Научная статья на тему 'Modern integrations and their benefits in teaching process'

Modern integrations and their benefits in teaching process Текст научной статьи по специальности «Науки об образовании»

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Ключевые слова
RECTANGULAR / TRADITIONAL / DEVICES / SURFACE / TEACHING AIDS / AUTISTIC / COMPLEMENTARY TOOL / LEARNING TOOL

Аннотация научной статьи по наукам об образовании, автор научной работы — Barotova Marifat Baratovna

This article is a discussion on the ness and disadvantages of modern technological teaching tools in the classroom. You will get information about the various types of popular learning and teaching tools which are used in today's classrooms.

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Текст научной работы на тему «Modern integrations and their benefits in teaching process»

MODERN INTEGRATIONS AND THEIR BENEFITS IN TEACHING

PROCESS Barotova M.B.

Barotova Marifat Baratovna - Teacher of English Language, DEPARTMENT LANGUAGES, BUKHARA MEDICAL INSTITUTE, BUKHARA, REPUBLIC OF UZBEKISTAN

Abstract: this article is a discussion on the ness and disadvantages of modern technological teaching tools in the classroom. You will get information about the various types of popular learning and teaching tools which are used in today's classrooms.

Keywords: rectangular, traditional, devices, surface, teaching aids, autistic, complementary tool, learning tool.

For most of us, our first visual and sensual contact with a learning tool begins at an age when we did not say a word, leave aside knowing an alphabet. At that impressionable age, we twisted a crayon or a pencil between tiny fingers, not quite being able to grasp it, but succeeding in tentatively touching it with our tongue. We thus literally got our first taste of a learning tool. We made wild doodles with chalks, crayons, coloured pens, etc on just about any surface (when nobody was looking naturally!). This progressed to learning how to hold a pencil and trying to draw a line or a circle and later to actually writing our ABCs. The older generation still fondly remembers their first black rectangular slates and sticks of white chalk they took to school. These are used even today in India's rural areas and municipal schools and are often a child's first learning tools. From a teacher's point of view, the slate is a teaching aid, as the larger version of it - the blackboard - is used to show the children how to write the alphabets and copy it on the slate in the exact same manner[1.225]. Starting with the blackboard, let's have a look at the different types of teaching tools used in the classroom, ranging from the traditional blackboard to e-learning packages. Keeping in mind a child's exposure to video games, iPads and smart phones, it is not surprising that as a student the child takes to technological teaching tools like the proverbial duck to water. Teachingand learning are both made more enjoyable through modern teaching aids of the technological kind. Children do tend to be more attentive as the audio or visual or audio-visual aids makes them engrossed in what is being taught. Devices like touch-screen gadgets makes learning more accessible and helps a child to understand a subject as complex as a Shakespearean play easy to understand thanks to the summaries of such subjects provided by the device's apps.Teaching aids like animated slide shows saves time for subjects like botany and biology. Some schools get carried away by the hype and herd mentality of "Other schools are using them; so should we". Here's why modern teaching aid can be ineffective: The modern technological teaching aids which are used in the classroom today are a barrier to student-teacher interactions. Learning, like these aids, is not automated. Quite often, clarity can be lost and essential details overlooked while explaining a topic with a technological teaching aid.[2.29] The biggest drawback to the use of modern teaching aids is the investment costs. These costs can be really huge as it is not a question of simply setting up the equipment on a one-time basis. Any technological equipment needs to be maintained. Quite often, the budget for such teaching aids can overshoot the mark. This has repercussions, with school fees being hiked to astronomical proportions. Moreover, in the case of using software teaching aids, the software needs to be constantly upgraded. Then there is the factor of learning how to use the teaching aids properly and effectively. Not all teachers can grasp technology very quickly so this involves a need to train them first. When giving access to the Internet to school children to encourage them to do research, it is essential to teach them cyber security and monitor the sites they visit.Whether a slide show or a touch screen device, a teaching aid must be a complementary tool to teaching and not a replacement of it. What's more, no two students are alike. Each

student has his/her own learning abilities and a teacher's personal touch goes a long way in making a student comfortable in the learning process. Teaching should never be a slave to technology.Modern teaching aids can be a boon to curious students and may be curse for a student who gets easily distracted by the marvels of technology. Finding out a middle path and optimal and appropriate use of these aids will see us producing quality students which is the primary motive of education. There was a time when the students sat under the shade of a banyan tree and the Guru taught them the virtues of life, how to face the world, how to live in the word and how to lead the world. If the world produced great teachers of the callibre of Chanakya and Plato there were equally great students of the callibre of Chandragupta Maurya and Aristotle. Authoritative knowledge in their own streams made the likes of Aryabhatta, Brahmihir, Charaka in India and Copernicus, Galileo, Einstein abroad capable of achieving timeless discoveries and inventions. This is ample proof of the fact that the classical idea of class rooms was not in any way inferior to any modern day class room as far as the quality of students is concerned. There was also a time when the class rooms simply consisted of desks, benches, teacher's table and black board.

References

1. Anthony E.M., 1963. Approach, Method, and Technique. ELT Journal (2): 63-43. doi:10.1093/elt/XVII.2.63.

2. Bell David, 2003. Method and Postmethod: Are They Really So Incompatible? (PDF). TESOL Quarterly 37 (2): 315-328. doi:10.2307/3588507. Retrieved February 7, 2012.

3. Brown H., 2001. Teaching by Principles: An Interactive Approach to Language Pedagogy (2nd ed.). WhitePlains, NY: Longman. ISBN 978-0-13-028283-5.

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