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    Teaching Aids

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    The Impacts of Teaching Aids usage on secondary school students’ performance in biology: a study of some selected senior secondary school in Yewa South Local government area. CHAPTER ONE INTRODUCTION 1. Background to the study The teaching of Biology to make understanding of the students has been what teachers of the subject find difficult to do. Even as cases may arise when these teachers are not happy about their students’ performance in the subject‚ not many of them have sat down

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    Teaching Aid

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    The Latest Technological Teaching Aids Today’s generation of school children are part of a “connected” age where it is natural to not only use technology in everyday life‚ but in school as well. New technologies in the classroom offer a more engaging way to learn‚ one where the students no longer learn passively but instead by interacting‚ with computers and electronic devices the new school supplies. University level‚ high school and primary students alike are beginning to make good use of fast-moving

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    The Teaching Profession

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    The Teaching Profession Educators have been debating for many years whether teaching is a profession. Teaching must be considered a profession based on the fact that a particular standard of knowledge must be acquired before an individual is allowed to teach. Because this profession has become in such high demand‚ I am likely to join the National Education Association (NEA) once I am able to practice this profession. I believe that joining the NEA will help to protect my rights and career as

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    Teaching Plan

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    Introduction Patient teaching plans are tools developed by nurses in facilitating a systematic and evaluative way used in communicating to their patients regarding a particular treatment or practice. According to Bastable (2008‚ p.407)‚ a teaching plan is a “blueprint for action to achieve the goal and the objectives that have been agreed upon by the educator and the learner.” In this context‚ the nurse is the educator while the patient is the learner where a teaching and learning activity will

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    Teaching Hospital

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    arrangement. 2. Complicated compensation structure of the institution. 3. Peculiarity of the administrative powers vested to officials of the organization. 4. Unacceptable stance of the members of the institution at the superior levels. 5. Personal connection between employees. Objectives 1. To identify the causes and effects of having insufficient motivational stimulus/stimuli within a workplace (in connection with McClelland’s drives‚ Herzberg’s two-factory theory‚ and Expectancy Model

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    Teaching Novels

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    An exploration of the innovative methodologies requires an awareness of the goals and objectives of teaching literature in general and the novel in particular‚ the advantages of teaching novels and teaching methodologies. It is very difficult to agree on the goals of teaching literary texts. In the past‚ teaching literature was viewed as a way of making people better human beings and better citizens. The purpose of making English Literature a course of study at University College‚ London in the

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    Teaching Poetry

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    TEACHING POETRY CONTENTS Introduction…………………………………………………………………....3 1. The child as a learner………………………………………………………5 2. Basic principles of teaching poetry……………………………..………..10 3. Using poems to develop receptive skills…………………….……….….14 4. Role of poems in developing productive skills……………….….….…..17 Conclusion………………………………………………………………..…..20 Summary………………………………………………………………………22 References…………………………………………………........................…23 Introduction

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    Teaching in Nursing

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    INTRODUCTION Clinical teaching is a form of teaching and learning with its focus of involving patients and their problems (Spencer‚ 2003). According to Lim‚ (2011)‚ it can be conducted in small group or one-to-one basis and is not only specific to nursing but is also used in other health sciences. The methods used in clinical teaching varies but the elements remains the same in that students experienced learning through providing care to patients under the supervision of experienced clinical tutors

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    Teaching by Principles

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    Teaching by Principles: An Interactive Approach to Language Pedagogy Brown‚ H. D. (1994). Teaching by principles: An interactive approach to language pedagogy. Englewood Cliffs‚ New Jersey: Prentice Hall Regents. 416 pp. Reviewed by Gail Schaefer Fu The Chinese University of Hong Kong H. Douglas Brown’s Teaching by Principles is intended for teachers in training -- those who intend to be teachers but who have little or no classroom experience -- and for teachers who train teachers. It is

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    Progressivism in Teaching

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    reason and knowledge come from personal experience (Student 2013). Collaboration and active learning are two important segments of progressivism. Collaboration not only between teachers‚ but also between students creates an environment conducive to learning. Active learning refers to students having an active role in helping create curriculum and formulating questions based off of the lesson. One of the final and arguably most important aspects of progressive teaching is the idea of intrinsic motivation

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