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Library/Glossary
Category: Teaching Methods  
Click on any term in this category to get a definition and more information.
ability grouping    leveled reading books   
Accelerated Schools Project    manipulatives   
active learning    mixed grouping   
Coalition for Essential Schools (CES)    Montessori   
Comer School Development Program    multi-age class   
Conditions of Learning    multiple intelligences   
constructivism    phonemic awareness   
constructivist math    phonics   
cooperative learning    Reading Recovery   
developmentally appropriate classroom    self-directed instruction   
differentiated instruction    student-centered learning   
Direct Instruction    tracking   
Discipline-Based Art Education    Waldorf school   
divergent and convergent questions    whole language   
Foxfire    whole math   
hands-on learning    whole math instruction   
high-frequency words      
Overview of Category: Teaching Methods

The range and nature of instructional methods used by teachers are central to student learning.

One key issue tied to teaching methods is how students are grouped. Some people argue that grouping students by ability puts slower students at a disadvantage by stigmatizing them and surrounding them with few academic role models. Advocates of mixed grouping say that students actually learn better when they are working with students of differing developmental levels, ages and abilities because it expands their perspective on concepts. Others argue that ability grouping allows the school to provide the most appropriate and effective instruction. A popular alternative is flexible grouping, which involves the frequent reassessment and regrouping of students based on constantly changing needs.

Another issue related to teaching methods is the extent to which teachers direct classroom instruction, as opposed to students directing their own learning. Hands-on learning encourages students to learn by actively doing, rather than simply listening; similarly, cooperative learning encourages students to learn by working together in a structured way to solve problems. Direct instruction refers to a teacher leading lessons and structuring them so that all students are doing the same thing at the same time. Self-directed instruction implies that students have a say in what they study and work on in class, and at what pace they complete their work.

Finally, several philosophies of teaching grow out of specific notions of how children learn best and how they develop mentally as they grow physically. Constructivism is built on the idea that a child's conception of the world is based on how he processes the interactions he has with the physical, logical and social worlds. Montessori and Waldorf schools offer specialized forms of constructivist teaching.

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