TEACHING APPROACHES IN SECONDARY SOCIAL STUDIES (EDUC161)
“THE CONCEPTUAL APPROACH”
BSE31
BORNASAL, RAY JASONBRIONES, BRYANBUENO, AMADO
THE CONCEPTUAL APPROACH
- choosing and defining the content of a certain discipline to be taught through the use of or pervasive ideas as against the traditional practice of determining content by isolated topics
- emphasis is not on the content perse, but in the big ideas that pervade the subject; using the content as a means of leading the students to discover the laws and principles or generalization that govern a particular subject/ discipline
- not a particular teaching method with specific steps to follow; it is more of a viewpoint of how facts and topics under a discipline should be dealt with
- stresses cognitive learning; the learning of content or the acquisition of knowledge
- involves more data collection usually through research while the discovery approach actively involves students to undertake experimental and investigative work
ROLES
OF
TEACHER
IN
CONCEPTUAL
APPROACH
a. Never tell the students the principles or rule which the students are supposed to state at the end of the lesson.
b. Should help the students gather sufficient data to enable them to form the expected generalization.
c. Should be able to master the cognitive hierarchy of his discipline.
d. Should categorize all knowledge pertinent to his area:
-from facts to concepts -from concepts to
generalizations -from generalizations to
principles-and all of these should
be organized around conceptual schemes which are the pervasive ideas embodying the whole discipline.
Conceptual Scheme
Principle
Generalization
Concept
Fact
Hierarchy of Cognitionnext
Term
Fact
Meaning
Simple statement of truth
Examples
Ice melts, water freezes, wax, liquid solidifies, water vapor, condenses, mothballs sublimate
back
TermConcept
MeaningSynthesis or constellation
of related facts
ExamplesIce, water, wax, water
vapor, and mothballs are all matter back
TermGeneralization
MeaningGeneral statement relating
two or more concepts
ExamplesBy relating matter with
physical change, the general statement may likely be. “ All matter undergo physical change.”
back
TermPrinciple
MeaningStatement of fundamental
processes, true with out exception within the stated limitations, capable of demonstration or illustration
ExamplesThe principle involved in the
physical change of matter is conversation.
back
TermConceptual Scheme
MeaningThe main pervasive theme
underlying a major field of study
ExamplesUnderstanding the environment
through matter and energy
back
Important Notes:
Flow of ideas from facts up to conceptual schemes is from simple to complex-allowing students to organize their thoughts from bits of information to larger cognitive level.
Students should be given lots of opportunities to read, listen, and write to expose them to as many situations as possible and lead them to categorize information.
EMPHASIZING CONCEPTUAL UNDERSTANDING
Many a time, our teaching is devoted only to memorization of isolated facts for purposes of examinations and grade. When we teach facts only, the tendency is we are able to cover more for your students to commit to memory and for you to cover in a test but our teaching ends up skin- deep or superficial, thus meaningless. If we emphasize conceptual understanding, the emphasis goes beyond facts. We integrate and correlate facts, concepts and values in a meaningful manner.
The many facts become integrated into a less number of concepts, yet more meaningful and consequently easier to recall. When we stress on conceptual teaching, we are occupied with less, but we are able to teach more substantially. It is a case of “less is more”! This is precisely the emphasis of the Basic Education Curriculum.
+--CONCEPT PATTERN ORGANIZER
ConceptCharacteristics
Characteristics
Characteristics
Example
ExampleExample
Example
Example
Example
Example