EPP Module 2
EPP Module 2
COLLEGE OF EDUCATION
Don B. Benedicto Road,
Gun-ob, Lapu-Lapu City, Cebu 6015
Prepared by:
CHAPTER 2
Lesson 5
EPP 1 Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuyan 1 1 | 11
CHAPTER 2
Lesson 5
What’s In
What’s New
Approach is a set of assumptions that define beliefs and theories about the nature of
the learner and the process of learning.
Techniques are the specific activities manifested in the classroom that are consistent
with a method and therefore in harmony with an approach as well (Brown, 1994). Technique is
referred to also as a task or activity.
What is
1. Demonstration Method
The demonstration method is a direct method of instruction. It is referred as the “show and
tell” method. The teacher simply shows to the students how a thing is done and explains as
he/she demonstrates. For an effective demonstration, it is necessary that the teacher
mentions the do’s and don’ts of the process for emphasis and clarity. It is important that as
a teacher demonstrates a process, he/she cautions students on steps of a skill where
students are often mistaken or which are most often missed.
It is expected that after the teacher demonstration of a process, the students are given the
opportunity to demonstrate the process or the skill themselves. However, students should
not be expected to demonstrate the process or the skill immediately on their own after the
teacher has shown it. This has to be done gradually. The steps are:
It goes without saying that at all times, while students practice the newly learned skill,
teacher must be visibly supervising students while they practice for mastery.
2. Hands on Learning
Hands-on learning, more formally known as experiential education, reflects a teaching
philosophy that promotes learning by doing. The strategy allows children to practice guided
tactile learning in which they absorb knowledge not only by listening, but by experiencing.
Generally speaking, hands-on learning is learning through experience. Students handle the
materials, equipment, and instruments in real time and manipulate it. It is obtaining the skills,
knowledge, and competencies that are necessary. Working in hands-on way is presumed to
extend a more thrilling and realistic experience of the content. The most verifiable researches
bear evidence for the speculation that employing hands-on activities steers to positive
motivational result. Although there are also evidences that adults may be over-challenged when
independent problem-solving is involved during these kinds of activities, especially those who
are not used to open laboratory work were found to be low in confidence regarding aspects of
practical and hands-on work that require analysis and critical thinking.
By definition, hands-on learning requires students to engage in the education process using
multiple senses including sight, hearing and touch known as multisensory learning; the hands-on
teaching strategy engages the senses in a way that promotes learning comprehension on
multiple levels. This practice allows students to understand information and also use it. For
example, a young child may verbally acknowledge understanding basic math facts, but is unable
to solve problems on an addition worksheet. Manipulating tactile math blocks allows that
student to better comprehend the concepts by actively utilizing acquired knowledge.
3. Cooperative Learning
Cooperative Learning, sometimes called small-group learning, is an instructional strategy in
which small groups of students work together on a common task. The task can be as simple as
solving a multi-step math problem together, or as complex as developing a design for a new kind
of school. In some cases, each group member is individually accountable for part of the task; in
other cases, group members work together without formal role assignments.
According to David Johnson and Roger Johnson (1999), there are five basic elements that allow
successful small-group learning:
Positive interdependence: Students feel responsible for their own and the group's effort.
Face-to-face interaction: Students encourage and support one another; the environment
encourages discussion and eye contact.
Individual and group accountability: Each student is responsible for doing their part; the
group is accountable for meeting its goal.
Group behaviors: Group members gain direct instruction in the interpersonal, social, and
collaborative skills needed to work with others occurs.
Group processing: Group members analyze their own and the group's ability to work
together.
Cooperative learning changes students' and teachers' roles in classrooms. The ownership of
teaching and learning is shared by groups of students, and is no longer the sole responsibility of
the teacher. The authority of setting goals, assessing learning, and facilitating learning is shared
by all. Students have more opportunities to actively participate in their learning, question and
challenge each other, share and discuss their ideas, and internalize their learning. Along with
improving academic learning, cooperative learning helps students engage in thoughtful
discourse and examine different perspectives, and it has been proven to increase students' self-
esteem, motivation, and empathy.
b. Aesthetic Project – appreciation powers of learners are developed through musical program,
beautification of things and appreciation of poems and so on.
c. Problematic Project – develop the problem solving the capacity of learners through their
experiences.
d. Drill Project – it develops mastery of the skill and knowledge of the learners.
Characteristics:
Independent
Self-contained
Self-instructional
Clearly defined objectives
Concerned with individual differences
Systematically organized learning opportunities
Utilization of variety of media
Active participation of learner
Components of Module:
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
If the teacher is not an expert in a given content, you will need resource persons to ensure a
good training where participants gain well-presented knowledge. Resource persons do not just
One important resource at your fingertips is that of the local community and environment. In
your local community you have people who have expertise in a wide range. In your local
environment you also have access to a range of natural resources.
The local community is an often overlooked teaching resource. Maybe you are doing some work on
transportation with Class X. How could you introduce this topic to your students in a way that will
capture their interest? One way would be to invite in a local doctor or a nurse to talk about the heart
and how they measure the blood pressure of their patients. For the topic of excretion, you could ask
someone who has had a kidney transplant to talk about their kidney disease and operation. This could
be a relative or a family friend of the students or staff. For respiration you could ask a local athlete to
come in and explain the how lactic acid affects their performance.
Your students will be interested to hear about what these visitors do and will want to ask questions, so
this needs to be carefully planned. If you choose to do this you need to be clear what you would like
your students to gain and learn from the experience, and then follow the steps in Activity 3 to prepare
for the visit.
We arranged that she would bring a machine for measuring blood pressure. She measured my blood
pressure and then talked to my students for about 15 minutes about the importance of measuring blood
pressure, what causes it to be too high and the treatments available. I had a poster with a diagram of
the heart which she used in her explanation.
My students had prepared some questions in advance, which they were able to ask, but the discussion
soon moved on as they thought of more and more questions. Quite a few students stayed behind after
the lesson to find out more about training to be a nurse.
The local environment can support your teaching. In your local environment you also have access to a
range of natural resources. The outside environment can be seen as a place to collect resources but it
can also be used as an extension of your classroom.
Field trips are recognized as important moments in learning; a shared social experience that
provides the opportunity for students to encounter and explore novel things in an authentic setting.
It is important to recognize that learning outcomes from field trips can range from cognitive to
affective outcomes
Among the many potential outcomes, research has shown that field trips:
Expose students to new experiences and can increase interest and engagement in science
regardless of prior interest in a topic (Kisiel, 2005; Bonderup Dohn, 2011),
Result in affective gains such as more positive feelings toward a topic (Csikszentmihalyi &
Hermanson, 1995; Nadelson & Jordan, 2012).
Are experiences that can be recalled and useful long after a visit (Salmi, 2003; Falk & Dierking,
1997; Wolins, Jensen, & Ulzheimer, 1992).
What’s More
An approach gives rise to method (design) while a method (design) includes techniques (tasks or
activities).
Choose one among the options given below, with the same grouping, you are to vlog
and demonstrate the chosen option. And post it on our google classroom.
Cooking demonstration
Buying basic commodities
Making a chair/dustpan
Plant repotting
REFERENCES
https://blog.friendscentral.org/benefits-of-hands-on-learning
https://www.quizalize.com/blog/2018/02/23/teaching-strategies/
https://www.scribd.com/document/426194207/Hands-on-Learning-
Checked
https://www.teachervision.com/professional-
development/cooperative-learning
Chapter Reflection