There are some students who could learn a particular lesson better by having the information read to them and making connections to what they have previously learned but the question is does this work for majority of children and will it work day after day.
When would you ever
read information to students? My difficulty atm is that a) I don't know whether you are intending this thread for classroom teaching, and b) what similar backgrounds we may or may not share. The above makes me think that maybe not.
I'm going to start with an actual (sorry: lengthy) example. I'll follow it with the points I want to make.
Ok, in classroom teaching, here is an actual science unit that I taught decades ago.
Subject: Science: Solids, Liquids, Gas - grade 2 (old curriculum 1980's)
Aim: Students were to understand the concept that matter can be in the form of solids, liquids or gas and to have the concept of these three states; that matter generally expands when heated where it will also move from S to L to G, and contract when cooled and go from G to L to S. (water excepted since it expands when it turns into ice).
I did not read information from a book, and did not lecture. Nor were there "leading questions" for the most part.
Material: objects that can be observed (see below)
Objectives: the various items listed under aim
Length: roughly one week, with different planned activities each day (teaching units)
- We made popcorn, looking at the size before and after it was popped, and we got to eat it. We observed THAT it got bigger. I had to supply the information that water inside the kernels had turned into steam which burst the kernels. An air popper doesn't allow steam to be seen. But kids had plenty of experience seeing steam in their environment and could make the connection.
I made the general statement that things expand when they got hotter, and contract when they get colder. The words "expand / contract" were part of the learned vocabulary so I made sure we used them a lot. I pointed out telephone wires which get saggy in very hot weather, and more in a straight line in cold weather. This got the kids excited because some had noticed this. They were coming in weeks later with stuff they had observed, bursting to tell it.
The popcorn unit gave both the concept of expand/shrink, and states of matter from liquid to gas since we talked about water and steam - a familiar thing to them.
- For gas:
You can blow up a balloon and state that there is something inside which is making it expand, namely air.
There was an "activity table" at the back of the room. Students were rewarded when finishing work with the right to use the activity table. That table contained activities that reinforced things being studied, but because it was a "reward" they actually wanted to do more work.
One activity was at small aquarium filled with water. Instructions: Place a tissue in the bottom of a cup, put the cup into the tank upside down and push it totally under water. See if you can keep the tissue dry. Discussion later was that the air in the cup prevented water from entering. The cup was not empty: it was filled with air which is a gas.
You children naturally run to adults, excited to show their discoveries unless this is discouraged somehow (too busy to listen etc.). They were coming to me, telling their parents, looking around in the playground and at home. This thing with the tissue in the paper is
magic. If you don't kill curiosity with endless testing which puts them under judgment and anxiety, children are naturally inquisitive. When they DO get the school-required test, it's a piece of cake because of all the exploration they have done.
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The points:
- The teaching was done mostly by creating experiences for children
- The experiences were linked to feelings of pleasure: eating popcorn, exploring things, discovering with no judgment
- You can observe comprehension through the types of experiments or strategies a child adopts, a look in the eye, the kinds of questions they ask, alertness, body language
- Children naturally want to share their discoveries with adults
- The thing that has to be controlled isn't getting them to talk, but getting them not to talk all at once since they got excited. The same is true for adults, and the good workshop leader will give room for 10 minutes of babble at key moments.
- Reading out of a book would have killed all of that. Besides, reading is a skill that kids need to acquire so why read for them?
I do not disagree with discussions or the devices toward them. But I'm pointing out that a lot of learning can happen without the use of words. (Guided) Experience is a great teacher.
I hope this makes it a bit more clear.