Introduction Section

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INTRODUCTION SECTION

Critical thinking has been an important issue in education, and has become quite the buzzword
around schools. The Common Core State Standards specifically emphasize
a thinking curriculum and thereby requires teachers to elevate their students’ mental workflow
beyond just memorization—which is a really good step forward. Critical thinking is a skill that
young minds will undeniably need and exercise well beyond their school years. Experts agree
that in keeping up with the ever-changing technological advances, students will need to obtain,
understand, and analyze information on a much more efficient scale. It is our job as educators to
equip our students with the strategies and skills they need to think critically in order to cope with
these tech problems and obstacles they face elsewhere.

Fortunately, teachers can use a number of techniques that can help students learn critical
thinking, even for children enrolled in kindergarten.

Effective teachers are always on the prowl for new and exciting teaching strategies that will
keep their students motivated and engaged.

Whether you’re a new or experienced teacher, you may feel inundated by all of the new
educational buzzwords, theories, and new strategies that are out there.

With all of this information available, it’s hard to decide which strategies are right for your
classroom. Sometimes, the old tried-and-true ones that you have been using in your classroom
just happen to work the best, and that’s OK. Teaching strategies that are considered “new” may
just not fit into your teaching style.

Empathy—the power to understand perspectives other than your own—is an essential skill for all
children to master, and it’s one of an important set of teaching strategies teachers should focus
on. Empathy is foundational for building bridges between individuals, understanding each
others’ complex emotions, gaining a diverse perspective, and leveraging relationships for
collaboration and progress.

Despite its importance, empathy is a still a skill. And like all skills, interpersonal or not, it can be
thoroughly developed … or ignored. You could argue that alongside our responsibility to equip
our students with the academic skills to ace tests, utilize technology, and comprehend
curriculum, we likewise need to consider how we can formulate our teaching strategies to
undergird their character to become the most well-rounded and complete individual as they
progress through their educational career.

A teaching strategy is the method used to deliver information in the classroom, online, or in
some other medium. There is no one best strategy; we can select from several instructional
strategies for just about any subject.

Teaching strategies refer to methods used to help students learn the desired course contents and
be able to develop achievable goals in the future. Teaching strategies identify the different
available learning methods to enable them to develop the right strategy to deal with the target
group identified.

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