Transcription of Chapter 4 Instructional Methods and Learning Styles
{{id}} {{{paragraph}}}
Stephen Petrina. (in press). Curriculum and Instruction For Technology Teachers125 Chapter 4 Instructional Methods and Learning StylesHow do we factor the variability of students into our Instructional Methods ? All students aredifferent, and yet there are many commonalties from student to student. Should students simplydesign their own education, an education that theoretically would be tailored to their needs?Should students be left to their own desires and needs, as Rousseau advocated in Emile in the late1700s and as A. S. Neill advocated in Summerhill in the 1960s? Or are there ideas and methodsthat all students should simply endure, for the good of the social system? We have learned quite abit about accommodating the variability of students through research into Instructional Methods andlearning Styles .
Instructional Methods and Learning Styles ... • Didactic- Direct teaching; Verbal and typically in the form of a lecture or presentation. ... or a combination of direct and indirect instruction, means that the teacher and students reject status quo content and focus on a transformation of themselves or their world.
Domain:
Source:
Link to this page:
Please notify us if you found a problem with this document:
{{id}} {{{paragraph}}}