Topic 5

Teaching Methodologies

The strategies a teacher uses to deliver instruction. Choosing the right method depends on the topic, the students' age and level, the available resources, and the desired learning outcome.

A. Major Teaching Methods

Eight Core Teaching Methods

Lecture Method
Teacher-Centered
Teacher talks; students listen and take notes. One-way communication. Efficient for large groups and delivering large amounts of information quickly. Does not actively involve students.
Best for: introducing a new topic, explaining complex theory, large classes
Discussion Method
Student-Centered
Two-way communication between teacher and students (or among students). Encourages critical thinking, participation, and sharing of ideas. Teacher guides rather than dictates.
Best for: exploring ideas, developing reasoning, topics with multiple perspectives
Brainstorming
Student-Centered
Students generate as many ideas as possible on a topic — no criticism or judgement allowed during idea generation. All ideas are recorded first, then evaluated. Encourages creativity and divergent thinking.
Best for: problem-solving, creative tasks, introducing a topic, generating hypotheses
Demonstration Method
Teacher-Centered
"Show and tell" — teacher shows students how to do something step by step. Combines visual explanation with verbal instruction. Students observe, then replicate. Especially effective for procedures and practical skills.
Best for: lab procedures, practical skills, safety demonstrations, science experiments
Cooperative Learning
Student-Centered
Students work in small groups where each member has a role and contributes to a shared goal. Builds teamwork, communication, and collective responsibility. Different from group work — accountability is individual AND collective.
Best for: projects, complex problems, developing social skills, peer learning
Inquiry-Based Learning
Student-Centered
Students are given a question or problem and must investigate, gather evidence, and draw conclusions. Teacher acts as a facilitator. Promotes scientific thinking, curiosity, and independence. Closely related to the scientific method.
Best for: science, research tasks, developing investigative skills
Role Play / Simulation
Student-Centered
Students act out scenarios or simulate real-world situations. Develops empathy, communication, and application of knowledge in context. Ideal for subjects involving human interaction or complex social situations.
Best for: language learning, social studies, health education, civic scenarios
Problem-Based Learning (PBL)
Student-Centered
Students are presented with a real-world problem and must solve it using research, critical thinking, and collaboration. Content is learned as a tool for solving the problem — not taught first and applied later.
Best for: complex, cross-disciplinary problems; medical, engineering, and science education

B. Teacher-Centered vs. Student-Centered Approaches

Key Differences

FeatureTeacher-CenteredStudent-Centered
FocusTeacher is the primary source of knowledgeStudent takes an active role in learning
CommunicationOne-way: teacher → studentTwo-way or multi-directional
Role of TeacherInstructor / authorityFacilitator / guide
Role of StudentPassive listener / note-takerActive participant / problem-solver
ExamplesLecture, DemonstrationDiscussion, Brainstorming, PBL, Inquiry, Role Play
Best forDelivering content efficiently to large groupsDeep understanding, 21st-century skills, critical thinking
Teacher-Centered Methods
  • Lecture
  • Demonstration
  • Direct Instruction
  • Rote learning / Drill
Student-Centered Methods
  • Discussion
  • Brainstorming
  • Cooperative Learning
  • Inquiry-Based Learning
  • Problem-Based Learning
  • Role Play / Simulation
  • Project-Based Learning
⚡ MCQ Tip Lecture = one-way (teacher talks). Discussion = two-way (teacher + students). Brainstorming = no criticism allowed during idea generation. Demonstration = show and tell. Modern education favours student-centered approaches for developing higher-order thinking.

Quick MCQ Revision

MethodOne-linerCentered
LectureTeacher talks, students listen — one-wayTeacher
DiscussionTwo-way exchange of ideas — teacher guidesStudent
BrainstormingGenerate ideas freely — NO criticism during idea phaseStudent
DemonstrationShow and tell — teacher shows, students observe then doTeacher
Cooperative LearningSmall groups with individual + collective accountabilityStudent
Inquiry-BasedStudents investigate a question — teacher facilitatesStudent
Role PlayStudents act out scenarios — real-world applicationStudent
Problem-Based LearningReal problem first, content learned as tool to solve itStudent
Key