Teaching Models and Strategies

There are multiple ways that teachers can form approaches to get content across to students. We can narrow down our teaching strategy to 4 basic models. Social Interactive Family, Information-Processing Family, Personal Family, and Behavioral Family. Within these 4 models contain the components of different teaching strategies. Each one of these models is vital to the learning process of the student. Students need all approaches to teaching (direct instruction, cooperative learning, and inquiry practices) in order to be well-rounded learners. All of these modes of teaching work because they help all kinds of students. In the Approaches to Instruction article, we can see the main teaching strategies explained. Direct Instruction is a great model to use when introducing a new topic to students. This is sometimes done through lecturing or questioning. Cooperative learning allows the students to work with each other. After the students have been introduced to the new topic, they have the opportunity to build on it with their peer review and input. Inquiry learning is where the mastery skills of the topic come in. If the students can take what they have learned and apply it to a real concept, then they have mastered the learning. Inquiry is the problem-solving step to understanding how to apply the knowledge that has been learned. These 3 main strategies are the ones used widely by teachers.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

MY Philosophy of Education and Learning

Digital Pedagogy

Digital Age Education