INTRODUCTION TO MICRO-TEACHING AND ITS NEED STRUCTURE 1. Introduction 2. Objectives 3. Defining Teaching 4. Status of Teacher Training Before Micro-teaching 5. Concept of Micro-teaching 1. Steps of Micro-teaching 2. Micro-teaching Cycle 3. Rationale of Micro-teaching Procedure 4. Phases of Micro-teaching 6. Analysis of Teaching 1. Identification of Teaching Skills 1.7 Core Teaching Skills 1.7.1 Teaching Skills and Their
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activity is not a lesson plan. In fact‚ there is no need for a lesson plan to ever be seen‚ touched‚ considered or dreamed of by students‚ and nor does it even need to exist on paper or disk‚ though it usually does. A lesson plan is a teacher’s plan for teaching a lesson. It can exist in the teacher’s mind‚ on the back of an envelope‚ or on one or more beautifully formatted sheets of A4 paper. Its purpose is to outline the "programme" for a single lesson. That’s why it’s called a lesson plan. It helps the
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Reflection of Micro lesson I presented my first micro-teaching lesson and lesson plan for 1.5 hours to my peer groups and delivered 20-25 minutes. My chosen topic was diabetes I chose this because I felt diabetes is common and most students will have some knowledge of diabetes. I felt nervous at the beginning of lesson‚ I was having difficulties with technical problems‚ I felt that this made me loose concentration‚ and this will be a learning curb for next time. As I carried on presenting my
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Reflection in Teaching Teachers‚ it is thought‚ benefit from the practice of reflection‚ the conscious act of thinking deeply about and carefully examining the interactions and events within their own classrooms. Educators T. Wildman and J Niles (1987) describe a scheme for developing reflective practice in experienced teachers. This was justified by the view that reflective practice could help teachers to feel more intellectually involved in their role and work in teaching and enable them to
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result of careful reflection . . . They themselves learn lessons each time they teach‚ evaluating what they do and using these self-critical evaluations to adjust what they do next time. (Why Colleges Succeed‚ Ofsted 2004‚ para. 19) What this chapter is about . . . . . . . Reflective practice ± what is it? Why and how should we do it? Reflection `in’ and `on’ action Some models of reflective practice Using reflection as a basis for improving learning and teaching Writing your personal
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theories (I) have about the teaching of science” 2. “consider … the possible learning outcomes of an ‘enquiry’ approach to teaching science compared to ‘direct’ teaching” 3. include reference to underlying theory 4. refer to specific teaching situations 5. engage in critical reflective thinking My theory In order to challenge my theory of teaching I first need very briefly to define it. When I was taught science it was mostly through direct teaching. Any experiments performed
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sheet was there as well as vocal encouragement. * Controllers all worked and game was setup well. * Projector and screen worked exceptionally well‚ using this tool meant the learners would not be crowded round a small television set. Teaching: Teaching approaches used: * Discussion (history of games‚ pros & cons) * E-learning (computer based learning) * Discovery (finding hidden items throughout the game) * Games (a fun way of learning adding a carrot using escapism**)
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As discussed in the micro-reflection‚ gendered racism is one of the most challenging types of discrimination to combat. My micro-reflection of “gendered racism exploits the intersectionality of multiple minority identities. How can we mute its effects?” alludes the article I read about the multiple layers of discrimination against Black Muslim women. However‚ I believe that the gendered racism is actively practiced on a day-to-day basis. Recently‚ the inauguration of President Trump in the United
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Critical Reflections on Teaching What is reflective teaching? Reflection defined | |[pic]|recognising |[pi| | | | |+ |c] | | |Reflection means | |examining | |the way we teach. | | | |+ | | | |
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I had the pleasure of doing my micro-field experience in a pre-kindergarten classroom at a head start program in Brooklyn. The classroom consists of 17 students‚ eleven of whom are boys and the other six are girls. The class is quite diverse with regards to individual needs‚ abilities‚ and learning styles. There are nine students who have an IEP for different learning needs. Six of the nine students with an IEP also receive speech and language services. The activities and materials in the classroom
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