Teacher directed instruction
the teacher controls the content and guides the presentation of the lesson. One-way delivery.
Methods of teacher-directed instruction
lectures, guided practice, questioning, demonstrations, independent practice or homeowrk.
Advantages
presenting a great deal of material to a large group of students in a short time. The best way to introduce new concepts, teach lower-level thinking skills, and appeal to students with cognitive difficulties
Criticism
Effective ONLY for lower-level skills and doesn't encourage enough student participation in the learning process
Structured overview
Teacher provides an oral, written, or visual summary or outline of a topic at the beginning of a lesson. Helps students see the big picture
Lecturing
teacher simply presents new material to passively listening students. Teacher should try to lecture in ways taht are stimulating and engaging to students imagination
Specific instruction
The teacher directs the students' attention toward specific learning goals in a highly structured procedure. Explanation, demonstration, and practice.
Drill and Practice
Lower level skills such as memorization of spelling rules or arithmetic procedures are mastered through repetitive practice. "rote learning".