Principles of Teaching eBook

Adam S. Bennion
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about Principles of Teaching.

Principles of Teaching eBook

Adam S. Bennion
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 196 pages of information about Principles of Teaching.

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QUESTIONS AND SUGGESTIONS—­CHAPTER VI

1.  Discuss our obligation to grow.

2.  Point out the difference between praying and merely saying prayers.

3.  Discuss the various means which guarantee spiritual growth.

4.  Comment on the thought that a personal inventory is as essential to teaching as it is to financial success.

5.  What is your daily scheme for systematic study?

6.  What plan do you follow in an attempt to know the scriptures?

7.  Why is it so important that we assume the responsibilities placed upon us?

HELPFUL REFERENCES

Those listed in Chapter IV.

CHAPTER VII

NATIVE TENDENCIES

     OUTLINE—­CHAPTER VII

Importance of Child Study to teachers.—­Teaching both a social and an individual process.—­A Child’s characteristics—­his birthright.—­What the nervous system is.—­Types of original responses.—­The significance of instinctive action.—­Colvin’s list of native tendencies.—­Sisson’s list.—­A knowledge of native tendencies essential to proper control of human behavior.

We have now discussed the significance and meaning of teaching, together with the consideration of the characteristics that constitute the personal equation of the teacher.  It is now pertinent that we give some attention to the nature of the child to be taught, that we may the more intelligently discuss methods of teaching, or how teacher and pupil get together in an exchange of knowledge.

Teaching is a unique process.  It is both social and individual.  The teacher meets a class—­a collection of pupils in a social unit.  In one way he is concerned with them generally—­he directs group action.  But in addition to this social aspect, the problem involves his giving attention to each individual in the group.  He may put a general question, but he gets an individual reply.  In short, he must be aware of the fact that his pupils, for purposes of recitation, are all alike; and at the same time he must appreciate the fact that they are peculiarly different.  In a later chapter we shall consider these differences; let us here consider the points of similarity.

The fact that a boy is a boy makes him heir to all of the characteristics that man has developed.  These characteristics are his birthright.  He responds in a particular way to stimuli because the race before him has so responded.  There is no need here of entering into a discussion as to how great a controlling factor heredity may be in a man’s life, or how potent environment may be in modifying that life—­we are concerned rather with the result—­that man is as he is.  It is essential that we know his characteristics, particularly as they manifest themselves in youth, so that we may know what to expect in his conduct and so that we may proceed to modify and control that conduct.  Just as the first task of the physician is to diagnose his case—­to get at the cause of the difficulty before he proceeds to suggest a remedy—­so the first consideration of the teacher is a query, “Whom do I teach?”

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Project Gutenberg
Principles of Teaching from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.