There are a few children in your class who make errors. Which of these is most likely to be your analysis of the situation?
The children have poor intelligence
The children have not yet gained conceptual clarity and there is need for you to reflect on your pedagogy
The children are not interested in studies and want to create indiscipline
The children should not have been promoted to your class
Failure of a child to perform well in class tests leads us to believe that
assessment is objective and can be used to clearly identify failures
children are born with certain capabilities and deficits
there is a need to reflect upon the syllabus, pedagogy and assessment processes
some children are deemed to fail irrespective of how hard the system tries
A teacher wants to ensure that her students are motivated intrinsically. She would
specify uniform standards of achievement for all children
plan learning activities which encourage convergent thinking
focus on the processes of learning of individual children rather than on the final outcome
offer tangible rewards
Which one of the following statements best describes why children should be encouraged to ask questions in the class?
Questions increase the curiosity of the children
Children can be made to realize that they lack intelligence by making them think of all the things they don't know about
Questions take learning forward by interactions and lead to conceptual clarity
Children need to practice their language skills
Which of these is a characteristic of a child with learning disability?
An IQ below 50
Difficulty in reading fluently and reversing words
Bullying other children and engaging in aggressive acts
Doing the same motor action repeatedly
Which one of the following assessment practices will bring out the best in students?
When students are required to reproduce facts as tested via multiple choice questions
When the emphasis is laid upon positive correlation between test scores and student ability
When conceptual change and students' alternative solutions are assessed through several different methods of assessment
When the marks obtained and the position secured by the student in the class are the ultimate determinants of success
According to Vygotsky, zone of proximal development is
zone demarking the support offered by the teacher
what the child can do on her own which cannot be assessed
the gap between what the child can do independently and with assistance
the amount and nature of support provided to the child to achieve her potential
According to Piaget' s theory, children learn by
memorizing information by paying due attention
changing their behaviour when offered appropriate rewards
scaffolding provided by more able members of the society
processes of adaptation
D.
processes of adaptation
According to Jean Piaget's theory, adaptation was one of the important processes guiding cognitive development. The adaptation process itself can occur in two ways: through assimilation and accommodation.In assimilation, people take in information from the outside world and convert it to fit in with their existing ideas and concepts. People possess mental categories for information, known as schemas, that are used to understand the world around them. In accommodation, people also accommodate new information by changing their mental representations to fit the new information. When people encounter information that is completely new or that challenges their existing ideas, they often have to form a new schema to accommodate the information or alter their existing mental categories.
Piaget proposes that pre-operational children are unable to conserve. He attributes this inability to which one of the following factors?
Inability of hypothetico-deductive reasoning
Lack of high-level abstract reasoning
Personal fable
Irreversibility of thought
Socialization is a process of
acquiring values, beliefs and expectations
socializing with friends
assimilation and accommodation
learning to critique the culture of a society