Btvted Course Module Ict
Btvted Course Module Ict
Btvted Course Module Ict
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Module 1
Introduction to Teaching Common Competencies in ICT
Module Overview
“Technology is just a tool. In terms of getting the kids working together and motivating
them, the teacher is most important.” – Bill Gates –
Hello students!
Welcome to Technology
for Teaching and
Learning 1- Module 1.
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In this module,
essential terms and
constructs of getting
the knack of
technology for
teaching and learning
are defined. You will
encounter these terms
as we go through in
this course. Also, this
module introduces to
students the roles of
technology for teaching
and learning.
At the end of this
module, you are
expected to:
• Define terms and
concepts essential to
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the understanding of
technology for teaching
and learning
• Use the concepts
and terms in
communicating with
peers
• Explain the roles of
technology in teaching
and learning
• Portray the value of
technology in
supporting student
learning
Are you ready? Then
start the lessons now!
Hello students! Welcome to Technology for Teaching and Learning 1- Module 1.
In this module, essential terms and constructs of getting the knack of technology for
teaching and learning are defined. You will encounter these terms as we go through in
this course. Also, this module introduces to students the roles of technology for teaching
and learning.
At the end of this module, you are expected to:
• Define terms and concepts essential to the understanding of technology for teaching
and learning
• Use the concepts and terms in communicating with peers
• Explain the roles of technology in teaching and learning
• Portray the value of technology in supporting student learning
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Are you ready? Then start the lessons now! 0
Lessons in this Module
• Understanding the Basic Concepts Related to ICT
• Roles of ICT in Teaching and Learning
In this module, essential terms and constructs of getting the knack of technology
for teaching common competencies in ICT are defined. You will encounter these terms as
we go through in this course. Also, this module introduces to students the roles of
technology for teaching and learning.
Lesson 1
Understanding the Basic Concepts Related to ICT
Learning Outcomes
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Analysis
• How useful is
the technology for
teaching and learning?
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________________________
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• What are the terms
and concepts related to
technology for teaching
and learning?
________________________
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• How useful is the ICT for teaching and learning?
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• What are the terms and concepts related to ICT for teaching and learning?
__________________________________________________________________
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Abstraction
The following terms and concepts are related to ICT that you need to digest.
1. Technology refers to methods, processes, and devices used for practical
purposes. It includes instruments from pencil and paper to modern electronic
gadgets and tools for the practical task.
2. Information and Communication Technology and Literacy or ICT
Literacy is the use of digital technology, communication tools and networks to
access, manage, integrate, evaluate, create and communicate information (Guro
21, 2011).
3. Educational Technology refers to the utilization of technology in
teaching and learning, which includes both the non-digital (flip charts, pictures,
models, realia, etc.). And digital (electronic tools: hardware, software, and
connections, etc.).
4. Digital Literacy refers to the ability to discover, assess, utilize, share, and
generate content with the use of information technologies and the internet
(Cornell University).
5. Digital Learning is an instructional practice that utilizes technology to
reinforce students’ learning experience. It covers the use of a broad spectrum of
processes that comprises blended or virtual learning. It can come as online or off-
line, which utilizes digital technology.
6. Online Digital Tools and Apps use an Internet connection to access the
information needed, like Skype. It is a telecommunication application
software product that focuses on providing video chat and video calls between
computers, tablets, mobile devices via the Internet and to regular telephones.
7. Off-line Digital Tools and Apps can still be used even if there is no internet
access. Among these are Canary Learning, Pocket, Evertone, iBooks, KA LITE
(Gupta, Prinyaka, 2017).
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8. Instructional Technology refers to the theory and practice of design,
development, utilization, management, and evaluation of the processes and
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resources for learning (Association for Educational Communications and
Technology, Seels, B.B. &Richey, P.C. 1994).
9. Software refers to program control instructions and accompanying
documentation stored on disks or tapes when not being used in the computer. By
extension, the term refers to audiovisual materials (Smaldino, 2005).
10. Multimedia is a sequential or simultaneous use of a variety of media formats
in a given presentation or self-study program (Smaldino, 2005).
11. Internet is a massive network of networks, a networking infrastructure. It
connects millions of computers globally, forming a network in which any
computer can communicate with any other computer as long as they are
connected to the internet. It is generally defined as a global network
connecting millions of computers (http://www.webopedia.com).
12. World Wide Web (www) is also called a Web, which is a graphical
environment on computer networks that allows you to access, view, and maintain
documentation that can include text, data, sound, and videos (Smaldino,
2005). It is a way of accessing information over the medium of the internet. It
is an information-sharing model that is built on top of the Internet.
13. Web Access is the ability of the learner to access the Internet at any point
during the lesson to take advantage of the array of available educational
resources.
14. Webquest is an inquiry-oriented lesson format in which most or all
information that learners work with comes from the web. These can be created
using various programs, including simple word processing documents that
include links to websites.
15. Productivity Tools refers to any type of software associated with computers
and related technologies that can be used as tools for personal, professional,
or classroom productivity. Examples: Microsoft Office, Apple Works – word
processing, grade and record-keeping, web page production, presentation)
(KFIT-Unesco 2016).
16. Technology Tool is an instrument used for doing work. It can be
anything that helps you accomplish your goal with the use of technology. These
technology tools can be classified as: a. Data/Calculation Tools. Examples:
spreadsheets, Excels, Sketchpads, probability constructor b. Design Tools.
These are used to make models and design, creating, and building. Included
here are Family Tree Maker, GollyGee, and Crazy Machines, among others.
c. Discussion Tools. Four different approaches utilize discussion and interaction
on the Internet. These are threaded discussion forum, Blogging, Live chat, and
Video Teleconferencing, Netiquette, and Safety on the Net. d. Email Tools.
Emails are great communication tools for sending messages, photographs,
videos, and other files. It allows you to reach out to others around the world.
Examples are google mail, Ymail, Yahoo mail, and many more. e. Handheld
Devices. Handheld devices have become popular among learners. These include
Personal Digital Assistants, global positioning system, (GPS) and Geographic
Information system (GIS) in the classroom, Portable electronic keyboards, Digital
cameras, Mobile phones, Palm, Handheld computers.
17. Webquest is a teacher structured research experience for the students
that are primarily based on the use of the World Wide Web and typically takes
one or more instructional periods (Bender & Waller, 2011). 18. Blog is an online
journal where posted information from both teachers and students is arranged.
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There are three kinds of blogs: blogs used for communication, blogs used for
instruction, and blogs used for both (Ferriter & Garry, 2010).
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19. Wiki, an editable website usually with limited access, allows students to
collaboratively create and post written work or digital files, such as digital photos
or videos. Wikipedia is one of the most widely recognized of all the wikis
(Watters, 2011).
20. Flipped classroom utilizes a reverse instructional delivery, where the teacher
is required to use the web resources as homework or out of class activity as initial
instruction of the lesson, which will be discussed during class time.
Podcast is a video or
audio multi-media clip
about a single topic
typically in the
format of the radio
talk show. The two
essential functions of
a podcast are to
retrieve information to
disseminate
information (Eash,
2006).
22. Google Apps is a
cloud-based teaching
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tool which is stored in
the Google server
and is available for
students both at home
and in school. It
includes the Gmail, a
free-mail for all; Google
calendar – a tool used
for organizational
purposes; Google
sites that provide
options for developing
blogs and wikis; and
Google docs are used
for sophisticated word
processing and editing
for the document.
23. Vlog is a video blog
where each entry is
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posted as a video
instead of the text.
24. Facebook is a
popular social
networking site used
by students and
adults
worldwide to present
information on
themselves and the
world.
25. VOIP (voice over
internet protocol) is a
category of hardware
and software that
enables people to use
the Internet as a
transmission medium
for telephone calls by
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sending voice data in
packets using IP rather
than traditional circuit
transmission.
21. Podcast is a video or audio multi-media clip about a single topic typically in
the format of the radio talk show. The two essential functions of a podcast
are to retrieve information to disseminate information (Eash, 2006). 22. Google
Apps is a cloud-based teaching tool which is stored in the Google server and is
available for students both at home and in school. It includes the Gmail, a free-
mail for all; Google calendar – a tool used for organizational purposes; Google
sites that provide options for developing blogs and wikis; and Google docs are
used for sophisticated word processing and editing for the document.
23. Vlog is a video blog where each entry is posted as a video instead of the text.
24. Facebook is a popular social networking site used by students and
adults worldwide to present information on themselves and the world.
25. VOIP (voice over internet protocol) is a category of hardware and software
that enables people to use the Internet as a transmission medium for telephone
calls by sending voice data in packets using IP rather than traditional circuit
transmission.
Application
1. Make a wordlist of terms of at least 20 ICT-terms with definitions or
descriptions. Write in your references (APA Format) to the sources of your
explanations.
2. Identify three (3) concepts that you learned in this lesson. Write your ideas
about the idea.
Closure
Congratulations on the job well done. You can now proceed to the next lesson
“Roles of ICT for Teaching and Learning”.
Lesson 2
Roles of ICT for Teaching and Learning
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Learning Outcomes
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At the end of the lesson, you should be able to:
• Portray the value of ICT in supporting student learning
• Explain the roles of ICT in teaching and learning
Activity
Activity
• Go back to your
learning experiences in
school. Recall specific
ways by
which the use of
educational technology
helped you learn.
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• Write a short
paragraph on how
helpful technology is in
your life as a learner.
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________________________
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Go back to your learning experiences in school. Recall specific ways by which
the use of educational technology helped you learn.
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Analysis
What are the roles that technology plays in the work of a teacher?
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• What are the roles that technology plays in the learning of students?
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• Many college students are presently required to take computer courses inncluding
word processing, spreadsheet preparation, presentation techniques, etc. How do you
think this will help application of skills in teaching?
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How can learners
benefit most in the use
of technology?
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• How can learners benefit most in the use of technology?
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Abstraction
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Roles of Technology for
Teaching
According to Stosic
(2015), educational
technology has three
domains:
1. Technology as a
tutor. Technology can
support the teachers,
tutors and other
professionals to help
students learn better.
2. Technology as a
teaching tool.
Technology can be
used as an
instrument in
teaching.
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3. Technology as a
learning tool.
Technology makes
learning easier and
more
effective. use these
tools for learning for
life.
A. For Teachers and
Teaching
1. Provides essential
support to teachers.
2. Modernizes the
teaching-learning
environment.
3. Enhances teaching-
learning methods and
strategies in teaching.
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4. Opens opportunities
for educational
research.
5. Improves the
capabilityof teachers
and inculcates
scientific attitude.
6. Serves as an
avenue for teacher
professional
development.
7. Encourages
scientific attitude.
B. For Learners and
Learning
1. Supports learners
on learning how to
learn on their own.
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2. Develops the
communication skills of
learners through social
interactions.
3. Augments learners’
higher-order-thinking
skills: critical thinking,
problem
solving and creativity.
Roles of Technology for Teaching
Application
Write a paragraph on how you are going to use technology when you become
a teacher.
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Congratulations
because you gained
knowledge of the roles
of technology in
the teaching-learning
process.
Closure
Module Assessment
This test aims to evaluate how the learners are learning about Module 1. Encircle
the letter of the correct answer.
1. The following are purposes of using WebQuest EXCEPT
A. To encourage the students to use information in meaningful classroom
discussions.
B. To introduce new knowledge and to strengthen knowledge.
C. To acquire knowledge through reading.
D. To develop higher-order-thinking.
2. John has the skill in using information and communication technologies to find,
evaluate, create and communicate information. What ability is manifested?
A. Digital literacy
B. Numerical Literacy
C. Reading and Writing Skill
D. Assessing and Evaluating Skill
5. This is a type of learning facilitated by technology that allows students to have control
over time, place, path or pace.
A. Digital learning
B. Deep learning
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C. Digital teaching
D. Instructional learning
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6. Teacher Gina uses tablets, video conferencing and smartboard for effective teaching.
What domain of technology is this?
A. Technology as a teaching tool
B. Technology as a learning tool
C. Technology as a tutor
D. Technology as a program
7. The following are roles of technology for teachers and teaching EXCEPT
A. Enhances passive classroom to alive classroom.
B. Improve higher-order-thinking skills of students.
C. Improves teaching performance of teachers.
D. Provides an avenue for professional development
8. Jennifer has the ability to think with reason, understand the logical connection between
ideas and ability to identify, analyze and solve problems systematically. What is
manifested by Jennifer?
A. Higher-order-thinking skill
B. Creative thinking
C. Reading literacy
D. Numerical literacy
MODULE SUMMARY
References
Bilbao, P., Dequilla, M.A., Rosano, D., Boholano, H. (2019). Technology for teaching
and
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learning 1. Lorimar Publishing, Inc.
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Online Sources
User blog: W A N I S A H/Understanding the basic concept in ....
https://community.fandom.com/wiki/User_blog:W_A_N_I_S_A_H/Understanding_the_b
asic_concept_in_ICT
Module 2
ICT Policies and Safety Issues in Teaching and Learning
Module Overview
“There can be infinite uses of the computer and new-age technology, but if teachers
themselves are not able to bring it into the classroom and make it work, then it fails.”
-Nancy Kassebaum-
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• Enumerate the national ICT policies affecting classroom practices
• Describe the implementation of ICT policies in teaching-learning
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• Identify ICT policies that are incorporated to the design and
implementation of teaching-learning activities
Lesson 1
ICT National or International Policies That are Applicable to
Teaching and Learning
Learning Outcomes
Introduction
Information and Communications Technology (ICT) can impact student
learning when teachers are digitally literate and understand how to integrate it into the
curriculum. When you want every student to enumerate national ICT policies, each time
you teach, understanding the existing and planned national policies related to ICT,
may help you achieve your goal. You will find the answers to this question in this
lesson.
Activity
1. Write down the policies and suggest what to do to implement the ICT in Education
policy first at the national level (all schools) and then how to implement the policy in our
classroom.
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2. Individuals prepare a presentation for class discussion.
Analysis
ICTs are not only an instructional means to provide prerequisite learning
activities; they offer an exploratory space where the learner is in charge. Write down a
list of the international and national ICTs as a learning tool you think can improve
quality in education.
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Abstraction
The international policymakers join forces to successfully implement ICT in
educational practice to address the individual needs of students, the implications of
technology for student assessment, and teacher learning to successfully implement
technology (Voogt, 2013). A National ICT Policy is a policy put into place so that the
government and stakeholders can have access to information that is committed to
bringing digital technology to all individuals and communities.
The provision of ICT to academic staff and students is critical to recommend
them to more effective learning environments. By overcoming the needs and
reinforcing the functional aspects, it may help decision-makers to employ academic
staff on an investigation of the status of the developments of ICT in improving
the teaching and learning environment in educational institutions. (Alzahrani, 2017).
The ability of policymakers to innovate on related policy issues outperform
technological innovations because it changes and evolves. Different institutions in
different countries formulated and proposed policies in various forms. Lack of rigorous
and significant evidence complicates the attempts to outline impactful
ICT/education policies.
The World Bank’s Systems Assessment for Better Education Results
(SABER) initiative, as part of their work, attempts to document national
educational technology policies around the world and their evolution over time.
Policymakers try to benchmark their policies on ICT use in education against
international norms, so a related SABER-ICT policy framework has been developed.
Likewise, those of comparator countries around the world, identify key themes and
characteristics, draw on an analysis of their policy documents.
There are eight policy themes around the world that are commonly
identified in educational technology policies; (1) vision and planning; (2) ICT
infrastructure; (3) teachers; (4) skills and competencies; (5) learning resources; (6)
EMIS; (7) monitoring and evaluation; and (8) equity, inclusion, and safety. The
framework only considers policy intent but not the extent to which policies are realized
in practice, nor the impact of such policies. The policymakers are challenged to offer
useful related policy guidance for rapid developments and innovations in the technology
sector (Trucano, 2016).
SABER-ICT policy framework may find useful by policymakers as a means to
help their country benchmark the current state of related policy development. It
can look forward to potential future policy directions and gain inspiration from other
countries. There are two official documents wherein Policy on the use of ICTs in the
Philippine basic education system is articulated. The Medium-Term Development
Plan of the Philippines (MTPDP) 2004-2010. The MTPDP states: “ICT will be
harnessed as a powerful enabler of capacity development. It will, therefore, be
targeted directly towards specific development goals like ensuring basic education
for all and lifelong learning, among others” (National Economic Development Authority,
2004a, p. 2) and the 2002 Basic Education Curriculum (BEC), that stipulates the
following goal of Philippine primary education: “We must educate our Filipino
learners to filter information critically, seek credible sources of knowledge, and use
data and facts creatively so that they can survive, overcome poverty, raise their personal
and national esteem, and realize a gracious life in our risky new world.” (p. i)
The Philippine government, especially the Department of Education and
Department of Science and Technology, has forwarded ICT educations through policies
and projects. The Restructured Basic Education Curriculum launched in 2002 aimed to
implement an interactive curriculum and to integrate technology in instruction and
education, with computer literacy much emphasis. The Act of 1998 (R.A. 8484) was
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passed to generate the participation of companies and to engage the private sector.
There are programs with DepEd through streamline data collection to improve ICT
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education. To help schools to participate in ICT-related programs, the DepEd
Computerization Program (DCP) was implemented.
According to Arinto (2006), policy statements on ICT integration in
Philippine primary education reflect a human development perspective. However, critical
ICTs for schools’ programs tend to be informed by a human capital approach. The
human development perspective joined the mainstream of education and
development in the 1990s, and it now reinforces the international consensus on
Education for All and the Millennium Development Goals, However, many
educational reform efforts. It continues to influence the human capital perspective
(Avalos, 2003).
Application
As a whole class, you plan to organize a forum inviting a resource speaker to
talk on ICT on national and international policies applied to teaching and learning Well
done! You have just finished Lesson 1 of this module. Should there be some parts of the
lesson which you need clarification, please ask your teacher during your online
interactions.
Closure
Now if you are ready,
please proceed to
Lesson 2 of this module
which will
discuss safety issues in
ICT
Closure
Now if you are ready, please proceed to Lesson 2 of this module which will
discuss safety issues in ICT.
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Lesson 2
Safety issues in ICT
Lesson 2
Safety issues in ICT
Learning Outcomes
At the end of the lesson, you should be able to:
Activity
1. Write a 3-5 page and how critique paper critically examining the implementation
process of technology integration about ICTs in education
2. Learners share knowledge with classmates.
3. In groups, discuss the policies and suggest what to do to implement the ICT in
Education policy first at the national level (all schools) and then how to implement the
policy in your classroom.
4. Once the group has an overview of the policy environment, they need to start thinking
about how to implement the ICT safety issues in cyberbullying.
Analysis
1. Organize small groups to interview and explain how existing and planned national
policies impact classroom practices their classroom practices correspond to and
support policies related to ICT.
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2. What is the impact of ICT in Education Policy to teaching and learning?
_____________________________________________________________________
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_____________________________________________________________________
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3. Interview a cyberbullied student and what are your suggestions to improve student
performance related to the discussion of safety issues in cyberbullying?
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Abstraction
“Technological change is not additive; it is ecological. New technology does not
merely add something; it changes everything.”
Originally, with the active participation of the learner instructor, the
implementation of ICT in education was to change the teaching and the learning process
from the traditional instructional teacher-centered endeavor to a learner-centered
approach with the active participation of the learner coach (Voogt et al., 2013).
The most natural part for the effective integration of ICT into the educational
system is given enough capital although the process of integration is complex and
multifaceted, like in curriculum and pedagogy, teacher competencies, institutional
readiness, and long-term financing,
To improve the quality of education, policymakers and implementation
managers must have a clear vision in investments of ICTs that requires a vast amount of
money. Such massive investments require not only careful planning for skills
enhancement of both teachers and learners but also thoughtful implementation.
Both policymakers and implementation managers at the national and institutional
levels need to plan for the introduction of high technology and understand the
contextual complexities of the educational ecosystem of the communities.
Youths acquire ICT skills faster than adults, according to the studies of the World
Youth Report (2003) and more likely to share these skills with their peers either
intentionally or through interaction. Hu & McGrath (2012) study reports on the
implementation of the national reform in Chinese secondary schools. The study focused
on the use of ICT in teaching the English language. Findings indicated that the majority
of the teachers have a positive attitude towards ICT and happy with the current
ICT use in English. Moreover, results showed that some teachers find difficulties in
changing from the traditional pedagogical method of teaching to a technological based
pedagogy. Hu and McGrath (2012) suggested that continuous professional development
programs that can motivate the attitudes of teachers positively to equip them with new
ICT skills.
After substantial worldwide implementation ICT in schools, studies have found
out that those teachers who are more proficient in using ICT focus on the internet search
and word processing instead of project-based teaching ()Phelps, Graham, & Watts,
2011). Mingaine (2013) observed that despite the benefits of ICT, the school management
had not fully implemented the policies developed by the Ministry of Education in Kenya.
They assert that some schools had developed guidelines on how to implement ICT,
but no attempt was made to achieve them. This prompted an investigation of
challenges that hindered the efficient implementation of ICT in public secondary schools
in Meru County.
Mooij and Smeets (2001) suggested five successive phases of ICT
implementation representing different levels of ICT transformation of the
educational and learning processes. These include:
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(1) the incidental and isolated use of ICT by one or more teachers
(2) increasing awareness of ICT relevance at all levels
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(3) emphasis on ICT co-ordination and hardware
(4) focus on didactic innovation and ICT support
(5) use of ICT-integrated teaching and learning that is independent of time and
place.
You might have heard the term’ cyberbullying,’ and it means to try to hurt
someone’s feelings by using ICT such as the internet, email, chatrooms, and
texting to deliver demeaning messages at any time and through a variety of avenues.
Today’s children with online access and equipped with digital mobile phone or social
network account can receive cyberbully messages anywhere and at any time, and these
digital messages can also be anonymous, that increase the amount of fear experienced
by the target child. This intense psychological stress of victims of bullying
unfavorably affects a child’s ability to concentrate on schoolwork, and school lessons
or activities.
Children who experience classic bullying and cyberbullying adversely affects
their academic performance. Those who experience classic bullying are likely to avoid
locations and activities they associate with negative experiences; likewise, cyberbullied
victims try to avoid the technological spaces. In cyberspace, technological areas such as
social media networking sites, online websites, social networks, chat programs, and
school computer rooms are all vital elements in the educational development and social
lives of students relevant to their academic success. As technology and technological
skills become more critical in modern academics and professional training, cyberbullied,
students face several academic and career difficulties.
The Government today unveiled tough new measures to be like the UK that is the
safest place in the world to be online. These are the suggested safety policy measures:
• Independent regulator will be appointed to enforce stringent new standards
• Social media firms must abide by mandatory “duty of care” to protect users and
could face hefty fines if they fail to deliver
• Measures are the first of their kind in the world in the fight to make the internet
a
safer place
In the first online safety laws of their kind, social media companies and tech firms
will be legally required to protect their users and face severe penalties if they do
not comply. The eSafety Toolkit for Schools is designed to support schools to
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create safer online environments. The resources are backed by evidence and
promote a nationally consistent approach to preventing and responding to online safety
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issues.
The resources are categorized into four elements: Prepare, Engage, Educate,
and Respond. Each contributes to creating safer online environments for school
communities, whether the resources from each element are used on their own or
collectively, each contributes to creating safer online environments for school
communities.
• Prepare
Prepare resources to help schools evaluate their willingness to deal with
online safety issues and deliver suggestions to improve their practices. They are
useful for strengthening school policies and procedures in online safety.
• Engage
All members of your school community should be active participants in
creating and maintaining safe online environments. Engage resources to
encourage the participation of the school community in creating a safe online
environment. They help engage school community members as involved and
valued participants, and they facilitate the real involvement of students.
• Educate
Preventing an online incident is always better than having to respond to
one. The Educate resources support schools in developing the knowledge, skills,
and capabilities of students, staff, and parents to have positive and secure online
experiences. They bid best practice guidance for online safety education and sit
alongside eSafety’s complement of curriculum-aligned teaching-learning
activities.
• Respond
There must be processes in place in case an incident happens so that it is
controlled appropriately. The Respond resources support schools to evaluate and
respond to online incidents effectively. They preserve digital evidence, offer
guidance to understand reporting requirements, minimized more harm, and
supporting wellbeing. eSafety developed the Toolkit in consultation across every
state and territory with government and non-government education sector
representatives. It was established in response to the Royal Commission into
Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse and the Education Council’s work
program to report bullying and cyberbullying.
Application
Based on your activities, make a mind-map of the decisions you face
concerning the implementation of ICT policies in teaching-learning and the safety issues
in ICT regarding cyberbullying.
Closure
Congratulation! You have just finished Lesson 2. In this lesson, you learned
about the practices that address safety issues in ICT for teaching and learning and safety
issues in cyberbullying. In the next lesson, you will learn about the ICT policies that are
incorporated to the design and implementation of teaching-learning activities.
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Lesson 3
Uses of ICT Policies
in the Teaching and
Learning
Environment
Lesson 3
Uses of ICT Policies in the Teaching and Learning
Environment
Learning Outcomes
At the end of the lesson, you should be able to:
Identify ICT policies that are incorporated into the design and implementation of teaching
-learning activities and have a deeper understanding of the uses of ICTs in facilitating the
teaching and learning process
Incorporate ICT policies in the design and implementation of teaching-learning activities
Activity
1. You will research other schools’ ICT policies and best practices by surfing the World
Wide Web and write down your discoveries using the graphic organizer.
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2. You will do a class observation on how ICT practices are utilized in the
classroom.
Analysis
1. Where is the most research on the impact of ICT focusing on?
________________________________________________________________________
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2. What policies do reports on the use of ICT practices that impacts teaching and
learning in the classroom?
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Abstraction
Globally, researchers and policymakers acknowledge the importance of
developing a school-based ICT policy plan to facilitate the integration of
information and communication technology (ICT) in education. Despite this interest,
little is known about how schools can improve their local ICT policy capacity and how to
launch an ICT policy plan.
In many countries, the use of ICT in education and training has become a priority
during the last decade. However, very few have achieved progress. Indeed, a
small percentage of schools in some countries reached high levels of effective use
of ICT to support and change the teaching and learning process in many subject areas.
Others are still in the early phase of Information and Communication Technologies
adoption. Those schools with sufficient ICT resources have better results achievements
compared to those schools that are not well-equipped. Finally, teachers are more
convinced that the educational achievements of pupils are anticipated to good ICT
use. There is a high percentage of teachers in Europe (86%) say that students are more
motivated when they used computers and the Internet in class.
A lot of resources have been invested by many governments across the world to
ICT development to improve teaching and learning using technology in schools.
New educational ICT policy issues emerged, and new patterns of ICT related
practices are evident in education. To support traditional learning methods, many
teachers use ICT to know how ICT can promote teaching and learning, as explained
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by Khattak, (2015). Furthermore, it has been proven that students have lots of benefits
to new technologies.
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Literature shows that ICT has a potential to enhance the teaching and
learning process in many ways if it is well-utilized in learner-centered schools According
to research conducted by Dzidonu, (2010), it shows that learning activities that are
challenging, authentic, multisensorial and multi-disciplinary, students are motivated
with higher attendance report, motivation and academic accomplishment as a result of
ICT programs.
When there are potential and promise of ICT use in education, there are also
'perils' related to the distraction of existing traditional teaching and learning practices,
such as the high costs, increased responsibilities on teachers, equity, and issues around
data privacy and security. Four broad tangled issues must be addressed when considering
the overall impact of the use of ICTs in education, effectiveness, cost, equity, and
sustainability.
Policies related to technology use in change and evolve, often along a
somewhat predictable path, and technological innovations often outpace the ability of
policymakers to innovate on related policy issues. Such policies take different forms and
are formulated and proposed by various institutions in different countries. No matter what
country, a lack of rigorous, relevant evidence typically complicates attempts to draft
impactful ICT/education policies. The educational effectiveness of ICTs depends on how
they are used and for what purpose. ICTs do not work in other educational tools or
educational delivery for everyone, everywhere in the same way. In developing
countries, education takes place under situations that are substantially different from
those in developed countries. The poorest countries spend the least proportionately
on non-salary related educational expenditures. The Philippines is one of many
developing nations that have turned to information and communication technology (ICT)
as a tool to improve teaching and learning, whose educational system reveals many of
the same problems and limitations of its fellow developing nations. Unfortunately,
implementation endures from several weaknesses: the absence of documentation
and information on how ICT is used; there is a lack of coordination between public and
private sector efforts; and not sufficient teacher preparation. More specifically, there is
uncertainty about whether computers in schools are fully utilized for educational
computing. There were also concerns that computers meant for students were instead
being used only by teachers for lesson plans preparation or playing games.
Educational researchers stated that lack of documentation regarding ICT use
is a problem that exists in many countries. In developing countries, data that could
help determine how scarce educational resources should be distributed or how effectively
they are being used are simply not available. Finally, teacher preparation is not sufficient.
Some training programs for teachers emphasize the use of specific software packages, but
the integration of ICT in the curriculum is overlooked (Ng et. al, 2009). If teachers dare
to use ICT without adequate training, they are likely to do it inaccurately.
Therefore, Philippine national policy has been formulated in the advanced use of
ICT in education. The Senate Committee on Education, in cooperation with the
DECS, launched Project CARES in March 2001. Project CARES was designed to
upgrade the use and application of ICT in public elementary and secondary schools
nationwide (Rimando, 2001). The primary concern of the project is the school
administration to respond to the need for accurate and timely data that administrators and
teachers need to manage their classes.
Philippines as a developing country are committed to instilling schools with
ICT, hopeful that these technologies will improve teaching and learning in today's
knowledge society. Subsequently, the government and the private sector have introduced
programs to deliver schools with computer hardware and software, Internet connectivity,
and teacher training. However, substantial gaps still exist in ICT program
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implementations. There is a lack of data on schools’ use of ICT, so there is little
basis for policy formulation; furthermore, there is a lack of coordination between
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public and private sector efforts. Within the ICT program, thus leads to wasted time,
money, and human resources. Finally, there is a demand for further teacher training in
both computer literacy and ICT integration in the curriculum. These gaps must be
sufficiently addressed before ICT can have a significant impact on teaching and
learning in Philippine schools (Rodrigo, 2001).
A. Policy Recommended Programs that have applications to education teaching-
learning:
1. ICT in Education Masterplan for all levels, including a National
Roadmap for Faculty Development in ICT in Education. A National Framework
Plan for ICTs in Basic Education was developed.
2. Content and application development through the Open Content in
Education Initiative (OCEI), which converts DepED materials into interactive
multi-media content, develops applications used in schools and conducts students’
and teacher’s competitions to promote the development of education-related web
content.
3. PheDNET is a “walled” garden the hosts educational learning and
teaching materials and applications for use by Filipino students, their parents, and
teachers. All public high schools will be part of this network with only
DepEd-approved multi-media applications, materials, and mirrored internet
sites accessible from school ‘s PCs.
4. Established Community eLearning Centers called eSkwela for out-of-school
youth (OSY), providing them with ICT-enhanced alternative education
opportunities.
5. eQuality Program for tertiary education through partnerships with state
universities and colleges (SUCs) to improve the quality of IT education and the
use of ICT in education in the country, particularly outside of Metro Manila.
6. Digital Media Arts Program, which builds digital media skills for the
government using Open Source technologies. Particularly the beneficiary
agencies organizations, the Cultural Center of the Philippines, National
Commission and for Culture and Arts, State Universities, and local government
units.
7. ICT skills strategic plan, which develops an inter-agency approach to
identifying strategic and policy and program recommendations to address ICT
skills demand-supply type.
B. Some Issues on ICT and Internet Policy and Regulations
Issue No. 1: Freedom of Expression and Censorship.
• The UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights provides that everyone has
the right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion, likewise the
right to freedom of opinion and expression.
• Censorship restricts the transmission of information by blocking it or filtering
information.
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• Information privacy must be used for purposes and will not be disclosed to
others without the consent of the individuals.
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Issue No. 3: Surveillance and Data Retention
• Indirect Surveillance – no direct contact between the agent and the
surveillance subject and but evidence of activities can be traced.
• Dataveillance –the use of personal information to monitor a person’s
activities.
• Data Retention – the storage and use of information from
communication systems.
Application
The availability and the use of the new ICTs also encourage new types of
learning interactions: between teacher-learner, teacher-teacher, learner-experts, and
between learners-computer. In a continuum from traditional to the new environment,
where would you position your school? Place an X mark where you think your school is.
Closure
Now that you have already known the implications of ICT Policies and Safety
Issues in Teaching and Learning, you can now proceed to the next module, which will
discuss on Theories and Principles in the Use and Design of Technology-Driven Lessons.
Module Assessment
Encircle the correct answer.
1. When you ensure important information that will only be used for purposes and not be
disclosed to others without the consent of the individuals, is an example of what safety
issues of ICT?
A. Privacy and Security B. Surveillance and Data Retention
C. E-pollutants from E-waste D. Freedom of Expression and Censorship
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2. Which form of surveillance that serves as storage and use of information from
communication systems?
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A. Data Retention B. Indirect Surveillance C. Dataveillance D. Censorship
4. The following statements are the risks associated with the use of ICT and e-
Networking, EXCEPT:
A. Cyber-bullying in all forms, receiving sexually explicit images or messages.
B. Prolonged exposure to on-line technologies, particularly at an early age.
C. Emphasizes learning to understand and new technologies in a positive way.
D. Addiction to gambling and gaming.
6. What network management considered when you make clear that no one should
log on as another user?
A. Password Policy
B. Safety in the Use of Network in Schools
C. Personal mobile phones and mobile devices
D. Using Cameras
8. What program for tertiary education through partnerships with state universities
and colleges use to improve the quality of IT education and the use of ICT in education in
the country, particularly outside of Metro Manila?
A. PheDNET C. eQuality
B. eSkwela for out-of-school youth (OSY) D. Digital Media Arts
9. What practices violate the provision in the use of the internet when it restricts the
transmission of information by blocking it or filtering the information?
A. Blocking C. Freedom of expression
B. Censorship D. Surveillance
10. The following statements are the implications of the ICT policies and
guidelines for teaching and learning, EXCEPT:
A. Learners should not only know the benefits of technology use, but they should
know how they can be protected by hazards that brings to their lives.
B. It guides the teachers on what they should teach that relate to ICT.
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C. The learners of the 21st century are even more advanced than some of the teachers, so
they don’t need guidance on how to use technology.
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D. Technology should never replace any human teacher.
MODULE SUMMARY
References
Alzahrani, M. G. (2017). The Developments of ICT and the Need for Blended Learning
in Saudi Arabia. Journal of Education and Practice, 8(9), 79-87.
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Education”. Available
online
http://www.unesco.org/
education/educprog/lwf
/dl/edict.pdf; accessed
7 August
2002.
Bilbao, P. et al. (2019). Technology for teaching and learning 1. Quezon City,
Philippines: Lorimar Publishing, Inc.)
Dzidonu, C. (2010). An analysis of the role of ICTs to achieving the MDGs. United
States
of America: Division for Public Administration and Development Management,
United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UNDESA).
Gloria, R. T., DECS Memorandum 90, s. 1997, Department of Education, Culture, and
Sports, Pasig City, 18 March 1997.
Hu, Z., & McGrath, I. (2012). Integrating ICT into College English: An implementation
study of a national reform. Education and Information Technologies, 17(2), 147-
165.
Jannah, M., & Higgins, S. Islamic Studies Teachers’ Perceptions of Using a Blended
Learning Approach for Teaching the Islamic Education Curriculum in Saudi
Arabia. DOING EDUCATION DIFFERENTLY, 59.
Khattak, R., & Jan, R. (2015). The impacts of ICT on the students’ Performance: A
Review
of Access to Information. Res Human Soc Sci, 5(1), 85-94.
Mooij, T., & Smeets, E. (2001). Modelling and supporting ICT implementation in
secondary schools. Computers & Education, 36(3), 265-281.
Ng, W. K., Miao, F., & Lee, M. (2009). Capacity-building for ICT integration in
education.
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Digital Review of Asia Pacific, 2010, 67-76.
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Nkwenti Ndongfack, M. (2010). ICT Integration in Cameroon Primary Schools: A Case
Study of Government Primary Practicing School Angele, South Region. Master's
Dissertation, Kuala Lumpur: Open University Malaysia.
Pellegrino, J.W. and M.L. Hilton (eds.) (2012), Education for Life and Work: Developing
Transferable Knowledge and Skills in the Twenty-First Century, National
Academies Press, Washington, DC.
Phelps, R., Graham, A., & Watts, T. (2011). Acknowledging the complexity and diversity
of historical and cultural ICT professional learning practices in schools. Asia-
Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 39(1), 47-63.
Rimando, T. P. (2001). “Senate, DECS set computer project for public schools”, in
Manila
Bulletin, 13.
Schmidt, D. A., Baran, E., Thompson, A. D., Mishra, P., Koehler, M. J., & Shin, T. S.
(2009). Technological pedagogical content knowledge (TPACK) the development
and validation of an assessment instrument for preservice teachers. Journal of
research on Technology in Education, 42(2), 123-149.
Tondeur, J., Van Keer, H., Van Braak, J., & Valcke, M. (2008). ICT integration in the
classroom: Challenging the potential of a school policy. Computers & education,
51(1), 212-223.
Voogt, J., Knezek, G., Cox, M., Knezek, D., & ten Brummelhuis, A. (2013). Under which
conditions does ICT have a positive effect on teaching and learning? A call to
action. Journal of computer assisted learning, 29(1), 4-14.
Watson, D. (2006). Understanding the relationship between ICT and education means
exploring innovation and change. Education and Information Technologies,
11(3-4), 199-216.
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Module 3
Theories and Principles in the Use and Design of Technology-
Driven Learning Lessons
Module Overview
“Learners in the internet age don’t need more information. They need
to know how to efficiently use the massive amount of information
available at their fingertips – to determine what’s credible, what’s
relevant, and when it’s useful to reference.”
- Anna Sabramowicz-
Lessons in this Module
• Dale's Cone of Experience
• TPACK Framework for Effective Pedagogical Practice
• The ASSURE
Welcome to Model
your quest for exciting facts about Module 3!
The varied theories and principles in the use and design of technology-driven
learning lessons is a critical factor in promoting innovation in the instructing, and
the learning process relies particularly upon their convictions on how individuals
adapt. Specifically, they have to know who their students are and how to move toward
instruction. As a future teacher, your job is to give learning encounters that will help
accomplish the target outcomes. In this Module, you will be acquainted with various
theories and learning standards, for example, Edgar Dale’s Cone of Experience, the
TPACK Framework, and the ASSURE model.
After this module, you will be able to::
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• Explain comprehensively Dale’s Cone of Experience and present classroom practices
that exemplify each level of the Cone.
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• Presents an exemplar of different instructional tools that are suitable for an instructional
setting.
• Understand and describe the Technological pedagogical content knowledge (TPACK)
• Select and employ appropriate technology tools in designing a lesson.
• Understand the concept of the ASSURE model in designing lessons with technology.
• Apply the ASSURE model in planning and creating a lesson.
Lesson 1
Dale’s Cone of Experience
Learning Outcomes
Activity
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Activating Prior Knowledge Study the Cone of Experience given below.
Analyze how the elements are arranged from the bottom upward or top-down and put
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your ideas to the graphic organized below.
Analysis
• How are the experiences of reality organized in the Cone of Experience?
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• Which way is farthest away from the real world, in this sense, most abstract?
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• Does the Cone of Experience design mean that all teaching and learning must move
systematically from base to pinnacle?
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• Can you overemphasize the amount of direct experience that is required to learn a new
concept?
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• How can you, as a future teacher, can use the Cone of Experience to maximize
learning?
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• Identify the bands of the Cone of learning that belong to passive and active learning
categories.
PASSIVE ACTIVE
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Abstraction
Edgar Dale (1946) introduced Cone of Experience that reveals the
development of experiences from the very real to the extremely abstract (at the top of the
Cone). The Cone of Experience intends to notify students of how much a person’s recall
established on how they face the material.
The Cone charts the average retention rate of the knowledge for various
teaching methods. The further down the Cone you move, the higher the learning,
and the more knowledge is likely to be retained. It also indicates that it is
important to note when selecting an instructional method that engaging students in the
process can improve the retention of information. This shows that strategies of
“action-learning” result in the retention of up to 90 percent. Individuals learn better by
using visual types of learning. Perceptual types of learning are based on feelings. The
more sensory channels are possible in interacting with a resource, the better chance
that many students can learn from it (Diamond, 1989). According to Dale (1969),
two teachers should develop lessons that draw on more real-life experiences. Dale’s Cone
of Experience is a device that helps teachers make resource and activity choices.
1. Direct Purposeful Experience - Some experiences have the least abstractness and the
maximum possible concreteness. Purposeful means interactions of one intent are
meaningful. Skills we gained in real life through our first-hand, direct involvement. In a
teaching-learning cycle, it is the best mode, means, or channels for the desired
outcomes. Teachers will also strive to provide the students with real-life realistic
experiences in the form of showing actual objects and enabling them to come into
direct contact with the realities of life themselves. Examples allow students to prepare
their meals, make a PowerPoint presentation, delivering a speech, performing
experiments, or making their furniture.
2. Contrived Experiences - These are not very rich, concrete, and direct as a real-life
experience. When the real thing cannot be accurately observed, artificial stimuli can be
given as a working model or as specific experiments in the laboratory. The working
model is the editing of fact, which varies in size or complexity from the original. It
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includes models, mock-ups, experiments, and so on. We may delete the needless
information in a condensed and edited version of the real thing, and make the learning
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simple. A mock-up of Apollo, the moon exploration spacecraft, for example, allowed the
North American Aviation Co. to research the lunar flight problem.
Examples of Contrived Experiences:
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Pantomime - is a "method of conveying a story by
bodily gestures." Pantomime's impact on the audience
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rely on the actors' movements.
Puppets - A puppet is
an inanimate object
or
representational figure
animated or
manipulated by
an entertainer, who is
called a puppeteer.
Puppets
can present ideas with
extreme simplicity.
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Types of Puppets
Shadow puppets –
flat, black silhouette
made
from lightweight
cardboard shown
behind a
screen.
Puppets - A puppet is an inanimate object
or representational figure animated or manipulated
by an entertainer, who is called a puppeteer.
Puppets can present ideas with extreme simplicity.
Types of Puppets
Shadow puppets – flat, black silhouette made from
lightweight cardboard shown behind a screen.
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Rod puppets – flat, cut-out figures tacked to a stick
with one or more movable parts, and are operated
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below the stage through wires or rods.
6. Exhibits – Bring the outside world into the classroom employing exhibits, the concrete
representation of the things. The teacher can help the students by gaining useful
experience through the observation and organization of educationally significant
exhibitions. Exhibits are less real or direct in terms of providing direct practical
experience. These may consist of meaningfully organized working models or
photographs of templates, maps, and posters. Many exhibitions are “only for your
eyes.” However, several shows provide interactive opportunities in which visitors can touch
or manipulate the displayed models.
7. Television and motion pictures – Television and movie clips can so expertly recreate the
history of the past, that we have to feel like we’re there.The special meaning of the messages
that film and television deliver lies in their sense of reality, their focus on individuals and
personality, their organization presenta¬tion, and their ability to select, dramatize, highlight,
and clarify.
8. Still, pictures, Recordings, Radio - This stage includes the number of devices that might
be classified roughly as one-dimensional aids because they use only one sense organ that is
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either eye (seeing) or ear (hearing). All these materials are less direct than audio-visual
experiences.
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9. Visual symbols - There are no longer practical reproductions of material objects, for such
representations are incredibly abstract. Visible concepts that describe something intangible
by association and something that reflects or stands for something else, usually by
association or by way of definition of something abstract. Visual perception has a predictive
framework that is interesting. This contains visual graphic resources such as charts, maps,
diagrams, sketches, posters, comics, photos, drawings on blackboards, and illustrations.
The visual symbols (free to use any language) form a primary contact language.
Diagrams - It is any line drawing that shows arrangement and relations as of parts to the
whole, relative values, origins and development, chronological fluctuations,
distributions, etc. ( Dale, 1969).
Types of Diagrams
Types of
Diagrams
Affinity Diagram -
used to cluster
complex
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apparently unrelated
data into natural and
meaningful groups. An
affinity diagram is to
arrange ideas into a
specific or natural
relationship.
Bananas, bananas, and
oranges, for example,
would
be grouped as fruits
while green beans,
broccoli,
and carrots would be
grouped as vegetables.
Tree Diagram – A tree
diagram is a modern
method for
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planning management
that defines the
hierarchy of tasks
and subtasks required
to complete and be
objective. The
tree diagram begins
with one element, then
branches out
to two or more, each
branching into two or
more, and so
on. The finished
diagram is like a tree,
with a trunk and
many branches.
Tree Diagram – A tree diagram is a modern
method for planning management that defines the
hierarchy of tasks and subtasks required to
complete and be objective. The tree diagram begins
with one element, then branches out to two or
more, each branching into two or more, and so on.
The finished diagram is like a tree, with a trunk
and many branches.
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Fishbone Diagram - Often referred to as the cause and
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effect diagram or Ishikawa diagram is a visualization
method for categorizing the possible causes of the root
cause of the issue. A fishbone diagram usually used for
root cause analysis incorporates the brainstorming
technique with a form of mind map design.
Types of Charts
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change starting with a
simple course
spreading out over
several branches
Tree or Stream Chart
shows creation,
growth and
change starting with a
simple course
spreading out over
several branches
Flowchart visual way of showing a process from beginning to
end. A diagram of the series of individual gestures or acts or
events involved in a complex structure or operation.
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Gannt chart is an activity time chart. A diagram displaying a
sequence of horizontal lines representing the amount of
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work completed or produced during different periods to the
amount expected for those periods.
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Political maps are reference maps commonly used. They 're put
worldwide on the walls of classrooms. They display the
geographical boundaries between units of government, such as
nations, states, and counties. We show highways, cities, and
significant water features like oceans, rivers, and lakes.
Poster - A large printed picture, photograph, or notice that you tick or pin to a wall or board,
usually for decoration or to advertise something.
Application
A. Based on the concepts presented above, design a lesson that will employ activities
that
can be found on the bottom parts of the Cone of Experience, particularly proving a
direct, purposeful experience.
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B. Reflect on the following questions.
1. Think about your most unforgettable learning experience. How was it (or how was it
not) a “rich experience” as defined by Dale?
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3. Why does Dale recommend that teachers maximize their time by giving practical and
abstract opportunities to teach?
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Closure
You did it! Now that you’ve already learned Cone of Experience’s consequences for
teaching and learning, you can now move on to the next lesson, TPACK Framework for
Effective Pedagogical Practice.
Lesson 2
TPACK Framework
for Effective
Pedagogical
Practice
Learning Outcomes
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Lesson 2 0
TPACK Framework for Effective Pedagogical Practice
Learning Outcomes
Introduction
As you put together to be a teacher, how do you validate your content knowledge
with your specialization? In terms of your teaching competencies, what strategies
techniques do you understand will work if you use it when teaching? You will keep in
mind the use of the technological device when teaching, what would be?
Teaching subjects or
courses are
challenging. However,
technology has the
potential
to help. To increase the
chance of technology
assisting students in
learning, teachers must
develop technological,
pedagogical, and
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content knowledge
(TPACK).
TPACK emerges, which
forces you to look at
the process of using
technology in the
classroom clearly and
concisely. By looking at
each aspect of this
framework as a
separate
but equally important
type of knowledge, you
can make the right
educational decisions
on
how, when, and what
kind of technology to
use in instruction.
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Teachers as
curriculum
designers can
integrate their
knowledge of student
thinking and learning,
the subject
matter, and technology
to create useful
lessons.
In the lesson, you will
begin to explore the
TPACK model or
framework.
Teaching subjects or courses are challenging. However, technology has the
potential to help. To increase the chance of technology assisting students in learning,
teachers must develop technological, pedagogical, and content knowledge (TPACK).
TPACK emerges, which forces you to look at the process of using technology in
the classroom clearly and concisely. By looking at each aspect of this framework as a
separate but equally important type of knowledge, you can make the right educational
decisions on how, when, and what kind of technology to use in instruction.
Teachers as curriculum designers can integrate their knowledge of student thinking
and learning, the subject matter, and technology to create useful lessons.
In the lesson, you will begin to explore the TPACK model or framework.
Activity
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Read and carefully
understand the sample
lesson plan created
based on Harris
and Hofer’s (2009)
procedure followed by
its TPACK element
description and answer
the
questions in the
analysis below.
Activity
Read and carefully understand the sample lesson plan created based on Harris and
Hofer’s (2009) procedure followed by its TPACK element description and answer the
questions in the analysis below.
Activity
Read and carefully understand the sample lesson plan created based on Harris and
Hofer’s (2009) procedure followed by its TPACK element description and answer the
questions in the analysis below.
LESSON PLAN
Competency Standards:
3. Understanding very simple written English in classroom contexts.
4. Spelling and rewriting very simple written English in classroom contexts.
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Learning Objectives: KOLEHIYO NG PANTUKAN
1. Students can mention the difference between cardinal and ordinal numbers after
discussing with their peers. 0
2. Students can mention at least ten cardinal and ordinal numbers ranging from one to
one hundred independently.
3. Students can produce at least five sentences containing five different cardinal or
ordinal numbers independently.
Learning Material:
Cardinal and Ordinal Numbers
Learning Strategies:
Group discussion, pair work, individual assignment.
Learning Activities:
(Note: Before the lesson, the teacher may have asked the students to do little research
about numbers around them. They may do it while at home or school.)
1. The teacher asks the students to sit in groups and discuss what they have found during
their research about numbers.
2. The teacher asks representatives of the groups to tell the class about what the groups
think about their findings during their research about numbers.
3. The teacher guides the students to compare the forms of the numbers they found and
find the difference between them.
4. The teacher introduces the terms cardinal and ordinal numbers and explains as well as
gives examples of how to write and use them in simple sentences.
5. Students are assigned in pairs and take turns to play cardinal and ordinal numbers
drag and drop game and word matching game (Note: depends on the availability of
the personal computers as well as the Internet connection, the teacher can assign
different pairs to different PCs and play the games as teams). The teacher will walk
around to observe and assist any team having difficulty with the games.
6. Students tell the class and the teacher about their results on playing the games,
whether there is any difficulty concerning the questions or items of the games or not,
and the teacher will give feedback and comments about them.
7. The teacher distributes a BINGO worksheet to the students and guides them to play
the BINGO game classically.
8. The teacher reviews what the students have learned through the BINGO game and
helps them wrap-up their learning experience by asking them to take turns to do an
online quiz about cardinal and ordinal numbers individually.
9. While doing so, the teacher assigns the students who have not yet got the turn to do
the online quiz to write down five simple sentences containing both cardinal and ordinal
numbers and submit them to the teacher as soon as they finish.
Assessment:
The teacher can use the online quiz as well as the five-sentences writing assignment as
the tools for assessing students’ progress and understanding about cardinal and ordinal
numbers.
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Source: Setyawan, T. Y. (2014). Designing the TPACK Lesson Plan for Primary English
Classrooms
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Analysis
• Overall, describe the Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge that the teacher
possesses?
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• How and why this particular combination of technology, pedagogy, the content
most appropriate for this lesson/unit?
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________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
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Abstraction
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What is TPACK?
At the heart of excellent teaching with technology are three essential factors:
content, pedagogy, and technology, plus the relationships among and between them. The
dynamics between and among the three elements played out differently in various
contexts account for the substantial differences seen in the size and nature of the
incorporation of educational technology. These three knowledge roots (content,
pedagogy, and technology) form the core of the technology, pedagogy, and content
knowledge (TPACK) framework (Koehler & 2008; Mishra & Koehler, 2006).
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internet, digital media, interactive whiteboards, and software programs. TK is about
recognizing educational technology, evaluating its possibilities for a particular
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subject area or classroom, learning how to identify whether it can assist or hinder
learning, and continually learning and adjusting to emerging technology offerings.
2. Content knowledge (CK): Awareness of the actual subject matter that teachers need
to learn about teaching. This explains the appreciation teachers have of the subject matter.
CK may include knowledge of principles, hypotheses, facts, and organizational
structures within a given subject matter; it may also include the best practices of the
field and existing methods for presenting this information to students. The CK will
also differ according to the level of discipline and grade. Senior high school science and
history classes, for example, require less detail and scope than undergraduate or graduate
courses, so the CK of their different teachers will differ, or the CK that each teacher
imparts to their students can differ.
4. Pedagogical content knowledge (PCK): This defines the awareness of teachers about
the essential areas of teaching and learning, including the creation of curricula,
student evaluation, and reporting performance. PCK focuses on encouraging learning
and exploring the ties between pedagogy and its supporting activities (curriculum,
assessment, etc.), and similar to CK, may also differ depending on the grade level
and subject matter. However, in all situations, PCK seeks to improve teaching practices
by building more consistent linkages between the material and the pedagogy used to
communicate it.
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educational technology may help address some of these requirements;
• Students have various experiences in the classroom – like previous educational
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experience and technology exposure – and lessons using educational
technology should take this opportunity into account;
• Educational technology may be used in combination with established
awareness of the students, either by improving previous epistemologies or by
introducing new ones.
Application
1. You are now ready to design your TPACK lesson plans using and applying the
knowledge baseline you learned to the topic.
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What other matters or concerns should teachers look into and consider concerning the use
and integration of instructional media and technology?
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________________________________________________________________________
Closure
Well done! You have just finished Lesson 2 of this Module. Should there be some
parts of the lesson which you need clarification, ask your teacher during your face-to-face
interactions or other means of communication.
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Now, if you are ready, please proceed to Lesson 3 of this Module, which will
discuss the ASSURE model.
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Lesson 3
The ASSURE Model
Lesson 3
Learning Outcomes
At the end of the lesson, you should be able to:
• Understand the
concept of the Assure
Time Frame 3 Days
model in designing
Introduction
This section will discuss one instructional design model that can be used in
planning instruction for teaching. The ASSURE instructional design (ID) model
lessons with
uses a six-step process to effectively integrate the use of technology and media into
lessons to improve student learning. For successful instruction to occur, cautious
technology.
arranging is required. As a future teacher, this model is intended to help you viably
coordinate media/innovation into your lesson or instructions - to help “guarantee”
learning.
• Understand the concept of the Assure model in designing lessons with technology.
•Lesson
Apply Title: Macbethmodel
the ASSURE Introduction
in planning and creating a lesson.
Grade Level: Grade 11
Lesson Length: 90-minute block
I. Analyze Learners
Learners’ general characteristics: The lesson is designed for 11th-grade high school
students. This is an in-class support class comprised of 7 male and 11 female students, of
which six (6) students have Individualized Education Program (IEP) accommodations.
Academic ability and learning styles vary. In general, students become easily distracted
and lose focus quickly. The students are familiar with the work of William Shakespeare
and are capable of identifying the various literary devices found in work.
Entry characteristics: The students in this class are skilled in the use of computers and
tablets. However, their proficiency in this technology is limited to the use of
social media and entertainment applications.
Learning styles: Although the class is comprised of students of all learning styles, the
majority of students in this class are tactile learners.
II. State Standards and Objectives
Downloaded by Bernard Otero (bernard.otero@deped.gov.ph)
lOMoARcPSD|36981492
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Curriculum Standard
Analyze the impact of the author’s choices regarding how to develop and
relate elements of a story or drama (e.g., where a story is set, how the
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action is ordered, how the characters are introduced and developed).
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Prepare the learners: 0
Small group activities: The students will break into groups of three or four to
rewrite the scene they have just watched. They will use computers to
access the internet for research and assistance. Once rewritten,
students will use PowerPoint presentation software to present their
version of Act I, scene i to the class.
Analysis
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________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
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• How does the teacher use the ASSURE model to integrate technology into the
instruction?
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• What do you think the impact on student learning resulted from the ASSURE-based
instructional lessons?
________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
• What are your perceptions of implementing the instruction and of student learning with
technology?
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________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
Abstraction
What is ASSURE Model?
The ASSURE model is an instructional framework or rule that instructors can use
to create lesson plans which coordinate the utilization of innovation of technology and
media (Smaldino, Lowther and Russell, 2008). The ASSURE Model emphasizes the
student and the general result of achieving learning targets. The ASSURE model is
an enhanced advancement of the ADDIE general model. Although the ASSURE model
has six stages, which don’t relate to ADDIE’s five, ASSURE additionally presents
configuration stages, and offers with it the two principle includes: the underlying
spotlight on examination and the cyclic structure.
The exceptional component of this model is that it is centered around “arranging
and directing Instruction that fuses media” (Heinich, Molenda and Russel, 1993). Its
principal point of view is on the best way to incorporate media (any sort of media) into
guidance in a technique equipped for delivering the ideal learning results. Created by
Robert Heinich and Michael Molenda decades prior, the ASSURE model picked up
ubiquity due to its utilization in a well-known course reading for instructors.
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It is a notable instructional structure
control that utilizes the constructivist point of
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view, which integrates multimedia and
technology to upgrade the learning condition
(Lefebvre 2006). The ASSURE model was
altered to be used by educators in the study hall
by Smaldino, Lowther, and Russell, 2008. The
teacher leans toward the ASSURE model since it
is intended to be utilized for a couple of long
stretches of instruction and every individual
understudy. This model doesn’t require high
multifaceted nature of conveyed media,
profound ID information, or high correction of
plans (Gustafson and Branch, 2002).
The ASSURE model gives the new or beginner teacher a general guide to follow
to assist them with deduction increasingly like experienced teachers. This model was
developed by Heinrich and Molenda in 1999 and is based closely on the Instruction
Events of Robert Gagne. Furthermore, Smaldino, Lowther & Russell, 2008, adapted the
ASSURE model to be used by teachers in the classroom. Understanding when to use
teaching techniques and immersive technology is key to being successful
academically in the future.
The ASSURE Model has six steps, each represented by a letter in the acronym
title,
with each step describing a set of tasks central to the informed selection and use
of educational technology. The ASSURE acronym stands for these essential components:
Analyze Learners - The first step in the process is to make the instructor evaluate her
learners’ attributes. Those learner characteristics that are correlated with the
optimal learning outcomes should be given a priority. The collected information will help
you with the decisions you make on the other steps in the process. When you assess the
learners’ character, this will help you in choosing different techniques and tools to assist
the learning process. Your learner analyzes will include:
• General attributes of learners (e.g., age, academic abilities, gender, interests, etc.
• Prior competencies
• Learning styles, such as auditory, visual, and tactile
State Objectives - The next step in planning is to state the objectives of the lesson or
presentation accurately. Targets must be specified in terms of what the learner (not the
instructor or presenter) would do as a result of the training (in behavioral conditions).
Your lesson will have two or three clear targets. Usually, goals include four (4) essential
parts:
• A statement that describes the intended Audience. For example, “The first-grade
student will . . .” or “The student will . . . “
• A description of the student’s anticipated Behavior resulting from your teaching.
This conduct must be detected to be assessable. For example, it is beneficial to
use
action verbs such as add, alphabetize, organize, construct, pick, classify, contrast,
define, describe, diagram, identify, kick, mark, locate, create, multiply,
name,
produce, pronounce, choose, sketch, sort, determine, say, throw, emphasize,
verbalize and compose. Ignore such terms as learning, appreciating, grasping, or
understanding.
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• A description of the Condition to be observed for results. What tools does it
require the student to use (e.g., a map, a dictionary)? Which tools or equipment
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does it need the student to use? Will the student be permitted to use notes or a
summary when composing an article?
• A declaration of the learner’s Degree of accuracy or ability must be
demonstrated
to pass forward. The conditions should be based on the real-world and not
specified
on the multiple-choice test. Time and efficiency are also crucial to other purposes.
Will an English student in 11th grade be able to write a theme in 5
paragraphs
within 50 minutes? If a third-grade student can solve at least seven of ten single-
digit multiplication problems, can the instructor believe he or she has mastered the
concept?
Select Media and Materials - In this step, you have set the starting point (the student’s
current information, aptitudes, and perspectives) and the consummation point (objectives)
of your instruction. Presently your activity is the fabricate an instructional scaffold that
will associate the two focuses. You may choose accessible materials, change existing
materials, or structure new materials to help achieve the task. You may select a few
distinct kinds of media to use with the unit. Any of the media/innovations examined in
the content will be fitting.
Utilize Media and Materials - Here you should choose how the students will utilize the
materials. Next, set up the room and be sure the essential hardware and offices
are
accessible and prepared for your utilization before you use the exercise. It’s vital to
follow
the “five p’s” process to achieve this:
Require Learner Performance - This step expects you to depict how you will get every
student effectively and exclusively engaged with the exercise. Students understand best
when they are effectively engaged with the learning experience. Whatever your teaching
approaches, make sure to fuse questions and replies, conversations, group work, hands-on
exercises, and different methods of getting the students engaged effectively with
the learning of the contents. You should give close consideration to your students and
feel sure that they are really getting a handle on the content and not merely tuning in.
Taking an interest in the learning will encourage this degree of comprehension. Permit
them to build information instead of attempting to feed them with information. Finally,
for this step, feedback must be provided to the learner before any type of evaluation is
conducted.
Evaluate and Revise - The last advance of the ASSURE technique is to Evaluate
Student Performance. Here the assessment ought to be coordinated to the target.
Eventually, this final stage is the most significant. You should assess the guidance
procedure through, and through utilizing the goals you made before all else. It is useful to
consider your complaints, the instructional process, the instructional materials, and the
appraisal. By assessing the students against the targets, it tends to be resolved if the
exercise was successful and whether any progression should be altered or rethought.
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The ASSURE lesson plan model guides in the joining of innovation into study
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hall guidance. It fills in as a guide for educators and spotlights fair and square of
innovative help applied. The best possible utilization of this model will enhance day by
day exercises and understudy exercises and expand the capability of open innovations.