Using and Evaluating Instructional Material
Instructional
materials are highly important for teaching, especially for
inexperienced teachers. Teachers rely on instructional materials in
every aspect of teaching. They need materials for background information
on the subject they are teaching. Young teachers usually have not built
up their expertise whenever they enter into the field. Teachers often
use instructional materials for lesson planning. These materials are
also needed by teachers to assess the knowledge of their students.
Teachers often assess students by assigning tasks, creating projects, and administering exams. Instructional materials are essential for all of these activities.
Because
students spend a significant amount of their classroom time using
instructional materials and because of the large variety of available
materials, both print and nonprint, it is crucial that all materials be
thoroughly evaluated.
Instructional
materials shall be evaluated and selected according to specified
procedures by qualified certified staff to ensure that the materials in
the educational structure support the curriculum and meet the diverse
needs of students. The instructional materials selected must be age and
grade appropriate and must contribute to, and be aligned with, the
curriculum and competencies.
Instructional materials are print and non-print items that are designed to impart information
to students in the educational process. Instructional materials include
items such as kits, textbooks, magazines, newspapers, pictures,
recordings, slides, transparencies, videos, video discs, workbooks, and
electronic media including but not limited to music, movies, radio,
software, CD-ROMs, and online services.
Library
books are literary works, narratives, and other texts that are selected
for research or use but not used for guided or directed instruction.
Instructional staff shall consider the following factors in the selection evaluation and use of instructional materials:
• Directly support student achievement
• Impact on instructional time
• Authenticity
• Age/grade appropriateness
Criteria for Selection
Instructional materials selected should:
1. Support achievement of the content standards of the Learning Results;
2. Support the goals and objectives of the educational programs;
3. Enrich and support the curriculum;
4. Take into consideration the varied interests, abilities, and maturity levels of the students served
5. Foster respect and appreciation for cultural diversity and varied opinions;
6.
Give comprehensive, accurate and balanced representation to minorities
and women in history, science, leadership and the arts and acknowledge
the contributions of ethnic, religious and cultural groups to our
American heritage;
7.
Present a balance of opposing sides of controversial issues to enable
students to develop a capability for critical analysis;
8. Stimulate growth in factual knowledge, literary appreciation, aesthetic values and ethical standards;
9. Provide a background of information that will enable students to make intelligent decisions in their daily lives; and
No comments:
Post a Comment