2. Warm-Up Activity
What might be done to create a favorable
teaching and learning atmosphere in
class?
a. Encourage participation in challenging but achievable
activities
b. Discourage questions and dissenting opinions from
students
c. Insist on quiet and focused attention at all times
d. Allow students to do as they please
3. Warm-Up Activity
What might be done to create a favorable
teaching and learning atmosphere in
class?
a. Encourage participation in challenging but
achievable activities
b. Discourage questions and dissenting opinions from
students
c. Insist on quiet and focused attention at all times
d. Allow students to do as they please
4. Warm-Up Activity
Checking the attendance of students is one of the
daily tasks of the teachers that requires much
time. In order to maximize her time in the class,
what can the teacher do regarding checking
attendance?
a. Not call the roll everyday
b. Ask a student to check the attendance
c. Prepare a seat plan
d. Request for a log book
5. Warm-Up Activity
Checking the attendance of students is one of the
daily tasks of the teachers that requires much
time. In order to maximize her time in the class,
what can the teacher do regarding checking
attendance?
a. Not call the roll everyday
b. Ask a student to check the attendance
c. Prepare a seat plan
d. Request for a log book
6. Warm-Up Activity
What should a teacher do if a question is
asked, which she, the teacher cannot
answer?
a. Ignore the question
b. Call another student to answer it
c. Assign the class to look for the answer
d. Admit her lack of knowledge
7. Warm-Up Activity
What should a teacher do if a question is
asked, which she, the teacher cannot
answer?
a. Ignore the question
b. Call another student to answer it
c. Assign the class to look for the answer
d. Admit her lack of knowledge
8. Motivation
Stands for “impulse”, rationale, or driving
force
Is simply one’s reason or purpose for
undertaking an activity
Could originate from the inner self or from
external forces
9. Kinds of Motivation
1. Intrinsic Motivation
Also known as internal motivation
It originates from the student’s inner self
Examples:
To be the most popular
To be the torch bearer
To be declared the best athlete
To be a dean’s lister
10. Kinds of Motivation
2. Extrinsic Motivation
Originates from the learning environment
Includes some forms of incentives intended to
arouse and sustain interest in a learning activity
As a result, the student may work harder or
behave better
Examples:
Rewards, recognition, prizes, etc.
11. High or Positive Motivation
A highly motivated student is observed to do the
following:
Asks questions during a discussion
Facial expression shows intently listening and observing
what is happening in a demonstration
Smiles and nods to show confirmation
Curiously goes around the room to look for more materials
Persists in solving problem until reaching a solution
Does extra work beyond regular hours
Reads more references to gain more information
Actively participates in class discussions
12. Low or Negative Motivation
A poorly motivated student is observed to be
any of the following:
Inattentive with a blank look
Homework or assignments left undone
Seems bored or uninterested
Seldom participates in investigation lessons
Unable to work by himself
Not time conscious, hence wastes time
Depends on classmates for lesson conclusions
Does not listen, instead distracts others
Low performance in tests and other assessments
13. Motivational Strategies
1. Make the students aware of their own
progress
2. Vary teaching strategies
3. Let your sense of humor work in every
lesson. They will look forward to a fun-filled
lesson.
4. Arouse their curiosity.
5. Plan lessons which will need audiovisual
gadgets, tools, and materials
14. Motivational Strategies
6. Assist students in solving personal
problems or simple physical inabilities by
suggesting creative solutions.
7. Use educational games occasionally to
break the monotony of a straight quiet
learning task.
8. Pick a statement currently being quoted on
television or radio that has bearing on the
topic you are explaining.
15. Motivational Strategies
9. Vary the activity and the procedures planned for
the day’s lesson.
10. Announce a reward in any form for those who can
complete the learning activity fast enough but with
quality.
11. Role-playing, simulation games and
dramatizations are teaching strategies that cater to
their imagination and ambitions.
12. Write brief praises or words of approval for written
work when you return.
16. Motivational Strategies
13. Videotape a special presentation, debate, or
a musical piece
14. Once in a while, teach a topic from the
newspapers.
15. Be an enthusiastic teacher and show you
are interested and enjoying what you are
doing.
17. Techniques of Questioning
Questions
Set the mind working
Refers to eliciting of a verbal response
Research has shown that for every 40-minute
classroom discussion, about 86% are in the form
of questions asked by both teachers and students
18. Purposes of Questioning
1. To motivate
Do you like to know some interesting habits of birds?
2. To instruct
How does a volcano develop its steep slope?
3. To evaluate
Summing up, what factors are responsible for the upward
movement of water in stems?
19. Kinds of Questions
1. Soliciting – asking for information
Example: How many guests were there?
2. Directing – proposing course of action to
take, guiding, or redirecting thinking,
suggesting alternative
Example: Why don’t you combine red and
blue to make it colorful?
20. Kinds of Questions
3. Responding – doing something called for
Example: Shall I put out the light at the first
whistle?
4. Evaluating – agreeing or not, expressing
satisfaction, assessing
Example: Did you enjoy listening to her
song?
21. Kinds of Questions
5. Analytic questions – ask for definition of
terms, translations, or meanings of phrases
or statements
Example: What is a guitar? What is the
squareroot of 16?
6. Empirical questions – elicit responses that
are empirical statements
Example: If we raise the temperature to
100°c, what will happen?
22. Kinds of Questions
7. Valuative questions – elicit responses that are
value statements
Example: Who is your favorite teacher and why?
8. Cognitive-Memory questions – elicit responses
needing simple productions of facts, formula, or
other items that are remembered through
recognition, rote memory, and selective recall
Example: Who was the Fourth President of the
Philippines?
23. Kinds of Questions
9. Convergent questions – elicit responses
which involve the merging of diverse data;
ask for a comparison, a contrast, or the
drawing of a conclusion, a summary, a
generalization based on a prior data, or an
explanation.
Example: Compare Teacher A and Teacher
B.
24. Kinds of Questions
10. Divergent questions – elicit responses wherein
the individual is free to generate independently his
own idea.
Example: What comes to mind when you think of
Internet?
11. Evaluating questions – deal with “matters of
judgment, value and choice, and is characterized by
its judgmental quality.
Example: What do you think of Andres Bonifacio as
a hero?
25. Questioning Techniques
1. The teacher must be clear about the
purpose of the questions she asks.
2. Vary the type of questions asked during an
entire session.
3. Allow for sufficient wait-time to give them
time to think, especially for high level
questions.
4. Practice the students to answer divergent
questions.
26. Questioning Techniques
5. Ask questions at the right time.
6. Inject clues to assist weak or shy students.
7. Consider individual abilities when selecting
the student who should respond.
8. Be aware of your own style of questioning.
27. Teaching Approach
A procedure that employs a variety of
strategies to access better understanding and
effective learning.
A vehicle for the teacher to achieve long-
ranged lesson objectives
28. Process Approach
May be defined as teaching in which
knowledge is used as a means to develop
students’ learning skills
students are actively engaged in the activities
so the competencies needed in the subject
could eventually be acquired by them.
29. The Processes
Basic Skills:
Observing using the five senses
Classifying, ordering, and organizing
Measuring and estimating
30. The Processes
Higher skills:
Inferring
Predicting
Controlling variables
Formulating hypothesis
Analyzing and interpreting data
Drawing conclusion and generalization
31. Sample Lessons
1. Observing size, shape, color, and texture of
objects: listening, touching, tasting, and
smelling objects
2. Describing variation in shape of leaves,
color of flowers; comparing similarities and
differences of objects
3. Interpreting data recorded in graph,
tabulation diagrams, and illustrations
32. Inquiry Approach
Assist children in finding answers to their own
questions, gathering data and other
evidences, and formulating own conclusions.
It is implemented through a step-by-step
procedure using the inquiry processes
33. Recommended Activities
1. Assign a group to visit a natural pond
nearby. Study anything in it that interests
you. Upon their return, let them narrate
freely.
2. Write an essay on what they love to ask
their parents and why.
3. Do experiments