to the students
Present
the examples and list the attributes
Develop
a concept definition
Give
additional examples
Discuss
the process with the class
Evaluate
How can I adapt it?
This
activity can be done on the chalkboard, chart paper or overhead projector to a
large or small group. It also works well as one-on-one work. Rather than starting
with the teacher's concept, use a student's concept. Concept attainment can be
used to introduce or conclude a unit of study.
Variations
on the Concept Attainment Model
Present
all of the positive examples to the students at once and have them determine
the essential attributes.
Present
all of the positive and negative examples to the students without labeling them
as such. Have them group the examples into the two categories and determine the
essential attributes.
Have
the students define, identify the essential attributes of, and choose positive
examples for a concept already learned in class.
Use
the model as a group activity.
Assessment
and Evaluation Considerations
Have
the students:
write
the definition from memory.
determine
positive and negative examples from a given group.
create
their own examples of the concept.
"think
aloud"
Write
a learning log
Do
an oral presentation
Create
a web, concept map, flow chart, illustrations, KWL chart, T chart
ADVANCE ORGANISER MODEL
David Ausubel
An advance
organizer is a tool used to introduce the lesson topic and illustrate
the relationship between what the students are about to learn and the
information they have already learned. They are used during expository
instruction, which is the use of an expert to present information in a way
that makes it easy for students to make connections from one concept to the
next.
By
using an advance organizer to link the new information to old information, the
new information can be remembered more easily.
There
are three basic purposes of advance organizers.
First,
they direct students' attention to what is important in the upcoming lesson.
Second,
they highlight relationships among ideas that will be presented.
Third,
they remind students of relevant information that they already have.
An
advance organizer is not a summary or review of a previous lesson. It also
doesn't provide a structure for the current lesson. Instead, it provides a
structure for student thinking. It acts as a conceptual bridge from the old
information to the new information. A person's existing knowledge about a
concept is the most important factor in whether new material will be meaningful
and how well it can be learned and retained.
Analogies
and metaphors are frequently used as advance organizers because they help
students recognize that the topic they are beginning to learn is not totally
new, but rather can be related to something they are already comfortable with.
This not only helps the students better understand the new concept, but it also
helps to encourage and motivate students, as it makes them more confident about
the material to come. They also help teachers fit the new information into a
larger framework or existing schema. They help students understand the
governing questions, issues and propositions that are reflected in that
hierarchy. If students understand the basic outline of the structure, they are
able to fill in the gaps with new and related information as it is presented to
them.
ADVANCE
ORGANIZER MODEL
Goal
of learning subject matter and improvement of presentational methods of
teaching is important.
His
theory of meaningful verbal learning deals with three concerns-
*
How knowledge(curriculum content) is organized.
*
How mind works to process new information(learning).
*
How teachers can apply these ideas about curriculum and learning when they
present new material to students(instruction).
GOALS
AND ASSUMPTIONS
This
model helps teacher to organize and convey information as meaningfully and
effectively as possibly.
Advance
organizers provide concepts and principles to students directly.
This
model is designed to strengthen students’ cognitive structure.
Cognitive
structure deals with what kind of knowledge of a field is in our mind, how much
of it there is, and how well it is organized.
Before
presenting new material, existing cognitive structure should be increased by
presenting concepts.
Meaningful
learning can occur if material is solidly organized and this depends on the
learner.
Acc
to Ausubel, any subject is a chain of concepts and in our mind also, when we
accept these facts that is also settled as a chain in our mind, if new concept
is presented as related with the old one.
·
Social
system:
It means social atmosphere of
the classroom. It explains the environment, the structure and the nature of the
classroom. (Highly structured, moderately structured and loosely structured)
·
Principle of
reaction:
It means the rules that
should be followed by the teacher to deal with the responses of the students.
·
Support
system:
It means any supporting item
to create a better teaching and learning activities.(Teaching aids, learning
aids and atmosphere)
·
Instructional
effect:
Instructional objectives
·
Nurtural
effect:
Attitudinal changes, behavioral
changes…..
·
Syntax:
Set
of rules, principles and process that governs the structure of sentences in
given language. Here, it means the structure and design of all teaching
learning experiences in the classroom. A syntax is a model of teaching included
many phases.
Description and
lesson transcription
Concept
attainment model:
This model was developed based
on the theory of J.F.Bruner (Discovery learning). It is based on Brunarian
hypothesis, ie, fundamentals of any subject can be taught to any individual at
any stages of development in an intellectually honest way. Learning is the
result of individual’s discovery of the concept. It is the stage associated
task, but effective learning is possible on any concept at any stage. CAM needs
a semi democratic social system.
Syntax:
Phase 1: Presentation of data and identification
of concept
Phase 2: Testing attainment of the concept
Phase 3: Analyzing thinking strategies
Exemplars: they are the examples (yes
and no examples)
Advance organizer
model:
This model was developed based
on the theory of David Ausubel (Receptive learning theory or meaning full
learning theory). According to him, meaning full verbal learning is the
acquisition of ideas that are linked to other ideas. It takes place by the
interaction between the new concept (subsumed) and the more inclusive concept (subsume)
which are already learned. The process of linking the subsumed to the subsume
is known as subsumption. It is taking place through two methods: progressive
differentiation and integrative reconciliation
Syntax:
Phase 1: presentation of advance organizer
Phase 2: presentation of the learning material
Phase 3: strengthening cognitive structure
Group
investigation model:
This model is based on
theories of John Dewey and Herbert Thelen. This model gives importance to
learning through inquiries. This is a cooperative learning method. Students are
forming social groups and in the group they suggest, inquire and discuss the
content to be learned. GIM is gathering knowledge through inquiry in students’
group by cooperative attempts.
Syntax:
Phase 1: students encounter puzzling situation
Phase 2: students explore relations to the situation
Phase 3: formulate learning task and organize for
learning
Phase 4: group study
Phase 5: analyze progress and process
Phase 6: recycling of activity and review of learning
task
Jurisprudential
inquiry training model:
This model is developed based
on the theory of Donald Oliver and Johns Shaver. It provides a systematic
thinking on contemporary issues. It is a part of citizenship training. This
model provides awareness on situation of the society. It is a discussion
oriented model. Through this model, teacher can develop a framework of values
and decision on problems.
Syntax:
Phase 1: orientation to the issues or cases
Phase 2: identifying the issue
Phase 3: taking positions
Phase 4: exploring
Phase 5: refining and qualifying the position
Phase 6: testing the assumption behind the qualified
position