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Tuesday, 30 September 2014

EXAMINATION HINTS



Those who have an examination in view however, need to make the best of available time. Here are some guide–lines which may help.
            First of all make yourself thoroughly familiar with the syllabus. When studying your syllabus, take a careful note of its organization and length. It would be of help in your study to obtain some of the past papers set by the Examination Board. The Ordinary Level (O/L) courses usually take over two years depending on the number of subjects studied. You should plan your work carefully so that you have covered all the subject material a month or two before the examination. This will give you time for a complete revision of everything this building your confidence and re–inforcing your understanding of what you have learned.
            Tackling the work itself: Try to do this in complete privacy and quietness so that you achieve maximum concentration. Read a will of study through from beginning to an end slowly and carefully. Then try to recall its shape or argument. Ask yourself what were its chief points. Look up all unfamiliar words or pace names in the glossary or dictionary or an Atlas. It is obviously essential for you to have a great atlas or will be your constant companion through the course.
            As you study each section take notes, make a brief summary of the main points. The purpose of note taking is to help you understand and remember the essence of what you have learned. You will develop your own system of note taking but avoid merely copying the text book verbatim. It is your own ideas and understanding of what you have read that counts. The purpose of these notes is that you keep going back to them from time to time refreshing your mental image of the topic, re–inforcing your memory and understanding.
            When you think you have a good grasp of the unit, test yourself by answering the past questions. As you progress in your course, you should try to answer questions under conditions as close as practicable to those of the examination. Here the time element becomes important. If your GCE papers shows that five questions have to be answered in two hours, you should allow yourself twenty minutes for each question.
            Spend few minutes thinking about it and jotting down, on a spare piece of paper a plan for the answer. List the main points or facts. Get them into logical order. Then begin to write. This preliminary organization will help you to make clear, tidy presentation of your answer avoiding crossings–out or after thoughts, and this will go very much in your favour.
            Leave two or three minutes at the end for reading through again and correcting any obvious errors. Give the same amount of time to each question. Don’t be tempted especially in the actual examination to write at length on one subject if it means over running your time and sacrificing something else. All questions count equally and available points will be lost you leave any unanswered.
            Where a question calls for a sketch map or diagram, remember that more information can be conveyed clearly in this way than in any number of words.
            Your illustration should be as concise and accurate as possible but should give only the information asked for, don’t waste time putting in irrelevant details.
            In a sketch map there is no need to try to reproduce the intricacies of a say a coastline. Your coastline can be simplified and rounded, but the map should be drawn quickly and recognizable. As you work through the course practice drawing maps of the countries you are studying so that you can easily reproduce them for the examination. In fact the best help you can give yourself, all along the way is to shape your written and illustrated work towards examination requirements, shorthand.
            The study of geography does not end in the classroom. This is only a prelude to the appreciation and enjoyment of geography for its own sake. But at this stage, you will be equipped with knowledge and techniques that will enable you widen your studies, recognizing the relevance of geography with its many facets, to everyday life and the world about you.
            A common complaint of teachers is that their students cannot help their ideas when asked to answer an examination question or write an essay. The student may have a mass of relevant ideas and a considerable number of basic facts about the subject but they do not know how to organize these ideas to produce a coherent essay. Their main difficulty is not constructing grammatical sentences though they have trouble with this too but rather in organizing the paragraph in such a way that it secures a definite purpose such as narrating, arguing, defining, describing, analyzing.
            The writer tries to organize sentences into unified paragraph in order to communicate. In this study guide I will define a paragraph in expository writing as a group of sentences all related to one topic and organized in a logical manner. This means also that sentences built around a topic do not constitute a paragraph unless they are arranged logically. The topic or central idea may be expressed in one as a whole. The positions of the topic sentence varies according to the type of text, but it is usually at the beginning and sometimes at the end. When the topic sentence is the first sentence of the paragraph, it refers briefly to the theme of the preceeding paragraph or to the theme of the whole text if it begins the introductory paragraph, as well as indicating the theme of the new paragraph. But when the topic sentence is at the end it usually summarizes the paragraph in which it occurs.
            The topic sentence or central ideas may be developed in a number of ways. It may be developed by examples, comparison and contrast cause and effect, enumeration of details, analysis of positive and negative characteristics. In whatever way the topic sentence is developed, the structure of the paragraph must be held together by a unity of theme and by logical organization. Looking beyond the sentence into the paragraph is significant for a student both as a reader and as a writer that is both as a decoder and as an encoder of message.
            As a reader the student will be able to see at a glance the component parts of the text and thus makes better use of his time and attention. He can look for central idea, supporting details, examples, to illustrate general ideas and various relationships, causual, temporal, etc. he can enhance his reading efficiency by making use of such clues as transitional words or phrases and grammatical texical links.
            In making notes the students will be able to discriminate between what is basic to paragraph and what is not. Thus preserving the right relationship.
            As a writer, the student will be aware that to form a paragraph he must organize a group of sentences around a topic and link them together to form a unit. He will realize that the paragraph itself should generally be a component unit of a larger whole and that a group of unrelated paragraphs will not make an essay just as a haphazard collection of sentences will not make a paragraph.

Monday, 29 September 2014

THE CONCEPTS, APPROACHES, AND THE OBJECTIVES OF TEACHING PRACTICE



Introduction
            The underlying principles of current practices of student teachers are probably of extremely ancient lineage. Bruner (1966) discusses the way in which Bushmen pass on adult skills to their children. There is very little explicit teaching, what the child knows to those typifying our current approaches to student teaching, Nellie is the factor worker who has long been doing the job for years to whom new recruits are attached while they learn the job. Sitting with Nellie has long been recognized by industry as an ext.
            We believe that preoccupation with the need for this type of school experience reflects an attitude to the job of the teacher, which is grossly at variance with some of highfalutin language sometimes used about the profession. We profess to value the freedom of the teacher to develop his individual style, to be creative, to enthuse his pupils and, often less explicitly, to teach them some pretty complicated concepts. And yet we treat our aspirant paragons as if they were sitting at to tighten a nut. Plaskow (1969) was justified when he said that it is extravagant and kinkily to think that by putting students in schools for days and weeks they will somehow be trained to be teachers.
            When the student does get to school bearing in mind that he is a guest and eventually stands in front of a class he is likely to model his behavior on his memories of the teachers he had when he was a pupil, his college teaching and the example of the teachers he has observed. The teachers who taught him, and the teachers he is now observing, all in their time went through the same system so that all the pressures on the students are in the direction of conforming to the unadventurous stereotype.
The Concept of Teaching Practice
            Until quite recently the term all concerned with the preparation of teachers has accepted “teaching practice” almost universally and uncritically and its use has embraced all the learning experiences of student teachers in schools. The concept has been handed down from the earliest days of the development of training colleges in this country; it seemed such as ‘commonsense’ concept, completely accepted by the teachers, the college tutors and the students. Yet from the very earliest years of the training colleges there was tension between schools and colleges and this tension has centered on teaching practice. Students while frequently preferring teaching practice to other elements of the college course have yet been critical of their experiences in the participants. But the concepts itself was rarely questioned. We now wish to question this concept since it appears to be both anachronistic and ambiguous.
The Historical Concept
            Historically the concept was based on craft apprenticeship. The pupil–teacher movement had at its core the initiation of the apprentice into the mysteries of the craft by processes of telling, demonstrating and initiating. The master teacher told the students what to do showed them how to do it and the students initiated the master. This process depended for its success on certain prior conditions: the existence of an established body of subject matter, rules of thumb to be transmitted and the acceptance of the authority of the master by student.
            These conditions continued to hold good during the first decades of the present century. After the Second World War, however, the bases for their continued existence have been steadily undermined. The accepted bobby of knowledge appropriate for schools has been increasingly called into question by curriculum innovators led by Nuffield and schools council workers the traditional teaching skills and techniques have been challenged as being inadequate for the curricula the exercise of critical faculties, which college staff were urging as one of the goals of education has been taken to heart by the students and their willingness to submit to a master teacher’s authority and to follow his techniques has been weakened. At the same time, partly as a result of the impact of the newly developing study of philosophy of education, the concept of education has been widely discussed. The recognition that the term education and training denoted differences in aims, content and procedure led to the change in title from training colleges to colleges of education. But changing the name of the colleges did not transmute teaching practice into a more rigorous theory based activity.
I. CONNOTATION
            The term teaching practice has three major connotations: the practicing of teaching skills and acquisition of the role of a teacher, the whole range of experiences that students go through in school; and the practical aspects of the course as distinct from theoretical studies. We presumably have in mind the first when we talk about a student teaching practice mark; the second when we.
II. CURRENT APPROACHES TO TEACHING PRACTICE MODEL THE MASTER TEACHER
Master teacher approach: The master teacher is the mast craftman and teaching practice is viewed as a process of initiation in which the master teachers teaching skills, performance, personality and attitudes are acquired by the student through observation, imitation and practice. The arguments advanced in support of this approach stress its effectiveness, simplicity and commonsense. ‘If you want to become an effective teacher, do what the effective teacher does; Peters who in general seems to support this approach for it on more sophisticated grounds (Peters 1968). On the basis of an examination of the nature of teaching he concludes that teaching is a highly personal business. The teacher cannot be expected to adopt and put into operation the findings of research couched in general terms as teaching principles since principles are impersonal. The teacher should model himself on a more skilled exemplar adapting what he sees to his personal use. The arguments against this approach are both theoretical. A master teacher, however versatile, can offer a student only a limited set of skills, artiness and personality traits teacher looks, like sonally, have an ever greater problem, we don’t know what a master teacher look like. We have some idea what he shouldn’t look like but that is a different matter. This problem relates to the question of the identification of teacher effectiveness, which we discuss later. Here we merely wish to say that there are no universally accepted criteria to help us identify master teacher.
            There is one further problem in the master teacher approach; there is a practical difficulty of finding sufficient master teachers in the right places to go round. Pedley (1969) calculates that statistically this is feasible, but clearly it will be quite impossible at certain times and in certain areas. An approach to teacher practice that is dependent for success on the chance distribution of master teachers must have serious disadvantages on practical grounds alone.
            In sum, the model the master teacher approach, which seems to be the approach most widely favoured by teachers, results in a tendency to conservatism and traditionalism and operates against experimental innovation. Ultimately it stands for imitation rather than analysis and it puts obstacles in the way of understanding the processes of teaching.
            ‘Everyone knows that the teacher not only influences student (pupil) behavior but that he is also influenced by the student behavior. The teacher is constantly observing the student and modifying his own behavior in terms of his observations. We may therefore say that instructional behavior consist of a chain of three links–observing, diagnosing, acting.’ Strasser identifies four aspects of instruction:
1)    Teaching planning
2)    Teacher behavior initiatory
3)    Teacher observation
4)    Interpretation and diagnosis of learner behavior; teacher behavior influencing/influenced.
‘Instruction is regarded as dynamic and, over a period of time, self correcting, continually redirected, influenced/influencing in reactive process’ (Strasser 1967). Strasser’s model may be seen on page 177. Tabbah’s model for teaching strategies for cognitive growth has been embodied in the Teacher Handbook for Contra Costa Social Studies. Tabbah taught student teachers the strategies in ten days using this model (Verdium 1967). Models of classroom nitration based on interaction analysis (to be discussed later) are now being used both in America and Britain to describe and predict verbal behavior in the classroom.
            The master the teaching model approach to practical experience makes possible, and necessary, the integration of theory and practice. This integration becomes not an abstract goal to be achieved only rarely, but a necessary, constant occurrence. Tutors and students together develop models out of their discussions of the theories of teaching and learning; the models are tested in teaching learning situations and the results are evaluated. This approach necessitates precision and rigour. A model is a commitment to a position and can be tested if properly formulated. It is not a loosely assembled, unarticulated set of statements that some theories can point at with pride in their eclecticism (Stolurom 1965). Unlike the model the master teacher approach, t his approach offers practical, usable help to all students irrespective of their personality traits, attitudes and abilities. A model is infinitely variable so that there is no contradiction between a student’s following a theoretical model and his developing personal teaching style.
III. TEACHING CAUGHT NOT TAUGHT
            Akin to the master teacher approach is the view that it is impossible to teach anyone how to teach. Teaching is an art form akin to poetry or painting. The creative teaching act, like the act of writing poetry or painting a picture, can be facilitated by teaching but cannot, itself, be taught. Teaching ability is largely innate and the born teacher, the natural, owes little to training. Teaching performance is described in intuitive terms: the born teacher knows the right moment for the right activity. He is endowed with charismatic authority; the children never question his power, he is a natural disciplinarian. Teaching practice is views as providing the opportunities to display, recognized and refine the abilities that are in the student.
            This approach which depends on unexamined premises and half truth, is inimical to any rational understanding of the theory and practice of teaching and, therefore, to any rational approach to teaching practice. It assumes, in the first place, the existence of a general teaching ability operating in all teaching situations. The validity of this assumption is by no means established. On the contrary it seems likely that teaching behaviours are specific and closely related to given sets of conditions such as age, background and ability of children and type of school. A brilliant teacher in one environment may be a mediocre performer in another. In addition, as we have already intimated, born teachers are not so easily identifiable. Evidence is given below of the considerable difficulties involved in recognizing with certainty effective teaching but here we have a claim of complete certainty. Further, not only is the effective teacher recognizable but his effectiveness is attributed largely to genetic endowment. In the light of the discussion over the last half century on the complexities involved in studying the genetic element in verbal intelligence, it would be a brave man who would maintain the genetic bases of so complex a set of abilities as those involved in teaching. Finally, this naïve genetic argument is disproved by experience even though present methods of practical preparation of teachers are of voice, stature, fluency and shyness manage to overcome these disabilities.
IV. TEACHING AS A SCIENCE
            A quite contrary approach, and one closely related to the master the teaching model approach is adopted by those who regard teaching as part of the behavioural sciences. Teaching is behaving in a social context and is therefore amenable to scientific observation analysis. We will discuss this at greater length later but here we may point out that teaching behavior is modifiable by feeding back to the student teacher data about his ongoing behavior in the classroom and the results of his teaching in terms of the children’s behavior in the student, or approximations to it, is rewarded to ensure its persistence, a practice that is explicable with reference to learning theory. Similarly the student teacher’s teaching is understandable and controllable only in terms of attitude and personality traits. And the selection of skills and techniques is the master teachers, reflecting the master teacher’s values, experience and personality. The student’s values, experience and personality will be at least marginally, and at most radically different from those of the master teacher. In its extreme for this approach denies the individuality of the student. In a moderate form it encourages the student to copy isolate bits of teaching behavior may well hinge on their being a part of a total teaching behavior, when fragmented and adopted by another, they may be ineffective or even harmful. Further, this approach is only superficially easy to follow. In essence it tells a student to adopt another person’s teaching style, which probably involves changing his personality. If a student cannot do this, and the majority cannot, he can make little progress towards effective teaching. The student is advised to change his attitude or modify his personality traits, etc, advice that he does not know how to follow.
            We have some ideas what he shouldn’t look like but that is a different matter. This problem relates to the question of the identification of teacher effectiveness, which we will discuss later. Here we merely wish to say that there are no universally accepted criteria to help us to identify master teachers.
            There is one further problem in the master teacher approach; there is a practical difficulty of finding sufficient master teachers in the right places to go round.
            The model the master teacher approach, which seems to be the approach most widely favoured by teachers, results in a tendency to conservatism and traditionalism and operates against experiment.
V. OBJECTIVES OF TEACHING PRACTICE
            It is remarkable that no serious and detailed study of the objectives of teaching practice seems to have been carried out until quite recently. Presumably the objectives have been taken as self–evident: “to practice being a teacher”. This question–begging and largely meaningless statement corresponds to the undifferentiated concept of teaching practice discussed above. However, as the numbers of students have grown more schools and teachers have become involved in teaching, so the weaknesses of the present system have become more apparent and criticism and dissatisfaction have been voiced. Some teachers want to know more precisely what their contribution in teaching practice should be. Some college tutors feel that, while they insist that their students have statements of lesson objectives, they themselves are not making clear to the students (and teachers) the objectives of the whole exercise. Some are also influenced, by pressures from various sources, to see a need to state their objectives in behavioural terms. It is particularly important for students to have a clear grasp of the objectives since it is for them primarily that teaching practice is organized and their future depends on their satisfactorily fulfilling the objectives.
OBJECTIVES
1.   To provide the student with an opportunity of establishing an appropriate teacher–pupils relationship with children.
a)    Students can get to know children as individual.
b)    Students can learn to communicate with children.
c)    Students can get to know children in groups and classes.
d)    Students can have the experience of working with children.
e)    Students can develop with their pupils a reciprocal relationship of respect and liking.
f)     Students can develop a working relationship with children of different temperamental abilities. Although all ranked these objectives in fact staff accorded it more importance that did students (difference significant at 0.01 level) and students more than teacher.
2.   To provide the student with an opportunity for theory to be applied in the practical situation and to assist him, where necessary, to make the difficult discrimination between inappropriate theory and the inadequate implementing of sound theory.
a)    Students can try out apparatus based on theoretical approaches.
b)    Students can try out ideas, which they have evolved in college.
c)    Students can attempt to relate theories of learning and child development in the classroom.
d)    Students can test out in the school approaches suggested on the college courses.
e)    Students can apply in the classroom the methodology of teaching basic skills and certain subject’s areas.
f)     Students can relate their reading in education to what happens in the school.
3.   To provide an opportunity for evaluating the student’s potential as a teacher and suitability for the teaching profession.
a)    Students can discover if they experience satisfaction from teaching.
b)    Students can find out if they are happy being with children.
c)    Students can find out if they enjoy being in the school environment.
d)    Students can find out if they are capable of promoting successful learning activities with pupils.
e)    College and school staff can detect students unsuited to the teaching profession.
f)     School and college staff can assess the student’s potential as teachers and assign grades.
4.   To provide the student with an experience of success in the teaching situation so that he acquires confidence.
a)    Students are enabling to gain confidence from perceiving evidence of learning by pupils.
b)    Students are enabled to gain confidence from their satisfactory handling of school routine.
c)    Students are enabled to gain confidence from the experience of talking effectively to individuals and a class.
d)    Students are enabled to gain confidence from the approval of other adults in a professional situation.
e)    Students are enabled to gain confidence from achieving in the classroom an atmosphere appropriate to the task.
f)     Students are enabled to gain confidence from the pupils’ enjoyment of an experience they have provided.
The significant difference (at 0.01 level) between students and others suggests that students teaching practice feel insecure and need success.
5.   To provide an opportunity in the practical situation for the extension and deepening of the student’s self–knowledge.
a)    Students can discover from the intellectual challenge of their pupils the importance of extending their own knowledge.
b)    Students may discover if they sympathize with or are prejudiced against certain children and learn how to deal with their reactions.
c)    Students can learn to cope with the physical demands of teaching.
d)    Students can discover ways of responding to the demand imposed by their own expectations of themselves as teachers.
e)    Students can learn how to modify or utilize habits of voice, gesture or movement revealed in the classroom.
f)     Students can learn to accept responsibility for their actions in the classroom. Staff/teachers’ difference significant at 0.05 level; others at 0.01.
6.   To provide the student with practical experience in schools which will reveal some of the problems of discipline and enable him to develop personal methods of control.
a)    Students can develop the ability to hold the pupil’s attention for appropriate periods.
b)    Students can learn to contain the aggressive or destructive impulses of individual children or groups.
c)    Students can try to ensure that noise remains at an appropriate level.
d)    Students can learn to channel the energies of children constructively.
e)    Students can learn to ultimate control in the classroom while allowing appropriate initiative to pupils.
f)     Students can try out various procedures for engaging their pupils’ cooperation.
A very marked emphasis on class control form the teachers.
7.   To provide the student with opportunities for developing powers of organization.
a)    Students can learn to take responsibility for the organization of equipment.
b)    Students can learn to organize their subject matter so that it becomes significant to their pupils.
c)    Students can organize their classes into appropriate working units.
d)    Students can learn to organize the keeping of notebooks and records.
e)    Students can learn to take part in organizing the smooth flow of daily events at school.
8.   To provide an opportunity for the student to develop and display qualities of adaptability and sensitivity appropriate to the school situation.
a)    Students can learn to adapt their procedures to the physical conditions of specific schools.
b)    Students can learn to improvise materials.
c)    Students can learn to show tact in relationship with teachers and supervisors.
d)    Students can learn to show adaptability in response to unexpected situations.
e)    Students can show adaptability in varying their methods to the needs of different groups.
9.   To provide the students with an opportunity of becoming part of the school community, familiarizing himself with its practices and entering into appropriate professional relationships with its adult member, the most significant of which is his relationship with the class or subject teacher.
a)    Students can familiarize themselves with the day to day routine in schools.
b)    Students can enter into a professional relationship with practicing teachers,
c)    Students can experience the interplay of head, staff and pupils in the school community.
d)    Students can become aware of the relationship of the school to associate groups – local education authority, parents.
e)    Students can learn from the professional expertise of class and subject teachers.
f)     Students can become aware of the professional responsibilities of teachers.
10.   To provide for the interchange of ideas and methods between schools and college by college daffy and students perceiving new ideas, materials and equipments in use in schools, and by college staff and students introducing new ideas, materials and equipments into the schools.
a)    Students can introduce new approaches to learning into schools.
b)    Students can stimulate teachers to a reappraisal of their own procedures.
c)    Students can introduce new materials into schools.
d)    Students can introduce new work situations into classes.
e)    College and school staff and students can exchange ideas on teaching procedures.
f)     Students can introduce new apparatus and techniques into schools.
The remaining seven objectives refer mainly to the staff of colleges and teachers in schools. They are that teaching practice allows college staff to develop contact with schools.
11.   To judge the student in schools
12.   To keep in touch with schools
13.   Jointly with the student to develop learning situations based on teaching
14.   To evaluate the effectiveness of college courses
15.   And to evaluate the result of colleagues’ work
16.   Its also allows class/subject teachers to have time free from class.
OTHERS STATEMENTS OF THE OBJECTIVES OF TEACHING PRACTICE
            Specific studies and discussions of the objectives of teaching practice are sparse. Morris (1969) has summarized in general terms commonly accepted objectives as he sees them and has examined the conflicts arising from their fulfillment. Davis (1969) reviews the scanty American research on the purposes of students teaching, gives a list of non–behavioural objectives called from the American literature, talks of ‘new concepts about the nature and purposes of student teaching that are developing…out of the research on teaching and comments that ‘despite the importance attached to it [student teaching], behavioural objectives are seldom identified. One set of objectives was recently proposed by a conference or college staff, teachers and education officers (with college staff predominating).
The Objectives proposed were:
1.   To enable the students to acquire an understanding of the children in the classroom situation: to find out how their minds work and to learn how to make contact with them and to communicate with them.
2.   To adjust their minds to the practical situation and to relate what they had learned in child development lectures to it. To learn to be clear about their own aims in a lesson or series of lessons.
3.   To learn to be sensitive to the situation in the classroom and learn how to structure it. To develop resourcefulness.
4.   A major aim of teaching or study practice is to develop powers of observation.
5.   Ability to make good relationships with children.
6.   Interest in the learning process and ability to relate this to the learning situation.
7.   An understanding of the need for organization and preparation in any situation, and the ability to analyze.
8.   Personal maturity (e.g. social confidence)
9.   To give a chance for students to assess themselves.
10.   To give students the opportunity of become more a part of the normal teaching force as part of a teaching team.
11.   To give the students awareness of and insights into the complex network of relationships involved in school and classroom, in particular recognizing and accepting that human relationships exist in depth.
12.   Diagnosis. The first year’s teaching practice is a contribution towards a diagnosis year.
The Plowden Report (Department of Education and Science 1967) gives an unequivocal statement of the objectives of teaching practice. The purpose of teaching practice is to underpin and enliven theoretical studies in child development and education, and to daily round that will await them when they qualify. Through it colleges and schools can learn about each other’s new ideas. Group practice (interacts) usefully with the more theoretical aspects of the education course (and provides) valuable occasions for experimental work in the schools and collaboration between schools and colleges. Finally, two practical objectives are suggested. First, colleges should help meet the needs of the schools as well as those of their students ‘especially in areas where there is a grave shortage of teachers.’ The partnership between college and school and the close relationships often involved in group practice would be especially helpful to schools in underprivileged areas. Second, students on final teaching practice can ‘release teachers for periods of in-service training or experimental work’.
            To come to terms with realities of a teacher’s duties, to see their way through complexities of an unfamiliar organization, to gain familiarity with routine tasks, to experience teaching as a continuous process rather than as a series of expository exercises and to find out something about their own strengths and weaknesses.

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