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Modern methods of teaching

The old fashioned idea of teaching was that the children should play a passive part. They were
completely in the hands of their teachers, to be molded into a certain pattern set by formal
education, and to emerge as school leavers full of facts which, they had all too often learnt off by
heart and parrot-woes. Often, none of these facts were related to life. The children were made to
absorb them as a sponge absorbs water. this attitude was adequately summarized by Addison in
the eighteenth century. "What sculpture is to a block of marble, education is to the soul," he said.
Nowadays, such attitudes to teaching have completely changed and, while a certain store of facts
must be learnt for examination purposes and indeed as a background to ordinary living, today
such facts are not the 'be all' and 'end all.' Each child is regarded as an individual and not as a
cypher in an educational machine. The teacher's aim is to develop the full potential of each child.
He must be taught to respond to and to participate in the activities connected with learning and to
-co-operate with the teacher so that everything he does is geared to his own life and to
developing his control over his own environment. Today therefore, the facts and the subjects
studied are secondary to the development of the child's whole personality. Hence, subjects cover
a much wider range these days, from technical and practical subjects to current affairs and
commerce.
To claim a child's interest, great importance is placed on purposive learning which means
practical work of all kinds for the pupil. Such work must be varied as a child soon becomes
bored when one particular activity is carried on for too long. His interest is not stimulated neither
is the require skill acquired.
New attitudes mean new methods. Oral teaching, a time-honored method is still used, but not to
the same extent. The teacher must do some talking, but children are encouraged to talk too, to
ask questions and to discuss. The teacher has many mechanical aids to assist him in oral work.
Language laboratories in which children can both listen to correct speech in foreign languages
and record their own efforts, are extensively used. tape recordings of poetry and literature and of
plays stimulate a child's interest and foster a love for these things.
Words must be supplemented by visual aids which are important. A British child, who has never
seen South-east Asia will know it better, if he sees pictures of rice fields of Malaysia or
Singapore's colorful harbor. British geography will come alive for a Malaysian child if he can
see pictures of the coal-black mining country. Diagrams and charts clarify many subjects like
anatomy, science or chemistry. Film strips, from which children absorb facts much more quickly
than they do from a book, are widely used too. It is one thing to explain the growth of a plant
from a seedling. It is a much more telling experience to see it on a film taken with a time lapse
camera so that in ten minutes, growth spreading over many weeks can be seen. Mathematics too,
makes use of visual aids. Problems can be 'explained' and 'Cusenaire' equipment provides models
and blocks for measuring, all of which convey more to the pupil than a dull textbook.
In modern teaching, great value is placed on creative subjects such as craftwork, music,
dramatics and woodwork. Here, practical work is the order of the day and the child's progress
measured by the end product.
Modern teaching includes the body as well as the mind. a child must express himself and have an
outlet. Hence, all schools provide facilities for physical education and for a variety of games.
Many provide swimming instruction. extra-curricular activities too are considered important.
Hence, visits to museums, art galleries, theaters, and public games are organized.
We have come a long way from the old ideas on education where the three R's or the classics
were alone considered important. Now the aim is to teach a child live and to be lived with. As
with all new ideas, time will supply the answer as to whether the child and hence the man has
benefited.

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