Children's Errors & Alternative Conceptions
One of the most important shifts CTET wants teachers to make is in how they read children's mistakes. In a constructivist view, an error is not merely a fault to be crossed out — it is a meaningful window into how the child is currently thinking. Children build their own 'alternative conceptions' (also called misconceptions or naive theories) that make sense within their own logic, even when they are scientifically wrong: 'heavier objects fall faster', 'the sun moves around the earth', or writing '23' as 'two-three'. These reveal the rules the child is privately following. The constructive response is diagnostic: analyse the error to find the underlying reasoning, then design experiences that create disequilibrium and let the child reconstruct a better idea — rather than just marking it wrong, punishing it, or making the child feel stupid. Errors are therefore a natural, even necessary, part of learning; a classroom where children are afraid to be wrong is a classroom where they stop taking the risks that learning requires.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
The three learning paradigms (know who said what)
| Behaviourism | Learning = conditioned response · Pavlov, Skinner, Thorndike, Watson |
|---|---|
| Cognitivism | Learning = inner mental processing · attention, memory, insight |
| Constructivism | Learning = active meaning-making · Piaget, Vygotsky, Bruner |
| Key contrast | Behaviourism = outside-in (stimulus); constructivism = inside-out (the learner builds) |
Motivation at a glance
| Intrinsic | Drive from WITHIN — interest, curiosity, mastery, enjoyment |
|---|---|
| Extrinsic | Drive from OUTSIDE — marks, prizes, praise, avoiding punishment |
| Maslow's hierarchy | Physiological → Safety → Belonging → Esteem → Self-actualisation |
| Durability rule | Intrinsic motivation lasts longer; over-rewarding can erode it |