Friday, 16 October 2015
ONLINE ASSIGNMENT
INTRODUCTION
Discovery
learning is a technique of inquiry based learning and is considered a
constructivist based approach to education. It is supported by the work of
learning theorists and psychologists Jean piaget, Jerom Burner and Seymour
papert. Although this form of instruction has great popularity, there is some
debate in the literature concerning its efficacy
Discovery
learning
According to
Bruner, learning is an active process of discovery facilitated by existing
knowledge and ability of the learner. Discovery involves an internal
reorganization of previously know ideas in order to establish a better fit
between those ideas and the present situation. Bruner describes that the child
finds some sort of match between what he is doing and what he has already grasped
Bruner is chief proponent of
the discovery learning approach.
Discovery learning is an inquiry-base, constructivist process that takes place in problem solving
situations where the learner draws on his own past experience and existing
knowledge to discover facts and relationships to be learned. students interact with the world by exploring and
manipulating objects and by performing experiments.
Bruner proposes a new type of
curriculum suitable to his approach. It
is spiral curriculum. It is a type of curriculum in which students repeat the
study of a subject at different class levels , each time more deeply and at
higher difficulty level . Thus , the concepts initially introduced in simple
form at the elementary level are, in successive years, explored, developed, and
extended in increasingly sophisticated ways as the student matures and
develops.
Characteristics
· It is an inquiry-based approach.
· It takes places in problem solving
situations.
· Learners construct their own
knowledge.
· Learners apply their knowledge in new
situations.
· Emphasis is on the process and not on
the product.
· It is learner centred.
· Participated in the process in
important.
· It focuses on creating interest.
· It sees teacher as a facilitator.
Advantages
*Students learn
how to learn.
*It offers self-motivation.
*It encourages independent pacing of learners.
*It fosters creativity.
*It encourages curiosity.
*It ensure active involvement of learner.
*It develops problem solving skill in learners.
*It encourages active engagement.
*It develops problem solving skills.
Limitations
*It causes cognitive over load.
*It is difficult to organize successfully.
*It requires specially skilled teachers.
*Discovery project are resources intensive.
*It requires high pre-requisite knowledge on the part of learners.
CONCLUSION
Discovery learning is described an inquiry-based instruction and the
belief that learners are best educated when they discover facts about their
world for them selves . It involves inquiry-based learning as well as
constructivism.
REFERENCE
*Kauffman J M education deform, Lanham M D scarecrow press
*Brunner J S ``the act of discovery``
Friday, 2 October 2015
UNITED NATIONS ORGANIZATION
UNITED NATIONS
The United Nations is
an international organization founded in 1945. It is currently made up of
193 Member States. The mission and work of the United Nations are guided
by the purposes and principles contained in its founding Charter.
The Secretary-General
of the United Nations is a symbol of the Organization's ideals and a spokesman
for the interests of the world's peoples, in particular the poor and
vulnerable. The current Secretary-General of the UN, and the eighth occupant of
the post, is Mr. Ban Ki-moon of the Republic of Korea, who took office on 1
January 2007. The UN Charter describes the Secretary-General as "chief
administrative officer" of the Organization.
Each of the 193
Member States of the United Nations is a member of the General Assembly.
States are admitted to membership in the UN by a decision of the General
Assembly upon the recommendation of the Security Council.
The main organs of the UN are the General Assembly, the Security
Council, the Economic and Social Council, the Trusteeship Council, the
International Court of Justice, and the UN Secretariat. All were established in
1945 when the UN was
founded.
SOCIAL REFORMERS
Sree Narayana Guru
Narayana Guru, also
known as Sree Narayana Guru, was a social reformer of India. He was born into
an Ezhava family in an era when people from such communities,
which were regarded as Avarna, faced much social injustice in the caste-ridden society
ofKerala. He led a reform movement in
Kerala, rejected casteism, and promoted new values of spiritual freedom and social equality.He stressed the need for the spiritual and social
upliftment of the downtrodden by their own efforts through the establishment of
temples and educational institutions. In the process, he denounced the
superstitions that clouded the fundamental Hindu cultural convention of caste.
There are many legends surrounding
the life of Narayana Guru but few certain facts until his rise to prominence in
1887. He was born in 1856 august 20, the son of an Ezhava peasant, Madan Asan
and his wife Kuttiyamma, in the village of Chempazhanthy near Thiruvananthapuram. Most
likely, he was educated at least in part by a Nair teacher
from a nearby village. He was deeply influenced by Vedanta and by ideas of
social equality and social and religious reform. He taught religion andSanskrit to local children and studied yoga with notable
ascetics such as Chattampi Swami. He was an itinerant yogi for
some time and Cyriac Pullapilly says
that he was probably married for a few years but "his worshipful
biographers ignored this part of his life out of reverence for his later
ascetism"
RajaRam Mohan Roy
Raja Ram
Mohan Roy (22 May 1772 – 27 September 1833) was a founder
(along with Dwarkanath Tagore and
other Bengali Brahmins) of the Brahmo Sabha[1] movement
in 1828 which engendered the Brahmo Samaj, an influential Bengali socio-religious reform movement. His influence was
apparent in the fields of politics, public
administration and education as
well as religion. He is best known for his efforts to establish the
abolishment of the practice of sati, the Hindu funeral
practice in which the widow was compelled to sacrifice herself in her husband’s
funeral pyre in some parts of the Bengal. It was he who first introduced the
word "Hinduism" into the English language in 1816. For his diverse
contributions to society, Raja Ram Mohan Roy is regarded as one of the most
important figures in the Bengali renaissance. His
efforts to protect Hinduism and Indian rights by participating in British
government earned him the title "The Father of the Indian Renaissance".
British government has named a street in the memory of Ram Mohan Roy as
"Raja Ram Mohan Roy"
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