Bridging the digital divide! We aim to inspire young men and women to reach for the skies in ICTs in a safe and healthy environment. P.O. Box 309 Bamenda, Republic of CameroonEmail:corneliustawong@gmail.com

Nouveauté: Cliquez Pour Traduire Mon Blog En Français

Sunday, 5 October 2014

THE AIMS OF EDUCATION



When parents send a child to school, they expect the teachers to educate him. What do we as teachers mean by education? We mean our effort to train the child’s whole being, helping his mind, body and personality to grow to the full. The aim of education is therefore to help the child to develop as well as possible intellectually, physically, morally, socially and emotionally. We shall consider each one of these points separately.
Intellectual Development
            In school we spend a great deal of our time teaching the child facts, which he has to remember, but a truly educated person should think for himself.
            Encourage each child in your class to think. Do not always tell the child the answers to questions; ask him to find the answer by reading books or by making experiments. After the child has put some effort and thought into the question, ask him to tell you what he has discovered and then give him further help. For example, if you want the child to learn that two threes make six, instead of telling him, ‘Two threes are six’, give him some stones and ask him to count out of six of them. ‘how many groups of three have you?’ ‘Two groups of three.’ ‘Good.’ ‘How many stones altogether?’ ‘Six’. ‘Two groups of three make six.’
            Having found the answer by doing and thinking, the child will remember it much better. What is even more important, he will understand how the answer was obtained. As another example, to teach how a seed grows let the child plant it in a glass jar and watch it grow. In this way not only have you taught the facts but the child has also had to think and observe for himself. If a child wants to know how far it is from Lagos to Accra and how the two ports trade, show him the kind of geography book, or reference book, perhaps even an encyclopaedia, which will help him and let him discover the answer for himself.
            Language is most important for intellectual development. Too often children sit quietly in class copying exercises, when they should be talking to each other and to the teacher. Each child should be encouraged to express his thoughts clearly, and in an interesting manner. Try in each lesson to give all the children opportunities to think and to express their thoughts in words. This may mean more preparation for the teacher but it is very important, because each child should be helped to increase his intellectual capacity.
Physical Development
            Physical education should not end with the Physical Education lesson. The teacher should help the child’s body to grow strong and healthy. Hygiene and the correct diet are important. Teach each child to sit and stand properly, as continued bad posture will retard and spoil good growth. Make sure that the school meals, if these are provided, are nourishing and prepared under clean conditions.
            If a child has a speech defect or has trouble with his ears or eyes, a good teacher will help him to get proper treatment. Watch for any illness in the class, and see that a sick child is given medical attention. The healthy children must be protected, so a child suffering from an infectious disease should be prevented from attending school until he is quite better.
            Sleep is most important if the child is to grow well. Far too many children are unable to do their best work because they are tired; teachers should advise the children and their parents, so that at night each child has a really good rest in a well–ventilated room. A teacher who watches all these points will be helping each child to develop his best physical powers.
Moral Development
            Children have to learn the difference between right and wrong. This is usually taught through religion, but it should be taught also any time during the school day when something happens to give the teacher an opportunity to explain what is right or what is wrong.
            Suppose a child is honest and brings you a school pen he has found in the playground; praise him and tell the class they must all try to be honest. If a child is truthful even when it might bring him trouble, praise him for being brave enough to tell the truth. Tell a child who is weak at spelling or at doing sums to do his best without copying, for if he copies from the child next to him the teacher will not be able to tell how much he really knows, and will not be able to help him properly.
            Though it may be necessary sometimes, try not to draw much attention to the wrong that children do. Always stress what is good and right. Stories of good men and women will encourage children to copy such people. Show each child how the wrong things he does make other people unhappy, while the good he does makes other people happy. The teacher’s example is most important if children are to develop well morally. They will notice how the teacher behaves and will imitate him.
Social Development
            Children must learn to live in harmony with other people. At school a child is a member of a bigger group than at home. He has to learn to live and work peacefully with children form other families.
            When a child works in a group he will learn to take his turn and to share books, and things like paint or clay, with other children. If a child is in a team the teacher can let the team compete to collect the most marks, and each child will learn that if he does well the whole team will benefit, but if he does bad work the whole team will suffer and will lose marks. Encourage each child to consider and help others who are weaker than himself. Sick children can be sent cheerful letters, lame children can be treated kindly and small children can be taken safely home.
            The social development of the child is most important, as it will help him to play his part as a good citizen of his country.
Emotional Development
            Children must learn to control their anger if something does not please them. A child must try to be brave and not be fearful unnecessarily; he must learn to love and to be kind instead of hating or hurting others.
            The teacher should help each child to use his emotions in the right way. He can be angry about evil things such as ignorance and injustice, and try to put these things right. Encourage the child to be brave, but help him to realize there are some things it is right to fear. He should fear playing with fire, for he may get burned, fear crossing the road without looking first, as he may get hurt; and fear making others unhappy through selfishness.
            A child needs an outlet for his emotions, and plenty of hard work and creative work will help him to keep them under control. Let him express good emotions like love, by giving him opportunities to help other people. By imitating the good teacher a child will greatly helped in his emotional development.
            We must remember that the child should be the centre of all educational aims, and all we do will be to help him to develop to the best of his ability. Good examination results do not necessarily proclaim a well–educated person, whereas a conscientious worker, an honest thoughtful citizen, a helpful neighbor, an upright, kind husband or wife and a sensible parent do show that a man or woman is well educated.
The School
What is a school?
First a piece of land and a building must be acquired; it is often necessary to erect a suitable building. Then the building has to be furnished and equipped. Before the children can be taught in the school, suitable teachers led by a headteacher must be appointed. The teachers must have the knowledge and ability to teach, and the head must be able to help and direct them. Finally, though it may seem obvious, there can be no school without children. The children are the most important part of the school, and for them everything should be planted. We shall consider, in turn, all the factors that make a school.
            It is realized, of course, that many teachers who read this book may have little personal say in the site for a school or in the school building itself, though they should certainly have some say regarding equipment. The suggestions are included however in the hope that teachers will always use their influence with school authorities in order that the children can be taught under the best conditions.
The Compound for the School
            A dry compound on slightly high ground should be chosen, because during the rainy season water will drain fairly quickly from high land, while it will remain longer on low land, thus making the group damp and swampy. The compound should not be near a market, a railway station or any other noisy place. If possible it should not be on a main road, because the traffic will be disturbing, and during the dry season the cars and lorries driving past will make the school dusty. The site should be a reasonable walking distance from the homes of the children. Infant children particularly should not have to walk far to school, or they will be tired before they start their work. If possible pipes should be laid to bring water from the town supply; but if not, a good well should be dug, so that the children will have easy access to water. Hygiene cannot be taught without a reasonable supply of water.
            The compound should be big enough to provide space for the following:
a)      The school building;
b)      A large field for Physical Education and games;
c)      Garden and flower beds;
d)     A school farm;
e)      A rough space for digging and making models;
f)       Space for future building if the numbers in the school increase, as they probably will when more and more children desire to be educated.
When the compound is cleared a number of shady trees should be left, or new ones planted, so that the children may sit under them during outdoor lessons. The trees should not be too near the school or they may make the classrooms dark.
The Building
            Single storey schools are best for young children, as stairs may cause accidents. Each room should be big enough for the children to sit at desks when necessary, and yet leave a good space between desks, so that the teacher can easily reach each child to give individual help. There should be sufficient room for the arrangement of groups and for dramatics. The headteacher should have a separate room, where he can receive parents and visitors, and where he can keep his records and accounts. The teachers should have a staff room where they can sit at recess and lunch–time. A store room is necessary for keeping books, apparatus and extra equipment. There should be a latrine for every twenty five or thirty children, and two for the staff.
A Suggested Plan for a Primary School building
If there is not enough money to build a hall, it can be left until later. Instead of a wall between classes 5 and 6 there can be a movable partition, which must, however, fit firmly, so that talking in one room cannot be heard in the next. If necessary, the two rooms can be cleared and used as a hall. All the floors should be concreted, so that they can easily be kept clean, and also to prevent white ants getting into the building. The walls should be colourwashed and kept in good repair. Round the walls there should be a number of wooden rails, so that pictures and charts can easily be hung up for the children to see; these rails should be at the children’s eye level. The shutters for the windows must hook on the outside walls when they are open, and strong bolts should be fitted to lock them at night. Each classroom should have a ceiling, to prevent noise travelling from one class to the next. If possible the outside woodwork should be painted; this looks more attractive and will preserve the wood.
            This plan is simple, and should be fairly cool while providing plenty of light in the rooms. In the morning the sun will not shine into the classrooms to dazzle the children. When the sun reaches the south it will be high in the sky and will shine on the roof but not through the windows; a good ceiling will help to keep the classrooms cool. The windows should be as big as possible. An overhanging roof will help to keep the rooms cool in the hot season and will help to prevent the rain blowing in during the rainy season. If the roof is extended over the verandah it will shelter the children when passing from one room to the next. A large wall blackboard should be put in each room when the school is being built.
            There are some new ideas in education and these require a different type of building. Teachers should study the new ideas carefully before making a decision about them.
The Integrated Day
            The timetable is not one of lessons but of large blocks of time, for example all one morning may be given to Maths and Language, and all another morning may be given to creative activities. All subjects can be studied by different children in the same class during the morning. The idea is that each child should work at his own speed and interest. To a child all knowledge is one. It is we adults who split it up into subjects. For example, a child may be studying “The Market’. He reads about it, writes about it (factual knowledge and imaginative stories), learns poems and songs about the market, and draws and paints it. He makes models (craft); he works out a storekeeper’s bills (Maths); he finds where the goods come from (Geography and Environmental Studies); he discovers how old it is, and how the market has changed with the years (History); he asks how the community uses it and how it can serve the neighbourhood (Civic Studies). Integrated days mean integrated studies. Learning in all subjects goes on side by side centred on the theme which the children are studying.
            The Market, Buildings in our town, farms in our area, water, transport, the Post Office, people who help us, growth, happiness, a local building site, are all themes withint he children’s experience. The teacher would try to expand this experience by helping the children to study the part of the theme, which is most interesting to them. When a child has done some good work he will tell the other children about it, and the class will discuss together. The children will help each other to learn. They will learn to cooperate. Sometimes a child will work alone, sometimes the whole class will work together. Plenty of space and equipment is needed and this will affect the design of the building.
An Open–Plan School
            Because of the integrated day, some schools are built without definite classrooms, but have work areas instead: an art and craft area, a language area, a Maths and science area, an environmental area, a music area, etc. There must be plenty of apparatus, books and materials. The children can move freely from one area to another. This means the teachers will probably decide to work together.
Team Teaching
            The teachers will work as a team of two or three. Maybe in some schools all the teachers will be in the team. A teacher who is specially interested in maths will help in the maths area not only his own pupils but children from other classes as well. It is necessary for the teachers to like each other and be able to work together. One lazy teacher will spoil the team. In this sort of teaching system walls between the classrooms are unnecessary as the children should be free to move from one area to another. The school building will have to be designed in an open-plan way.
            These are very brief descriptions of some new trends in education, and how they may affect buildings. The ideas may not suit your school, nor your area, but every teacher should be knowledgeable and able to discuss these ideas with inspectors and parents.
Equipment for the Classroom
1.    There should be good blackboard space (one wall blackboard about three metres long, and one blackboard on an easel which can be moved).
2.    A blackboard ruler, chalks and a duster.
3.    Storage cupboards (as large as possible) with locks, and boxes with lids and locks for storing books and apparatus.
4.    Movable tables or table desks and chairs with backs. All these should be light and easily moved. The size depends on the height of the children, whose feet should touch the floor, but whose legs should not be cramped.
5.    Slates, chalks and slate-cleaners (for infants)
6.    Tables for models, science displays, etc.
7.    Textbooks and writing material.
8.    Teachers’ table, desk and chair.
9.    Register, diary, record books and timetable.
10.    Art and craft equipment…paint, brushes, clay-boards, paste, scissors, sewing materials, raffia, cane for baskets (many of these things can be obtained form bush or scrap materials).
11.    Various types of apparatus, depending on the age of the children, for Reading, Arithmetic, English, etc.
12.    Cardboard, inks, pens and paints for making apparatus.
13.    Books for a class library; book–shelves or a table.
14.    A wastepaper basket.
15.    A basin for clean water for washing.
16.    Container for pure drinking water. Each child should have his own cup or calabash, as it is not hygienic for children to use the same cup.
17.    A good clock (this may be shared with other classes).
18.    Brushes and dusters for cleaning the classroom.
Equipment to be shared by all the Classes
1.      Equipment for games and Physical Education
2.      Musical instruments
3.      A slide projector
4.      A gramophone and a radio
5.      A first aid box
6.      Mats for sitting on the floor.
With a limited amount of money the most important equipment should of course be bought first.
The School and the Community
(i)       The Duty of the School to the Community
1.      To give the children in the community a good education.
2.      To train the children to be good citizens, so that the community will benefit in the future.
3.      To have Parent–Teacher meetings, so that the parents are kept informed of the progress of the children, and if necessary can be advised how best to care for their children.
4.      To encourage parents and relations to visit the school, and see the children at their work.
5.      To hold adult classes after school hours, when illiterate people in the community can be taught to read and write.
6.      To help the people of the community to plan and build sufficient good schools, and keep them well equipped for the needs of the children.
7.      To help to improve the standard of health, farming, housing, etc., through the education of children.
(ii)          The Duty of the Community to the School
1.      To see that the school is properly equipped, so that the children can take full advantage of their education.
2.      To cooperate with the teachers for the benefit of the children, by visiting the school when invited and by showing an interest in the work of the school.
3.      To try to put into practice any advice the head teacher o teachers may give for the good of the children.
4.      To see that the children go to school at the right age, attend punctually, and are neatly dressed.
5.      To see that the school is supplied with the correct number of good, well qualified teachers.
The Staff
The Head teacher
            The headteacher has a most important job to do, and on his or her ability depends the smooth running of the school. He or she has a number of responsibilities and we shall study each in turn.
The Headteacher’s Responsibility to the Children
1.      To make sure that the classrooms, furniture, compound, teaching equipment and health conditions are suitable and adequate for the children.
2.      To teach by example good manners, kindness, punctuality, honesty and rules for health and good citizenship. To know all the children in the school by name, and to take at least one lesson per week in each class, so that he or she can judge how the children are progressing.
3.      To see that children are admitted to the school at the correct age and time in the school year according to the regulations of the Ministry of Education. To see that the children are placed in the class most suitable to their age and ability.
4.      If a class teacher is absent, to see that the children are kept busy and are well supervised. The headteacher should do this himself or herself as often as possible as two classes suffer if a class teacher is asked to supervise two classes at the same time.
5.      To make sure that each class teacher helps every individual child to make reasonable progress, and that no child receives corporal punishment unless it is justified and the punishment book is signed.
6.      To observe, help, direct and encourage classroom work and really know what is happening in the school. The headteacher should hardly ever be found in his or her room, but should be found involved with the children.
The Headteacher’s Responsibility to the Teachers
1.      To ensure the cooperation of the staff. To hold regular meetings at which the teachers can discuss their problems and give suggestions for the smooth running of the school. If possible these suggestions should be used so that the teachers feel that they are all working together for the good of the children. The headteacher should make sure that all the teachers know the rules and aims of the school.
2.      To assist the teachers, giving them the benefit of his or her knowledge and experience, and so improve the standard of the school. Inexperienced and untrained teachers should be particularly guided and helped.
3.      To draw up syllabuses suitable for each class, using as a guide any syllabus published by the Ministry of Education. To help the teachers make schemes of work and lesson notes.
4.      To plan the timetable for the whole school, so that each teacher is guided to divide the time in school reasonably between the subjects in the syllabus.
5.      To check registers and record books
6.      To see that there is an equal distribution of class and school duties among the teachers.
The Headteacher’s Responsibility to the Parents
The headteacher should try to get the cooperation of the parents, so that the school and home will work together for the good of the children. Her or she should form a Parent–Teacher Association, arrange for an Open Day occasionally and plan to have one afternoon per week when parents can come to discuss problems confidentially. (I shall explain each of these functions and show how they help the parents to cooperate with the school.).
Parent – Teacher Association
            Meetings are held once or twice a term and all the parents are invited. The parents can bring their problems and ideas for discussion, and the teachers can help. If they wish, the parents can see their children’s work, and discuss the syllabuses.
            The headteacher has a good opportunity for giving the parents a short talk about the aims and methods of maths or Reading or Science or Hygiene or the needs of each child physically or socially. If a child is backward because he or she is always tired in school, or does not get sufficient nourishing food, and, therefore, has no energy to work, the teachers can encourage parents to correct these troubles. The teachers can do a great deal to advise the parents but they must beware of being proud and showing off their knowledge, or the parents may feel angry or ashamed and may not come to the next meeting. A good friendly relationship between the school and home will greatly benefit the children.
Open Days
            These are held once, or at the most twice, a year. The school is open all day to the inspection of the parents and friends of the children. Exercise books, art, craft and needlework are all on show, and a short concert or demonstration lessons may be given. By showing the parents what happens in school their interest will be aroused, and when they find the teachers are real friends and guides to their children, the school may be sure of the parents’ cooperation.
Visiting the School
            Some parents have special problems that they wish to discuss with the headteacher. If the headteacher lets the parents know that there is one afternoon each week for them, they will not come and disturb the school routine at other times. A good head knows all the children and should be able to advise the parents, but if the class teacher can help, the head must see that the class is supervised when the teacher is busy with the parent. It is not good for the child to overhear such discussions.
The Headteacher’s Responsibility to the Ministry of Education, the Proprietor and the Managers
1.      To see that the school buildings are kept in good condition, and that faults are reported so that they can be repaired.
2.      To carry out the policy of the Ministry of Education, and of the governing organization.
3.      To see the school records and books are properly kept and checked.
4.      The educational standard of the school, and the standard of discipline are the responsibility of the headteacher.
The Primary School Teacher
            Teachers should never forget that their work is most important, and the state of the country in thirty or forty years will largely depend on how well the teachers of today have performed their duty. A teacher can have a great influence on a class, not only by what he says but also by his actions. Children notice everything their teacher does and they copy a great deal of it. It is no good telling children to speak the truth unless they always hear the teacher speaking the truth. It is no good telling them to be punctual and tidy unless the teacher is punctual and tidy himself. Below are listed a number of qualities which a teacher should have. For simplicity I shall refer to the teacher as ‘he’, but obviously the qualities apply equally to men and women.
1.      The teacher should be a person worthy copying.
2.      He should be very interested in children, and should have endless patience with them.
3.      The children should know they can rely on him and can trust his word. He should never make idle promises or threats.
4.      He should guide the children in a friendly manner and they should never be afraid to come to him for help.
5.      He must be interested in the things which interest children, and should listen with understanding to their news.
6.      He should be enthusiastic and active in his work, so that he can pass on his enthusiasm and interst to the children.
7.      He should have a knowledge of the needs of children, and of the best ways of teaching children at different stages.
8.      He should have the ability to explain things in a simple and imaginative manner.
9.      He should be a person who is interested in increasing his own general knowledge, and he should remember that a teacher will never know everything about teaching. He should continue to try to improve his methods by reading, attending vacation courses, and by experimenting.
10.  He should be a happy and lively person whom the children and their parents can respect.
A good training is very necessary to help a teacher develop his interest and ability for teaching children. No one should enter or remain in the teaching profession unless he is determined to do his best for the children. Incalculable harm can be done by lazy or careless teachers.

THE CHILD
            Because the most important person in our education system is the child, the teacher, if he is to do his job efficiently, must understand something about how a child develops. Psychology is the study of behavior. Child Psychology is the study of the behavior of children. The psychology of child development is the study of how children’s behavior develops and changes. The subject requires much study, and here I can only hope to awaken your interest so that you will read other books on the subject.
            By a child most people mean a human being who has not yet reached adolescence. Sometimes; however, adolescence is included in the study of child development.
Approximate age divisions:
Newborn         0 to 4 weeks
Baby                4 weeks to ½ years
Infant              ½ years to 7/8 years
Middle childhood       7/8 years to 12/13 years
Adolescence    12/13 years to 16/18 years
Development
            By development we mean a change towards something that is better, more mature and independent, more complex. Usually people develop as they grow older. (But we do not talk of development when illness or old age bring decline.) The word develop also means ‘to unfold’. It is the process of unfolding the inborn capacities, which are present in the newborn baby, but which need the correct environment for proper growth.
            But development may be halted or seem to go backwards (called regression) due to illness or emotional upset. Here are some examples of regression. A boy who has been ill in bed for a long time forgets how to walk; because he has been unable to practice the skill, he needs to be taught how to walk again. A mother dies and her little daughter, who has been running about and talking, goes back to the baby stage, crawls and stops talking. (She needs a substitute mother to love and care for her and she will start developing again.) The parents of a little boy have a big quarrel and their child is very upset. He could read and write, but now he begins to hesitate and make mistakes. (Until there is harmony again in the home, he will be troubled.) When studying development, remember t hat most children progress fairly steadily, and those who do not, need special help.
Why a knowledge of Child Development Helps the Teacher
            Development and growth are often described as happening at a certain age. This only for convenience and age is merely a rough guide. For example, most children start to say a few words by the time they are two years old, but some may start to talk at 12 months, and some not until they are about three. Yet all may be quite normal children.
            It is more helpful to consider stages of development. A child must be helped to pass through each stage successfully, before he can do well at the next stage. So, if you try to teach a baby to run before he can walk, you are wasting your time and harming the baby. This seems obvious, but when teaching, stages may be missed unless the teacher is careful. A child needs plenty of practice with matching and grouping before he starts simple addition. He must be successful in all the pre–reading stages before he can confidently tackle a reading book. The steps between the stages are small and a good teacher makes them so small that a child does not notice them, but feels happy and successful in his work.
            A good teacher should know the normal stages of development to be expected from children in his class, but he should also know what happens before and after those stages. Help the child according to the stage he has reached, not according to his age.
            The more we study children, the more we can help them. Education is a two–way business. The children learn from us but we also learn from the children.
The Development of the Junior School Child
            A child does not suddenly change from an infant into a junior. It is a gradual development and some children are slower than others. For the first two or three years the junior school teacher needs a good understanding of the younger child, because the young junior needs to be treated and taught in a similar way to the infant.
            The junior child has good physical control, and enjoys practicing skills, sometimes of the most intricate movements. He can sit and concentrate for quite a long time if he is interested, but he still needs plenty of change and variety in his lessons. His hand and eye coordination is good, and his writing, painting, modeling, etc., should show satisfactory progress, as he becomes neater and attends more to detail. When reading he can see smaller print than the infant.
            Socially the junior is ready to cooperate, take his turn and work in groups. His peers (children of his own age group) are very important and he will work hard for their respect and friendship. Adults are less important, but if he likes someone he will try to imitate that person. The adult may be so admired and copied, that we call it hero–worship. Teachers must make sure the children have good heroes to copy.
            He is more stable emotionally than the infant. But he can still be frightened by an unkind adult, or become nervous in strange situations. He is learning to control his temper. He is beginning to understand that other people have feelings, and is ready to give friendship and kindness. The teacher should build up his courage, confidence and thoughtfulness for others, by praise and encouragement.     
            Morally he has quite a good idea of right and wrong. Sometimes he expects the teacher to act as judge, so be careful to be fair. He will notice how people behave and he needs good, honest, truthful adults to copy.
            He will continue to appreciate beautiful displays, pictures, music, etc. it is the junior teacher’s duty to foster and extend this understanding. Intellectually the opportunities are enormous for extending the child’s mind. Help him to learn many interesting facts about the world. His memory is particularly keen and he likes repetition. It is a good time for learning tables, spelling, poetry, etc. but remembering without understanding is useless. He will gladly practice skills such as reading and writing of all kinds, and he needs step-by-step help. Although he is more ready than the infant to listen to the teacher talking, the emphasis must still be on doing. The child needs to solve his own problems with practical apparatus; he needs to experiment and discover. Most junior teachers talk too much. The child is the one who needs to develop his use of language. The teacher should use the questioning technique to encourage the child to think for himself.
            The junior’s interest are wider than those  of the infant. He likes to know what happens in other areas, though visits in his local environment will provide most teaching topics. Machines and inventors catch his interest. He will read books of knowledge and adventure. The classroom still needs to be full of stimulating activities, practical apparatus, interest tables, displays of work, various kinds of books and opportunities for the child to use his imagination and creative talents.

How a Child Learns
Reasons for Learning (Motivation)
No child will learn unless he has a reason for doing so. The most usual reasons are: his own interest and curiosity; his wish to be like an adult; his wish to succeed; his desire for praise; his desire to please the teacher or his parents; his fear of failure or of punishment. A teacher must be very careful that a child does not become too anxious and fearful, for if this happens his fear prevents him from learning properly.
Imitation
A child learns a great deal by copying the example of grown-up people, and in school the teacher must try to set the child a good example in everything. A child will also imitate his friends, and the teacher should encourage him to imitate the good and hard–working children, by praising them.
Listening
A child learns by listening, but he soon tires of sitting still and just listening. Things which help to make listening more interesting, like gramophones and the radio, are called aural aids. (Aural means ‘of the ear’.).
Seeing
A child learns by seeing. Anything which helps him to learn through his eyes is called a visual aid. Objects, pictures, charts and diagrams are all visual aids. (visual means ‘of the eye’).
Doing
A child learns by doing. Though hearing and seeing help the child to learn, he must be active and do things for himself before he can master a subject. A child cannot concentrate for long if he is just listening. He can concentrate longer if he listens and watches, but he can concentrate best when he is doing something himself. A good teacher plans his lessons so that a child spends only a very short time sitting still and listening. He plans to use visual aids, but most of the lesson is taken up with the children being active.
Understanding
Without understanding there can be no proper learning. The teacher must make quite sure that all the children in the class understand the lesson. Each child should be encouraged and trained to ask questions when he does not understand. A teacher should never be cross or laugh at a child who does not honestly follow the lesson, and asks questions. Asking questions shows an interested, lively mind. All great men and women have questioning minds.
            If only some of the children have understood a lesson, the teacher can give them a special activity, while he gives extra help to the others.
Habits
Good habits are very useful, as they save us a great deal of time and energy. In the first place a child has to learn a habit, but after it has been thoroughly learned he can do it almost without thinking.
            The infant takes a long time to write because he has to think carefully how to form each letter. To write ‘Pius’ the child may think something like this ‘Pius’. It has a big P. how do I make a big P? a straight line and a curve at the top. “I”: It has a small straight line with a dot on top. “u”: I must bring my pencil down, round, up and down again. “s”: It looks like a curly snake.’
            Watch a small child learning to write, and you can imagine him thinking like this as he slowly writes each letter. Then look at a child in the top class; how quickly and well he writes if he has been taught properly. He has learned a good habit of writing, and he can form the letters almost without thinking. Or watch a little girl learning to knit. How slow she is as she thinks where she should put her wool, but once she has mastered the skill of knitting and it has become a habit, she can do it very quickly and almost without thinking.
            When learning to speak the child is very slow, but once the speech habits are formed, the child can speak quickly and easily. With reading habits the same thing applies, slow learning at first; then once the skill is mastered, quicker and quicker reading. Habits may take years to learn and they should be very carefully taught, so that they will help the child in his education. Bad habits are a waste of time, and they are very difficult to break or change. Teachers should watch very carefully that the child is only forming good habits.
Revision and Practice
Repetition (doing an action over and over again) forms a habit and this is one way of helping a child to learn. After a child has been taught something which the teacher has helped him to understand, it should be revised and practiced often, so that the child will not forget it.
Attention and Inattention
It is important that the child attends to the lessons. Naturally he will not learn if he is not paying attention. This is rather a big point, so I emphasize it.
Causes of inattention in class:
1.      Lack of interest.
2.      Lack of materials.
3.      The work is too easy or too hard, and the child does not attend either because he cannot understand or because he already knows the work.
4.      Lack of variety.
5.      The teacher does all the talking and the child has no activity.
6.      The timetable is badly arranged; e.g. two very difficult lessons are put one after the other, and there are not enough breaks between lessons.
7.      Bored and uninteresting teacher.
8.      Teacher with weak discipline. One naughty child influencing others.
9.      Outside distractions (e.g. noise from other classes, people passing by).
10.  Lack of fresh air, sleep or food. Very hot or very cold weather.
11.  Chairs too big or too little, making children uncomfortable.
12.  Illness
Check inattention and help attention by:
1.      Interesting lessons and interesting subject matter.
2.      Good introduction and sufficient apparatus.
3.      Work suitable for the ability of the children. (group work and well–prepared schemes).
4.      Plenty of variety.
5.      Children doing most of the talking activity, helped by the teacher.
6.      Careful planning of the timetable.
7.      Interesting and happy teacher, showing a liking for the children and the work.
8.      Firm but reasonable discipline depending on the age of the children.
9.      Letting the children look at whatever is distracting them, and then calling them back to the lesson (e.g. let the class look at the people passing by, then say, ‘Now we have seen what is happening, we must carry on with our lesson’).
10.  Adequate fresh air by keeping windows open. Advise parents about sleep and food.
11.  Seats of the correct size.
12.  Help the sick child to get medical attention.
Memory
Learning depends to a great extent on memory. When we talk of a child’s memory we mean his power to remember things. Some children seem to be born with better memories than others, but the teacher can help the child to remember by attending to all the points mentioned in this section. ‘How a child learns.
The Child as an Individual
Individual Differences
            Although we have been considering the development of an average child, it is important to remember that every child differs in some way from every other child in the class. While one child may find Mathematics easy, another may find it difficult; one may be very good at Reading, another may be very slow; one may be very upset by a cross word from the teacher, but another may have to be spoken to many times before he appears to hear. It is important to remember that each child in the class is an individual, and needs slightly different treatment form every other child.
Differences of Environment
            Environment means the type of home and family from which the child comes. A teacher should find out as much as possible about each child’s environment. One may come form a rich home, another from a poor home; one may come from a large family, another from a small family; one may be the youngest child in the family, another the oldest; one may have sensible parents who listen to advice, another may have foolish parents who continue to do foolish things (e.g. give the child a poor diet, refuse to take him to the hospital for treatment when he is ill, do not help him to practice the laws of hygiene). The following examples will give the reader some idea of what to observe.
            One child comes from a humble home. The parents are illiterate, and although they have not much money they are sensible. They ask the teacher for advice about diet and cleanliness, and they feed their child as well as they can with their small amount of money. The mother takes her child to market, when she can, so that he can observe many things. When he asks questions about the things he sees, she explains as well as possible; she shows her child how to use money and count his change. She tells her child the house must be kept clean and free from germs, and the child must help her so that all the family will be healthy. The father talks to his child. If he hears anything interesting in the town he tells his child about it. When possible he takes his child out with him to the post office, the agricultural office or other public place. He takes the child to the farm not only to work, but also to learn the names of the plants, birds and insects that they see. In this way the child is learning all the time, he is getting ideas and his general knowledge is good. In school he is bright and interested in learning, because his parents have taught him to observe and think.
            Consider another child from a foolish family; the rich mother is enjoying herself with her friends, and cannot be bothered to talk and play with her child. In this family, too, the father is away for weeks and even months, because he is very busy making money, and he sees his child only very occasionally. The child is left to the care of a servant, who may be quite good and kind, but a servant cannot train a child’s mind nor form his character as a parent can. This child will appear dull in school because he has had no loving parent to awaken his mind. School training can never take the place of a good sensible family life, and teachers can only build on the foundations started at home. If, however, the teacher knows something about the type of home from which the child comes he can be more understanding towards the child. Remember that the child is not to blame for the foolishness of his parents, but as teachers we must help and guide the child and if possible through the Parent Teacher Association advise and guide the parents as well.
            I have only dealt with this subject very briefly, but the teacher will soon notice many different types of home environment and note the effect of environment on the children.
Differences of Ability
            Every child is born with a different ability to learn and reason. We call this intelligence. If a child is born with a poor brain, nothing can be done to make it a very good intelligent brain, but the child can be helped to make the very best use of the brain he has. It is important to remember this.
            A child with a poor intelligence may be doing his best, yet his work may not be up to the average standard of the class. The teacher must watch carefully and if the child is working hard he must be praised for trying. The teacher must help him very slowly, and step by step. A very clever child may find the work easy, and may not bother to work nearly as hard as the slow child. Often the bright child is given a great deal of praise when he has made very little effort. A child like this should be given more difficult work so that he also has to work hard to get good marks.
            In chapter 1, The Aims of Education, I said we were helping each child develop to the best of his ability. The clever, the average and the dull child are all part of our society, and all have an important job to do as citizens of their country. A lazy worker is no good in any position, and even if a man is very intelligent, he is no use to the community unless he works. A child with poor intelligence, who has been trained and helped to develop as well as he can, will find a job where he can serve his community well, and where people of real understanding will honour him for his conscientious work.
Physical Differences
            It is easy to pick out the differences in the bodies of the children. Some are tall, some are short, some are fat, some are thin, some have good eyesight, some do not see very well and have to wear glasses, some are good at exercises in P.E., while others find this lesson difficult. Proper diet, rest and care during illness make a difference to the way a child grows, but children also take after their parents and grandparents, and if they are all small in stature we would not expect the child to grow tall, though he should be strong and healthy.
Moral, Social and Emotional Differences
            The differences between the children’s moral behavior will depend on how they have been taught at home. The teacher must build on the home training and help each child to obey the laws of God and of his country.
            Some children naturally like to play with a crowd of their fellows, while some prefer to be alone. The ones who like to be with others must be encouraged to be independent sometimes, while the ones who like to be alone must sometimes be encouraged to take part in group activities.
            The teacher will soon notice the emotional differences between the children. One is calm and quiet, another is very excitable, another is easily upset and soon cries, while another loses his temper very quickly. The teacher must remember that emotions are good if used in a sensible way, and encourage the children to control them.
            In conclusion we should be thankful that we are not all alike and equal, like beans out of the same pod. Life would be very uninteresting if we all resembled each other exactly in every way. Each child and adult with his own special individual differences has a part to play in the society where he lives. Children have different shapes and sizes mentally, physically and spiritually, and as teachers we must treat each one as an individual and help him to develop his own personality.
Children with Special Disabilities
            Children who have special disabilities are those who are blind, deaf, dumb or have very weak brains. Teachers who teach these children need special training, and the children should attend special schools. There are few of these special schools in Africa, but as the educational system grow, more schools will gradually be built. At present children with these serious defects are probably not sent to school at all, but the teachers in the ordinary school may get children who are slightly affected by these disabilities, and he should know how to help them.
Children who cannot See very well
            The teacher can notice eye trouble when a child does very bad writing, or copies incorrectly from the blackboard. Infant children often write letters back–to–front or upside down, but that is quite a natural stage in the training of their hand and eye coordination. If, however, a child continues to have difficulty writing after two or three years there may be something wrong with his eyes. Let the child sit in the front desk of the class, and be patient. There is no treatment the teacher can give. The eyes are very delicate organs and must be examined by a specialist. The teacher should do all he can to encourage the parents to take the child to the hospital.
            A great deal can be done for these children nowadays, especially if they are sent to the hospital while they are quite young. Glasses can be fitted, but remember that only trained people in hospital can fit the correct glasses. The doctor can also give special exercises to help the eyes.
Children who cannot Hear very well
It is often more difficult to notice a child who does not hear very well. Quite often when such a child does not understand what the teacher is saying, he will just sit quietly and will be afraid to ask the teacher to explain again. If the teacher discovers there is a child who frequently misunderstands, or disobeys, the teacher should think before he gets cross, and consider the possibility that the child is slightly deaf. Watch the child carefully, and notice if he hears you when he is not looking at you. If he only hears when he is watching your lips move, he is probably a little deaf. Again the only help the teacher can give is to be patient and move him to the front of the class. Encourage the parents to take him to the hospital, as the earlier the treatment is started the more likely it is to succeed.
Children who cannot speak very well
            Sometimes the teacher will have a child in the class who cannot speak very well because of some trouble in the shape of his mouth. The teacher can only be patient and encourage the parents to take the child to the hospital as soon as possible, for a small operation may cure the trouble. More often the teacher will have children in the class who make mistakes in sounding certain letters. Do not make such a child uncomfortable by criticizing him in front of his friends, but help him by practicing words with the sounds he finds difficult and correcting any mistakes quietly.
            Another speech trouble is stuttering. This is when a child tries to say a word and repeats the first letter over and over again as he tries to say a word. ‘P-p-please may I h-h-h-have a b-b-b-book?’ This is usually due to a kind of nervousness and the teacher should be very kind and helpful. Try to ignore the stuttering as much as possible, praise the child when he does any good work and give him confidence. Try to make him feel a successful and useful member of the class and the stutter may disappear.
Children who have rather a Weak Brain
            These children need to be treated most kindly and gently. They should be taught in a special group, and given an earlier stage of work than the rest of the class. They should be made to feel part of the class, however, by being given easy but important monitoring jobs, like cleaning the blackboard, watering the flowers or collecting the pencils. Children who are not clever often copy the work of brighter children sitting near by, because they are afraid of getting bad marks. This is not likely to happen if the teacher gives the children simple work to suit their ability. When they do their best they must be praised and encouraged, even if the result is not very good.
            These child must be treated with understanding, and helped to realize they are part of the community, with a special job to do. If they are laughed at or treated unkindly, they will not understand why. Because their brains are weak, unkind treatment may even cause them to grow up to be thieves, wanting to hurt the community as the community has hurt them. The community has a big responsibility to these people, and those of use with good intelligence must use it to aid those of our brothers who are weak. The best way to help them is to see that they have a simple but necessary part to play in the life of the community.
Backwardness
If a child cannot keep up with the rest of the class and is always getting poor marks, we say he is backward. He needs special help and attention, but before the teacher can help him, he should try to discover the reason for the backwardness.
Reasons for backwardness
1.      Cause: The child may not have a very good brain and he just cannot do the work of the other children.
How to  help: He should be given special work suitable to his ability. He should be given plenty of praise and encouragement when he tries, but he should not be expected to do the same work as the other children.
2.      Cause: The child may have missed a great deal of school through illness, or because his parents do not send him regularly to school. If the child has been ill it is no one’s fault, but if absence from school is the parents’ fault, the teacher should talk to them and show them how they are preventing their child from learning.
How to help: These children should be given some extra help, in a group with other backward children or by themselves, during playtime or when the teacher has some other spare time. A good headteacher will arrange for these children to have some special help. Either he will have them in his room and help them himself, or he will take the class while the teacher gives them special help.
3.      Cause: The child may have missed some schooling two or three years before and may never have caught up, or he may have had a lazy teacher, or a teacher who had poor discipline and allowed him to play about; thus he missed his work and did not attend, so he gradually became more and more backward.
How to help: Special help is again necessary, and the teacher should go back and explain the very simple beginnings which the child never learned. For example if a child cannot understand sums about metres and centimeters the teacher must go right back to the beginning and teach the child how to measure and use a ruler. Then he must explain the first simple sums, and give the child practice until he can do them. Gradually he will progress to harder sums.
4.      Cause: The child may have a special disability
How to help: He usually needs special medical care.
A child may be quite good at most subjects and backward in only one. He then needs help in that one subject. It is easier to organize the class if all the backward children are put in a group, but the teacher must be careful he does not make them feel peculiar or different. Tell them they are in the special group so that they can be helped to catch up with the others, or because they are being given a little special work.

African Child Development



                Much research and study about how children develop is taking place in Europe and the USA. Be careful when you read books, because what is written may not apply to African children. Many African universities have research projects, so keep looking in modern teachers’ journals for the results. Each teacher can do his own research by observing children carefully.
Two Important Warnings
1. Do not jump to conclusions. If you observe that most children do a certain thing by a particular age, do not conclude that a child who does not fit the pattern is unintelligent. There may be special reasons. If you can discover these reasons, you can help the child better. For example, most children can weight accurately and work out simple weight sums between the ages of seven and eight. One boy cannot. What is the reason? Perhaps he is undernourished and cannot concentrate. Perhaps he came from another area and lacks experiences (no shop in his previous class, no sand or clay or weigh, no balance, no scales); maybe he has been ill and missed much of the early teaching; maybe he is afraid of failing, because his last teacher or his father has been too strict with him; perhaps he is ill and the fever makes his hand shake; maybe he is unhappy because of trouble at home.
2. Observing children carefully means that we find out many things which should be treated with confidence. Teachers must never gossip about children. The parents must know that anything we learn about their children is a secret, kept in our own heads. Our professional integrity (honesty) must be guarded by all teachers. If you want to discuss or write about your observations (and it is good to do these things) always use fictitious names so that no one can guess the identity of a particular child.
Rates of Development
                Research shows that most growth is irregular with quick periods and slow periods. Physical development is very fast in the prenatal stage (before birth) and during the first two years of life. The rate is then much slower until puberty, when the boy or girl grows quickly again.
                The rate of learning is irregular too. When starting to read the child may remember many words when the teacher plays the Flash card game. Then may follow a slow period, when he struggles with the reading book. if the teacher is helpful and encourages practice there will follow another period of rapid progress. It is during these periods of slow learning that the child may become frustrated, unhappy and stop trying. It is important for the teacher to recognize the different rates of development (and the rates will vary for each child), so that praise and encouragement will help the child to progress to the next stage.
Development of the Whole Child
                Development goes on at the same time (but at different rates) in all areas. We see the totlal child, but it is a very complex picture and often we study one section at a time. Development can be looked at under different headings, but the following divisions are quite useful: physical, intellectual (including language), social, emotional and spiritual (including moral and aesthetic). Remember that one aspect of development affects all others.
Heredity and Environment
                When a child is conceived, 23 chromosomes from the mother combine with 23 chromosomes from the father to make a new cell. The genes are carried on the chromosomes. The genes carry the heredity from both parents. Form the new cell develops a completely unique being. (in the case of identical twins the cell splits into two, and two babies grow with the same heredity, but the environment will be slightly different for each). From the genes the child will inherit characteristics of the father and of the mother, and of the grandparents and the great–grandparents. Certain things are decided at conception, such as the colour of the eyes or hair, the height of the adult-to-be and the sex. It is also decided that certain things are possible for the new human being, and other things are impossible. But no one knows what these possibilities are:
                The environment is all the factors outside the child affecting his development. The physical environment includes his home, the way he is fed, the toys he is given to interest him, and his experiences as he explores the world around him. The social environment includes the family, especially the parents. As the child grows older it also includes the people who live nearby, and most important, the teacher. The action of the environment on the genotype (described by the genes) produces the phenotype, the person as he develops. If a child is removed from his home at birth, he will grow into a different person from the one he would have been if he had stayed at home. His environment will be different. Some children with good inherited characteristics may not develop well, because of a poor environment. For example, a baby may inherit the possibility of a tall, strong body, because both his parents are tall and strong, but if the child does not get the nourishment he requires he may get rickets and other malformations. Although his genes laid the foundations for tallness and strength, he will be short, misshapen and weak. The environment has hindered his development. Another child may have the genes of great intelligence, such as would make him a scientist, a writer or a great teacher, but because he is given no stimulation, no toys, no help with language, no interesting experiences, he will not develop well. The potential (possibility for good development) was there, but the environment was poor.
                No one knows the potential of any one baby, so the environment must be the best possible to give all children the opportunity to develop properly. Remember that the womb is the first environment and if the mother lacks good food, or if she gets too tired, worried or anxious, this will adversely affect the baby even before he is born. (Although identical twins have the same heredity, they will not have exactly the same environment. They will sleep at different sides of the bed, one will be picked up before the other, one will be washed before the other, etc. these differences are small, gut they are enough to show that even two children with the same heredity grow up with different personalities, because of environment.)
                Child development is a very big subject and other books should be consulted. Rememeber it is the interaction of heredity and environment which produces the individual. He develops from within, following the stages of all human beings, but this development is helped or hindered depending on the environment.
Basic Needs of all Children
                There are certain things, necessary for growth and development, which apply to all children (and adults too for that matter). Without these basic needs no one can develop properly.
Physical needs: Food, shelter, rest and sleep, exercise and play
                A nourishing diet of proteins and vegetables as well as carbohydrates is necessary. Supervise any meals which are cooked at school. The buildings of home and school need to be kept in good repair. Advise the parents to send the children to school in suitable protective clothing. The child needs plenty of opportunity for movement, not only in P.E. lessons but also between lessons. Sometimes it is said that a change is as good as a rest, and careful planning of the school day will help give alternate quiet sitting times and active, moving about times. Sleep is most important, or the child will not be able to concentrate.
Emotional Needs: Love and security, success and a feeling of importance
                For the development of a human being, love is necessary and without it no one can progress. A child should feel that whatever happens, his loving family will care for him. This love and care leads to a feeling of security. A secure child is usually a well–behaved child. Often a child misbehaves simply to find out if anyone cares enough to stop him. If the adult shows that he likes the child and cares to help him, the child will respond by trying to be good.
                To help the child to feel secure in school, the teacher must be very regular in his behavior. A teacher who punishes without warning, or who ignores something one day but punishes the child for the same thing the next day, will puzzle and confuse him. The child will then feel insecure. He will not be able to work well, because he will be wondering what the teacher will do next. There should be rules in the classroom, sensible rules for the good of all, and the child should understand them clearly. He will not then be surprised if the teacher is cross when a rule is broken. The regular daily routine of school helps a child to feel secure, because the same sort of thing happens each day and he knows what to expect.
                A child wants to be himself; a person quite different from anyone else. Encourage each child to make the best of himself. What we think of ourselves is sometimes called a self–concept (a picture in our minds of ourselves). Each child needs to have a good self–concept, and to feel that he is a successful and important member of the class. Try to build up good self–concepts, by finding something every day to praise in each child. ‘what lovely neat writing, Ali.’ ‘How hard you have tried with your sums today, Mary.’ ‘You have been thoughtful and kind today, Musa.’ ‘What an interesting specimen you found today, Anna’. Each child you speak to will not only feel successful, he will also feel important. He will be happy that all the other children look at him when he is praised, and he will try even harder to do well. Naughty children are often those the teacher has forgotten to praise and encourage. The teacher will call a naughty child’s name and he will feel important, but not in a good way. He will have a bad self–concept.
Social and Moral Needs: Leading and following, being part of a group, an understanding of right and wrong.
                All children like to be a leader sometimes, as this makes them feel important. Try to give all the children in your class a turn at leading. They also need to be part of a group, and to take turns at following. Sometimes there is a child whom no group wants and he is pushed away (called an isolate). The teacher should watch for such a child, and help him to join in. we all need to be on our own sometimes, but in our society it is necessary to learn how to take our place in a group. This learning starts early in the Primary school.
                Everyone needs to learn what his particular society considers right or wrong. Teach the child gently to behave in the right way, and to dislike wrong actions. Guide the child to understand the difference between imagination, dreams and real life (see page 23).
Emotional Needs: expression of anger, fear, tenderness and happiness
                Anger and fear are natural, but we need to help the child to express them in the correct way. Help him to control his anger, and to use the energy to improve poor conditions. Help him to realize that fear may help to protect him in dangerous situations, but he also needs to learn when it is necessary to be brave. (Clay and sand play, drama and story telling help children express safely, emotions like anger and fear.).
                Tenderness also needs expression. No man is much use to his country if he selfishly tries to get everything for himself, without caring who is hurt or troubled. In an educated community the poor and weak are protected. Help each child to express tenderness and caring by helping any sick or weaker children, and by being kind to animals.
                The classroom should be a happy place where children and teacher can have fun together. (But be careful never to laugh at a child, because great harm could be done to his self–concept).
Intellectual Needs: Stimulation, opportunities to experiment and discover, opportunities to use language
                For the mind to develop properly every child needs to be stimulated by adults. He needs things to see, hear, taste, touch, smell. He needs opportunities to discover interesting things. The more the child is stimulated to experiment and find out, the more his interest and curiosity will grow. The child needs adults to help him have stimulating experiences.
                At first the parents are the teachers. A tin to rattle will increase the child’s listening ability, his physical coordination as he learns to hold it, his understanding of shape as he looks at it and feels it, his language as his parents tell him it is a rattle. This is only one small example of how parents can stimulate a baby. He needs many, many things to listen to, see, touch, taste and smell; things which bump, roll, bounce, float, sink, thread, fit one into another, can be put into groups, arranged in sizes, built one on top of the other, mixed together for food, looked at carefully, copied, etc. all the time the parents should be talking and explaining in words. With stimulation and language the child’s intellectual needs will be met. Language is very, very important. As a child spends five or six years at home before he comes to school, he needs language stimulation at home. Parents should be told how important it is to spend some time each day talking to their children, telling them what is happening, asking questions, and encouraging the children to tell the adults about all they see and do together.
                The teacher will build on the work started by the parents, helping the child to develop and use his language, so that he can express his thoughts clearly. The intellectual needs will then be met with more and more interesting lessons.
The Development of the Primary Child
                Before the child comes to school he passes through a number of very important developmental stages, but space prevents them being discussed here. Parents and teachers, who are trying to give children a good start in life, should study books on pre–school development.
                Usually a child starts school at about five or six years, and he is called an infant until he is about seven or eight. Then he is called a junior or a middle school child, until he is about 12 years old.
The Development of the Infant School Child
                The child at five or six is well developed physically. He can run, skip and jump. His balance is good, and he can turn and change direction quite quickly. He can make large motor movements better than fine motor movements. He cannot sit still for long, and he needs plenty of bodily activity. If he has been sitting still for a while let him dance or play a short game, e.g. ‘Who can stand as tall as a giant?’ ‘Who can make himself as small as a rate?’ “Be a drummer.” (Children beat the air and pretend to have drums) ‘Be a farmer digging the ground.’
                Infant children should be encouraged to make big drawings and big letters with big paintbrushes and big pencils and crayons. This helps them to practice and develop the finer movements of the fingers and the wrist. Children should be shown big pictures and big printing, while they develop the fine coordination of the muscles of the eye. Sometimes coordination between hand and eye is poor, due to lack of experience (all the pre–reading activities will help); and sometimes it is because the small nerves have not finished growing. We can, and should, give children plenty of practice to develop coordination. But we must also wait for the inner growth, and never force a child, or he will become frustrated and frightened.
                Socially the child at five or six is ready to play and work side by side with other children, and he enjoys their company. But he does not really cooperate with others very well, nor for long. He can be taught to play reading, number and activity games in a group. It is good training to encourage a child to share with others in a group, and to wait for his turn. The group should be small, only two or three children. The teacher should not be surprised if the children do not agree together very well.
                Adults are very important to the infant. In school the child considers his teacher the most important adult. He will copy your actions and speech patterns. He will work hard to get your praise. Try to help each child individually as often as possible, and make sure that each one knows you value him as a person.
                This will also help him emotionally. He needs to feel he is important to the teacher. He cannot control his emotions much and is easily frightened or made miserable. Try to make your classroom a happy place, where the child can rely on your friendship and firm, kind help.
                A young child has little idea of right and wrong. At home and at school he will gradually learn how his society expects him to behave. remember that a small child who lies, may do so because he finds it difficult to tell the difference between what has actually happened and what he has imagined. In fact he is not telling lies in the adult sense at all. Never say to a young child, ‘That is a lie.’ Just say, ‘Well I think you have made a mistake.’ ‘Go and look again’ or ‘Think again about what happened.’ Make as little fuss as possible. Give the child activities which will gradually help him to know the difference between reality and his imagination. Stealing is another problem with the young child. At home he will have started to learn about ‘mine’, ‘yours’ and ‘ours’, but his understanding will be poor. The teacher will help him to share, but also he needs to learn to respect other people’s property and work. Sometimes a child takes something from another because he is jealous. Perhaps you have neglected him and he is trying to get your attention. Sometimes he may take things because he is unhappy, because his parents do not seem to care for him. Try to let the child know you like him, and help him to return what he has taken. Again make as little fuss as possible, because at this stage of moral development the child does not understand why it is wrong.
                An infant child often seems to appreciate beautiful and wonderful things, and we must foster this aesthetic development. Try to have beautiful flowers, copies of famous pictures and examples of good local crafts in your room. Make attractive displays, and change them every fortnight. Display the children’s own work neatly. Show them charts with careful, even printing. Encourage them to enjoy beautiful music and movement; invite local bands and dancers into the school, and help the children to make their own music and dances. Help them to enjoy the feel of things, rough, silky, spikey; and the smell of things, sweetly perfumed flowers, food cooking, refreshing rain. The classroom should be attractive and tidy, as well as being interesting.
                Intellectually the child can be helped to develop his potential ability. Intelligence grows through understanding and experience. The primary class should be full of activities. An intelligent active mind is one which asks questions, and tries to solve problems, looks at the problems in as many ways as possible, considers relationships and all the possible answers to the questions or problems, and using experience chooses the answer which seems best. At the same time an intelligent mind realizes that with more experience a better answer may be found. The infant teacher can help to develop this kind of intelligent mind.
                The infant child needs to do things for himself. He needs to see, hear, touch, explore, act, dance, paint, move, experiment, make things, take things apart and put them together again, and try to find things out for himself. In this way he will gradually understand more about the world, and through understanding he will think intelligently.
                There should be little telling in the infant classes, but there should be a great deal of discussion about what the children are doing. Through language the child is helped to remember what he has done, think about what he is doing, and plan what he will do next, or what he will do later on in the day, or tomorrow, or next week. This thinking ahead is an important part of intelligent thought. The teacher should not tell the child much, but help him to think through asking the correct kind of question. (see notes on questioning.)
                Many educationists think that the early years are the most important in the child’s whole life. If he is happy and likes school, he will continue to like the junior and the secondary schools. We know that if a child is not happy, he will learn little. If he is stimulated by the infant teacher and develops every side of his personality well, he will continue to be an interested, keen learner in later years. As a house cannot be built without good foundations, so junior and secondary teachers can only build on the good foundations laid by the infant teachers. An infant teacher’s work is very, very important, and he should make a special study of child psychology to understand the development of the young child.


HERE ARE EIGHT KEY FEATURES OF THE NEW OPERATING SYSTEM



Microsoft has announced Windows 10, the next version of its desktop operating system. The Redmond giant has paid heed to feedback from unhappy Windows 8 users and has overhauled the user interface besides adding some features already available on rival platforms.
Here are eight key features of the new operating system.
1. Start menu makes a comeback
Microsoft has been demonstrating the new Start menu for quite some time, but the company has finally made it official with Windows 10.
The menu features a search bar and customisable space for pinning app shortcuts and live tiles. It looks very similar to the traditional Start menu that Microsoft discontinued with the Windows 8. On non-touch devices, it will replace the Start screen.
2. Everything runs in Windows

Modern UI apps from the Windows Store now also open in the same format that desktop apps do and can be resized and moved around.
Just like Windows 8.1, these apps have title bars at the top that allow users to maximize, minimize, and close with a click.  
3. Snap enhancements

Users can now have up to four apps snapped on the same screen with what Microsoft calls a new quadrant layout.
Windows 10 will also show other apps and programmes running for additional snapping and will make smart suggestions on filling available screen space with other open apps.
4. Multiple desktops, new task view

With Windows 10, users can create virtual desktops for different purposes and projects and switch between desktops and pick up where they left on each desktop, similar to OS X's Spaces.
There is a new task view that displays all open windows and desktops. This is also very similar to the Expose feature of Apple's OS X.
5. One Windows version across devices, Continuum

Windows 10 will run on all devices across form factors, including phones, tablets, 2-in-1s and PCs.
The OS will come with a feature called Continuum which will detect when you remove a keyboard from a 2-in-1 and switch to a touch-optimised UI with big tiles. It will also have a universal app marketplace.
6. Enterprise features


Windows 10 will come with a number of features for enterprise, including a customised store and corporate data protection. Administrators will be able to use Mobile Device Management for all devices.
7. Universal search
The Windows 10 Start menu will also feature a universal search box similar to Apple OS X's Spotlight feature and offers web results in addition to results obtained by searching across files, apps and settings.
8. Updated command prompt

Microsoft has pleased power users with some improvements in the command prompt interface. The command prompt now supports copy and paste keyboard shortcuts so you'll be able to use Ctrl+C, Ctrl+V commands easily.

Saturday, 4 October 2014

Windows 10: How the new Start Menu works


Microsoft Corporation announced its Windows 10 operating system to replace the largely unpopular Windows 8, skipping a number to mark a leap toward unifying the way people work on tablets, phones and traditional computers

It might not be the key feature in Windows 10, but one of the most striking design changes in Windows 10 harks back to an old one — the Start Menu.
The menu has been given a Windows Live Tile-style makeover, and you can now pin whatever you want to the panel on the right.
So, just like on Windows Phone, you could pin a preferred contact or favoured app. Remember that Live Tiles are dynamic, so they can show you the latest news or whether for your current location.
You could also pin a folder you regularly use; it's up to you. The left of the Start Menu works like the old Windows 7 one used to — so you can search for whatever you want and it can be activated using the Start key on your keyboard, and you can see recently accessed programs and browse through other programs, too, via an All Apps menu.
The All Apps option now features a vertical scrollbar, so you don't get any of the multi-me menu stacking that you used to get in Windows. As with Windows 7 and 8, the best way to find anything is by searching for it rather than browsing for it.
By bringing the Start Menu back, Microsoft is acknowledging that the Start screen went too far for some users, especially in the corporate space. But those Modern UI apps (now referred to as Universal apps we think) still provide the link with touchscreens.
But in reality bringing back the Start Menu doesn't change the functionality of Windows — the Start screen was the Start Menu of Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 and, while it was full screen, contained all of the same functionality (you could hit the Windows key and immediately start typing to search, for example).
The top of the Start Menu now has your user account icon at the top, so you can lock your PC, change your account picture or sign out. Another power button enables you to sleep, shut down or restart your PC.
A panel underneath this contains access to your files via the File Explorer as well as shortcuts to your Documents and Pictures. We actually ended up pinning the File Explorer icon to our taskbar just as it is in Windows 8. An arrow beside the File Explorer icon in the Start Menu shows you your most recently accessed folders for quick access.
As in Windows 8.1 you can right-click on the Start button itself to get a 'power menu' — quick access to the Control Panel and other more advanced features such as Run, Disk Management and the Task Manager.
One big change is that you can now resize the menu itself. This doesn't work that well at the moment as you can only make it flatter (more of a horizontal bar) or higher vertically. You can't freely resize it to form a smaller version of the now-old Start screen.
Right-clicking any item in the Start Menu brings up other options, such as pinning to the taskbar, removing the app from the Start Menu or, where appropriate, removing the app from your PC. As with the Windows 8 Start screen, you can drag the Live Tiles to rearrange them.
You can also turn individual Live Tiles off (perhaps you don't want to see your latest emails in the menu, for example) as well a change the size of the tile just as you can on Windows Phone and could in Windows 8 and 8.1. Small, Medium, Wide and Large are the various sizes available.

Right-clicking on blank space in the menu gives you two other options — Personalize and Properties. Personalization is currently about as useless as a chocolate teapot — it just takes you to a subset of the Control Panel that enables you to change the hue of the Start Menu as well as your window borders. This setting will be overwritten if you change the theme, however.
Properties is a lot more interesting. It takes you to the Taskbar and Start Menu Properties applet in Control Panel. Strangely, you're put into the Taskbar tab by default. Clicking on the Start Menu tab shows you a few options, the top of which is a checked box labelled Use the Start Menu instead of the Start screen. We do wonder how many people will choose to get the Start screen back. A handful, we're sure.
Some other options concern privacy for shared user accounts — you can clear the personal information from your Live Tiles as well as options to choose not to 'store and display' recently opened programs in the Start Menu.
A Customize option provides more granular control over what is shown in the Start Menu as well as behavioural characteristics such as whether sub-menus open automatically when you hover over them or whether dragging and dropping is allowed (both of these are permitted by default).
You can also choose to show system administrative tools in the menu and plenty of other things, too, such as the Control Panel itself, This PC (this is what My Computer used to be), your personal user folder or your music and video folders should you wish. It's all very customizable.
Whatever you think of the new Start Menu, one thing is for sure — it makes Microsoft's insistence on not even having a Start button in Windows 8 seem ridiculous. Just think about it; Microsoft missed out Windows's key modus operandi for a whole version.

Apply for the Chevening Scholarship scheme for the 2015/2016 academic year

The Minister of Higher Education announces to prospective and interested candidates that the British High Commission in Yaounde invites outstanding young professionals from Cameroon with leadership potentials to apply for the Chevening Scholarship scheme for the 2015/2016 academic year.
See Press Release.

OFFICIAL TEXTBOOK LIST SECONDARY EDUCATION

Software