Demonstration
Strategy:
Concept: is an act of showing an action with definite evidences or
proof by the teacher then letting students to repeat the action with or without
the guidance from the teacher. It is also a process of learning by doing.
Demonstration Method /Strategy: is a visual approach to examining information, ideas and processes. It is a teaching method that allows students to see the teacher actively engaged as a learner and a model rather than merely telling them what they need to know.
Some of the silent features
Demonstration Method /Strategy: is a visual approach to examining information, ideas and processes. It is a teaching method that allows students to see the teacher actively engaged as a learner and a model rather than merely telling them what they need to know.
Some of the silent features
- learning by seeing (visibility)
- take them by step by step (instruction)
- if students already know the concept then ask question like 'what would be the next step?'. (gaining of attention)
Purpose
Teacher
allows learner to view a real life example of skill or a procedure to learn.
Students-
allow demonstrating mastery.
Why to demonstration?
- To stimulate interest in a particular topic: attracts student’s attentions and create interest that the written or spoken word cannot.
- To illustrate points efficiently: it is useful when time or explanation alone is not sufficient.
- To provide a change of pace: giving students a break from other modes of instruction (verbal ones). It also avoids the boredom.
- Lack of equipment: demonstration is more effective when the shortage of resources.
- Time constraint.
- Risky experiment: All teachers are aware that all the experiment is not safe especially for small children (chance of hurting and burning or causing accidents). Hence teachers need to perform the experiments by themselves.
Steps/procedural involved
- Carefully plan the demonstration
- Practice the demonstration
- develop on outline to guide the demonstration
- make sure everybody can see the demonstration
- introduce the demonstration to focus attentions
- ask and encourage questioning
- plan a follow up to the demonstration
Advantages
- seeing before doing
- task guidance: can be guided step by step
- Economy of supplies: Less supplies needed because not everyone needs to handle materials
- Safety: Allows teacher to control potentially dangerous materials or machinery instead of students.
Disadvantages
- Not hand on: not direct hand on experience for students unless being lead to step by step
- limited view: students may not have an equal view of demonstration, so some ways miss an aspect of the demonstration
- Pacing issue: Not all the students’ ca follows the steps.
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