Lesson 10 –
Demonstration in Teaching
“Good demonstration is good
communication.”
Demonstration “is a public showing and
emphasizing of the salient merits, utility, efficiency, etc of an article or
product.” In teaching it is showing how a thing is done and emphasizing of the
salient merits, utility and efficiency of a concept, a method or a process or
an attitude.
A good demonstration is an
audio-visual presentation. It is not enough that the teacher talks. To be
effective, his/her demonstration must be accompanied by some visuals.
To plan and prepare adequately for a
demonstration, we first determine the goals, the materials we need, our steps
and rehearse.
What guiding principles must we
observe in using demonstration as a teaching-learning experience? Edgar dale (
1969 ) gives at least three:
1. Establish rapport. Greet your
audience. Make them feel at ease by your warmth and sincerity. Stimulate their
interest by making your demonstration and yourself interesting. Sustain their
attention.
2. Avoid the COIK fallacy ( Clear
Only If Known ) It is the assumption that what is clear to the expert
demonstrator is also clearly known to the person for whom the message is
intended.
3. Watch the Key points. Dale (
1996 ) says,” they are the ones at which an error is likely to be made, the
places at which many people stumble and
where the knacks and tricks of the trade are especially important.”
In the actual conduct of the
demonstration itself we see to it that we:
1. Get and sustain the interest of
our audience
2. Keep our demonstration simple
3. Do not hurry nor drag out the
demonstration
4. Check for understanding in the
process of demonstration
5. conclude with a summary
6. Hand out written materials at
the end of the demonstration.
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