St. Louis College of Bulanao: Purok 6, Bulanao, Tabuk City, Kalinga 3800
St. Louis College of Bulanao: Purok 6, Bulanao, Tabuk City, Kalinga 3800
This module is a requirement of the St. Louis College of Bulanao in response to the
implementation of the Blended Learning way of Instruction.
This Learning Material is a property of the College of Education – St. Louis College of
Bulanao, Tabuk City. It aims to improve students’ performance specifically in the Professional
Education.
General Instruction/s:
The module will start with an Introduction which will give a general background on the
Principles of Teaching. Series of activities and discussions will encourage you to explore and
learn about the topic. Through this module, the following instruction/s should be followed.
Note:
Encode your answer in a long bond paper, with a font size of 12, font style Times New
Roman, Margin 1”, Line Spacing 1.5.
You can write your answer in a Long Bond Paper, but make sure that your penmanship is
understandable and organize.
If you have difficulty in accessing into the internet, you can submit the hard at the Faculty
Office, 3rd floor and look for my table. My name was labelled in my table.
No to pictured activities
Copied answer in the internet will not be recorded.
MANAGEMENT OF INSTRUCTION
(OBJECTIVE-RELATED PRINCIPLES OF TEACHING)
I. INTRODUCTION
The material as well as the non-material resources in the teaching-learning process must be
well-managed in order to reap optimum learning. To ensure results, the management of these
resources must be grounded on time-tested principles.
An objective is an intent communicated by a statement describing a proposed change in a
learner. Good teachers provide clear objectives for each lesson and works to meet those specific
objectives during each class. Clearly defined learning objectives guide the learner of what he is to be
like when he has successfully completed a learning experience. Communicating your objectives to
your students, helps them focus their thinking and motivates them to participate in class.
Teachers are responsible for delivering lessons that are planned, organized, and implemented
based on the objectives that are specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and time-bound. But these
should be flexible enough to provide room for the learners to make their own personal and
independent connections from the classroom to real-life situations.
For this reason, the whole brain must be used for balanced learning not just the left for critical
thinking but also the right for creative thinking.
7. For accountability of learning, lesson objectives must be SMART, i.e. Specific, Measurable,
Attainable, Result-Oriented/Relevant, Time-bound and Terminal.
When our lesson objective is SMART it is quite easy to find out at the end of our lesson if we
attained our objective or not. It will also be easier on our part to formulate a test that is valid to
measure the attainment of our lesson objective. Moreover, our lesson becomes more focused for
we have a concrete picture of the behavior that our students should be able to demonstrate if we
realized our lesson objective.
In short, SMART objectives increase our accountability for the learning of our students. With
SMART objectives, we depart from the unsound practice of teaching that is so spread
out that in the end we find ourselves unclear on what test we are going to give to assess -learning.
With SMART lesson objectives, there is greater match between instruction and assessment. There
is curriculum alignment.
GOALS Institutional/Program
Goals are general statements Goals
about what schools are Derived from the
expected to accomplish GOALS Vision/Mission statements of
(Ornstein) the educational institution of
which you are a part.
On Objective Specifications
Teachers usually categorize learning into three main groups or domains. They may be often
considered in seclusion but in practice, learning may occur together in all three. These are the
cognitive, psychomotor, and affective domains. It means that when we teach, we should not only
focus on the enrichment of knowledge (cognitive) but also to teach the learner to act on what he
knows (psychomotor) and use it properly to benefit self and his neighbor (affective).
This is the trilogy of our human endowments. The teacher should dedicate himself/ herself to
unlock the mental (cognitive), physical (psychomotor), and spiritual (affective) capabilities of every
learner to achieve his/her true human potential.
A. Cognitive Domain
Table 4.1 The Descriptors and Illustrative Verbs for the Instructional
Objectives in the Cognitive Domain
The levels are arranged from the least complex levels of thinking to the most complex levels of thinking.
Helpful Descriptors of the Major Key Words
Mnemonic Categories in the Cognitive (Illustrative Verbs)
s For Domain
Beginners
defines lists recalls
R REMEMBERING
describes
identifies
matches
names
reproduces
selects
L Recall or retrieve previous
learned information.
labels outlines states
UNDERSTANDING
Comprehending the meaning, converts paraphrases
translation, interpolation, and defends extends predicts
O
UN
interpretation of instructions and distinguish generalizes rewrites
problems. State a problem in estimates infers summarizes
one's own words. explains interprets translates
APPLYING
S constructs operates
demonstrates predicts
shows
solves uses
ANALYZING illustrates
Separates material or analyzes deconstructs infers
concepts into component breaks down differentiate outlines
H parts so that its organizational
AN
compares discriminate relates
structure may be understood. contrasts distinguish selects separates
Distinguishes between facts and diagrams identifies
inferences. appraises explains
O E
EVALUATING
Make judgments about the value
compares
concludes
critiques
defends
interprets
justifies
of ideas or materials. contrasts describes relates
criticizes discriminate summarizes
evaluates supports
T CREATING categorizes
Builds a structure or pattern from combines
explains
generates
relates
reorganizes
diverse elements. Put parts compiles modifies revises
together to form a whole, with composes organizes rewrites
Helpful Mnemonics: RUn ApAn EC-tings: Read as: Run Upon Easy Things!
LOTS (Lower Order Thinking Skills): RUn Ap (Run Up!)
HOTS (Higher Order Thinking Skills): An EC ting (Uneasy Thing!)
When the cognitive and knowledge dimensions are arranged in a matrix, as shown below, it
makes a nice performance aid for creating performance objectives.
Factual
The basic elements students must know to be acquainted with a discipline or solve
problems.
Conceptual
The interrelationships among the basic elements within a larger structure that enable
them to function together.
Procedural
How to do something, methods of inquiry, and criteria for using skills; algorithms,
techniques, and methods.
Metacognitive
Knowledge of cognition in general, as well as awareness and knowledge* of one's own
cognition.
Source: http://www.nwlink.com/ædonclark/hrd/bloom.html#revised
B. Affective Domain
Table 4.2 The Descriptors and Illustrative Verbs for Affective
Domain Instructional Objectives
Hierarchy Descriptors of the Major Key Words
Categories in the Affective (Illustrative Verbs)
Domain
RESPONDING TO
PHENOMENA
Active participation on the part of answers greets reads
the learners. Attends and reacts t? assists helps recites
a particular phenomenon. Learning aids labels reports
outcomes may emphasize complies performs selects
SIMPLES compliance conforms practices tells
T in responding, willingness to discusses presents writes
respond, or satisfaction in
responding (motivation).
Program Objectives When you successfully complete BSEd/BEEd, you will be able to…
Course Objectives
At the end of the term, you will be able to....
Classroom Objectives
For Grade School
At the end of 45 minutes, Grade I-A pupils should be able to
For High School
At the end of 1.5 hours, Grade 7-A students should be able to
STEP 2: After you construct the stem, affix a VERB: (Be Specific - use only one action
verb)
Nonfunctional Verbs. These key words should be avoided when writing specific
objectives:
These are vague infinitives/verbs. To prove that somebody knows something, or has
understood, realized, perceived or become aware, he needs to show a behavior (i.e. explain, cite,
describe, enumerate...etc.). Objective statements using these verbs are called "General
Objectives" like the Institutional Goals and Program Goals.
APPLICATION
V. ASSESSMENT
VI. REFERENCES
Book/s
Principles of Teaching 1: Brenda B. Corpuz, Ph.D., Gloria G. Salandanan, Ph.D.
Principles of Teaching 1: Erlinda D. Serrano, MA. Ed., Ana Ruby M. Paez, M.S.
Internet
Blooms Taxonomy Chart
https://tips.uark.edu/blooms-taxonomy-verb-chart/
Objective-related Principles of Teaching
https://www.slideshare.net/jukerznet/principles-of-teaching-1-objectiverelated-principles-of-
teaching