Maxims and Phases of Teaching

To be so, successful teaching is based on certain time-honoured maxims which are evolved as a result of long experience in a teaching and research

Maxims of Teaching

Successful teaching is not a haphazard process. It is a planned and implemented set of activities occurring in an international and social setting with a specified goal of achieving learning of various forms and levels. It is the task of teacher to perform various activities, to produce change in student behaviour. To be so, successful teaching is based on certain time-honoured maxims which are evolved as a result of long experience in a teaching and research in the educational psychology. These have been framed keeping the child in the forefront.

Maxims and Phases of Teaching

Some of the important maxims of teaching are as under:

1. Proceed from Simple to Complex:- The subject-matter of the lesson should be arranged in such a way that easier ideas are used as a starting point and difficult one follow them. Simple means that idea which - involves a single concept or even a sub-concept and can be understood as a whole. If a teaching point is complex, it should be broken into simpler components and each should be presented one after the other.

2. Proceed from concrete to Abstract:- The natural way of teaching a lesson is to proceed from concrete concepts to abstract concepts. Suppose you want to teach addition, subtraction or multiplication to younger children, use beads, chalks or sticks for teaching computational skills.

3. Proceed from whole to Parts:- This is the basis of Genalt Psychology. A teacher should always perceive the whole thing first and then pay attention to its parts, e.g., while teaching a poem, the child should first be given an idea of the whole poem.

4. Proceed from Indefinite to Definite:- Vagueness characterises the early ideas of children and the aim of teaching is to make these clear and precise. The teacher should first diagnose those concepts, rules or other things which are vague in their minds, then he should explain them with illustrations, examples and by using analogies or teaching aids so as to make the concept or rule clear and precise. By this activity indefinite ideas will become definite.

5. Proceed from Familiar to Unfamiliar:- Teacher should proceed from familiar to unfamiliar situations. It teacher teaches a concept starting with familiar examples followed by unfamiliar ones the learning of concept will be easier and faster. Secondly familiar things are considered simpler than unfamiliar things.

6. Proceed from known to Unknown:- For effective teaching the procedure of sequencing the subject-matter should follow the maxim of known to unknown. The purpose of using what is known is to show them its resemblances with and difference from the things which they are going to learn. Through this process learner will be able to associate the new information with the already known knowledge, because learning takes place through associations and assimilations.

7. Proceed from Particular to General:- The teacher should start with specific and particular examples or facts. Specific examples should lead to generalisations. The criterion of effective teaching is that the children should be able to frame correct generalisations for themselves through experimentation and keen observations. The derivation of rules, principles and laws in subjects like sciences; mathematics, geography etc. are based on this maxim of proceeding from particular instances to general rules. On this maxim is based the inductive method of teaching.

8. From Seen to Unseen:- According to this maxim of reaching, the children should first be taught about the things which they see and thereafter they should be taught about the things which they do not see. It also means that the students should first be taught about the present and then about the past and future. The purpose of this maxim is that the children learn easily about those things which are before them and they find it difficult to learn about those things which are not before them.

For example, the children learn quickly about the fruits, vegetables, plants, trees and all those things which they. They find it difficult to learning about rockets, gravity of earth, deep oceans etc. as they do not see them. If the teacher wants to teach a student about tire Taj Mahal, he should first show a model of the Taj Mahal to the children. By seeing the model of the Taj Mahal, the children can easily understand about the real Taj Mahal.

9. From Analysis to Synthesis:- According to this maxim, teaching should start from a whole thing and after imparting knowledge about the whole tiling, knowledge about the various parts of the thing may be imparted by means of doing analysis of those parts and then the attention should be diverted to the whole. In other words, the child should be told about a whole thing and then the whole thing may be divided into parts and after imparting knowledge about the various parts all the parts may be combined into one to make them a whole thing. In this maxim, one proceeds from the whole to its parts and from the parts again to the whole.

10. From Psychological to Logical:- According to this maxim, the child should first be taught psychologically and then logically. In other words, child's education should be started according to his aptitude, age, courage, capacity, tendency, eagerness etc. It should be started with a subject which is before him. When his age, knowledge and mind-develop, logical education may be imparted about that thing. The degree of logical teaching should be increased according to the increase in his age, mind and knowledge.

11. From Empirical to Rational:- When a child attains knowledge by using or observing a thing, this is called empirical knowledge. When a teacher explains it to him by logic and prescribes a principle, it is called rational. When a child, who lives in plains, goes to a hill he sees vapour in the atmosphere. Sometimes the vapour enters his room. The child can know about the vapour and may also draw the conclusions that vapour forms in the hills. But when the teacher explains him as to how and whey the vapour forms, the child will be able to understand the cause of the vapour and its formation in the hills-alone and not in the plains. In this way the Child's knowledge about the vapour will be rational.

12. Follow Nature:- According to this maxim, the students should be taught keeping in view their nature, viz., their physical mental development. When education is given according to the original tendency taste, capacity, emotions, aptitude etc., the children learn their lessons easily. In fact, the children are eager to learn according to their natural tendencies. When students are willing to learn a thing, they can learn. If they are not willing, it will be difficult to teach them. The children learn only if the teaching is according to their nature. So, teaching should be according to the nature of the children. In the modern age, teaching is done keeping in view of the nature of the children. The children should be given such knowledge as they want.

Phases of Teaching

Activities have a special importance in teaching. Through activities, students get a lot of help in learning. Learning experiences come naturally through actions. These actions are different at different phases of teaching. According to Phillip H. Jackson, the operation of teaching could be classified into 3 different phases as:

  1. Pre active phase of teaching
  2. Inter active phase of teaching
  3. Post active phase of teaching

1. Pre active phase (planning stage):- This phase accounts for a pre-estimated idea before coming to the classroom. It includes a very good estimated pre-plan of understanding the class with a "good lesson plan." Lesson plan preparation includes:

  • Formation of objectives with a particular selected content
  • Content analysis
  • Development of strategies of teaching.

2. Inter active phase (presentations phase):- This is concerned with all activities and behaviour and manifested by the teacher in and after entering the classroom during the process of presenting the content. The operation included at this stage is:

  • Verbal and non-verbal stimulation
  • Presentation (along with an idea of Action Research)
  • Development and use of strategies involved in teaching.

3. Post active phase (evaluation phase):- This phase of teaching accounts for the concept achieved after the classroom situation undertaken by the teacher which led to the achievement of objectives as estimated earlier. This stage may also be undertaken by just mere observation. It included

  • Testing behavioral change of students
  • Selection of appropriate testing device
  • Feedback for evaluation

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