Question:
what is inductive method of teaching?
Mercy Grace B. Capague
2011-07-07 23:42:54 UTC
what is inductive method of teaching?
Three answers:
John W
2011-07-08 00:03:20 UTC
The inductive method, also referred to as the scientific method, is a process of using observations to develop general principles about a given subject. A group of similar specimens, events, or subjects are first observed and studied; findings from the observations are then used to make broad statements about the subjects that were examined. These statements may then become laws of nature or theories.

An example of the inductive method is: Extensive observations of many species of land-dwelling turtles reveals that the turtles have shells, lay eggs, and eat a diet of plants as well as insects. The data gathered from observing some examples of land-dwelling turtles is applied as a general rule about all land turtles.
Doctor P
2011-07-08 07:23:03 UTC
INDUCTIVE AND DEDUCTIVE METHODS OF TEACHING



Students have different intellectual capacities and learning styles that favour or hinder knowledge accumulation. As a result, teachers are interested in ways to effectively cause students to understand better and learn. Teachers want to bring about better understanding of the material he/she wants to communicate. It is the responsibility of the educational institutions and teachers to seek more effective ways of teaching in order to meet individual’s and society’s expectations from education. Improving teaching methods may help an institution meet its goal of achieving improved learning outcomes.



Teaching methods can either be inductive or deductive or some combination of the two.



The inductive teaching method or process goes from the specific to the general and may be based on specific experiments or experimental learning exercises. Deductive teaching method progresses from general concept to the specific use or application.



These methods are used particularly in reasoning i.e. logic and problem solving.



To reason is to draw inferences appropriate to the situation.



Inferences are classified as either deductive or inductive.



For example, “Ram must be in either the museum or in the cafeteria.” He is not in the cafeteria; therefore he is must be in the museum. This is deductive reasoning.



As an example of inductive reasoning, we have, “Previous accidents of this sort were caused by instrument failure, and therefore, this accident was caused by instrument failure.



The most significant difference between these forms of reasoning is that in the deductive case the truth of the premises (conditions) guarantees the truth of the conclusion, whereas in the inductive case, the truth of the premises lends support to the conclusion without giving absolute assurance. Inductive arguments intend to support their conclusions only to some degree; the premises do not necessitate the conclusion.



Inductive reasoning is common in science, where data is collected and tentative models are developed to describe and predict future behaviour, until the appearance of the anomalous data forces the model to be revised.



Deductive reasoning is common in mathematics and logic, where elaborate structures of irrefutable theorems are built up from a small set of basic axioms and rules. However examples exist where teaching by inductive method bears fruit.



more.........



http://www.articlesbase.com/writing-articles/inductive-and-deductive-methods-of-teaching-1059831.html



http://www.landmark.edu/institute/grants…inductivedeductive.pdf
B J Bee
2011-07-08 06:55:51 UTC
It is not spoon-feeding the students. It is having them investigate and find out ideas and truth on their own with motivation, encouragement, and guidance from their teacher.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
Loading...