Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Teaching Method
Teaching Method
By
Mrs.shabana nasar
Teaching method
A teaching method comprises the
principles and methods used for instruction
. Commonly used teaching methods may
include class participation, demonstration,
recitation, memorization, or combinations
of these. The choice of an appropriate teaching
method depends largely on the information
or skill that is being taught, and it may
also be influenced by the aptitude and
enthusiasm of the students.
Methods of instruction
Explaining
Demonstrating
Collaborating
Learning by teaching
curriculum
Summary
To help a cerebral palsy child in the early years, most teaching focuses
on functional gains in movement. Intense repetitive physical therapy
helps cerebral palsy children learn needed movement skills. Teaching
should focus on progress and positive change in a child's current
abilities rather than in lessening a specific cerebral palsy disability. For
example, a teacher might encourage a cerebral palsy student to
participate in activities which require two-hands rather than focusing
only on the use of the disabled limb.
As with mainstream
students, a cerebral palsy
child's mental capacity
varies. Some can
participate on an even
playing field with
mainstream kids and some
have degrees of mental
retardation or learning
difficulties. Each child
should be encouraged and
challenged to become as
mentally active as possible
from an early age.
Vocational Training
Taylor lives in simple surroundings, and his family does not have much
money to buy expensive equipment. His mother carries him most of the
time and he is getting heavier. Positioning is important for him so that he
can learn to sit alone and to move by himself.
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3. If you dont
know how to work
with power tools,
get help!
4. Pad the chairs
with soft fabric or
pillows.
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3. Then we pour
the Styrofoam
into the
tablecloth bag
and sew up
the hole.
Hint: Old plastic grocery bags work well
to fill small beanbags too.
Taylor loves trucks. The RSAs made him two trucks out of
Styrofoam with wheels from soda cans that really turn. These
trucks are light enough that he can move them by himself. He is
learning to identify colors, size, direction, and is getting stronger
by moving his truck across the floor.
All children need toys and equipment, but Taylors toys and
equipment are helping him to learn to sit up, move around his
environment, interact with other people and objects, and learn
pre-academic skills.
THANK
YOU