Thematic
Thematic
Thematic
THEMATIC APPROACH
In teaching and learning, a theme is the major idea or topic of a lesson content. For example, the story told by the teacher contained a moral theme, or the main theme of the poster is preservation of the environment.
As such, this thematic approach is often used in teaching story and essay writings, moral education, art and history subjects.
The thematic teaching method closely related with group activity and discussion. For example, to teach a topic with Preservation of the Environment as a theme, a teacher may organise group discussion of the following 3 ways.
TOPIC X
THEME
TOPIC X
TOPIC X GROUP C
2. DISCUSSION OF RELATED TOPIC THAT COMPLEMENT WITH ONE ANOTHER BY GROUPS OF MIXED ABILITIES.
GROUP A TOPIC Y(1) THEME GROUP B TOPIC Y(2)
SUB TOPIC X
SUB TOPIC Y
THEME
This approach relies on teachers who have a strong sense of curriculum as a learning process and can see ways to connect learning with key concepts.
Goal: to choose themes that relate to students' lives to ensure interest and engagement in the content.
Concepts that work best depend on students' age and developmental level. Topics typically found in single content areas offer rich links to other subjects, such as communication, immigration, rhythm, speed, matter, addition, metaphor, or waves.
Framing a theme as a question ("What Makes the Difference?", "Why Are We Moving?", or "How Do We Know?") will keep students asking (and answering) questions that matter.
Effective teachers employ strategies that engage learners not just in ways that are exciting or fun, but that make strong bonds between abstract ideas and understanding.
IMPLEMENTATION
Thematic instruction is characterized by a range of distinct strategies. Teachers who incorporate thematic instruction employ research-based strategies such as: Choose authentic themes that matter. Choosing themes that are authentic content connectors strengthens students' ability to build fluency between school subjects and apply them in realworld contexts. Select concepts or ideas that will blend disciplines and create bridges to new knowledge.
Design inquiry-based learning experiences. Designing hands-on, "minds-on" activities help students make real-world sense of concepts by applying what they are learning.
Employ cooperative grouping. Using small, cooperative learning groups to support problem-solving and cooperation.
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