Aims & Objectives of Teaching Science
CTET frequently asks WHY we teach science in school, and the rewarded answers all point away from rote learning. The National Curriculum Framework (NCF 2005) position is that school science should be true to the child, true to life and true to science: it must engage the learner, connect to everyday experience, and represent science honestly as both knowledge and method. The chief aims are to develop a scientific temper and attitude; to build science process skills (observing, classifying, inferring, predicting, experimenting); to nurture problem-solving and the ability to apply knowledge to real situations; to cultivate curiosity, creativity and an aesthetic appreciation of nature; and to relate science to society, the environment and the learner's own life. Note the order of priority CTET expects: understanding, application and the ability to investigate come FIRST; covering the syllabus and memorising definitions come last. An aim like 'enabling children to relate science to everyday life and the environment' will almost always be the correct option over 'completing the prescribed content quickly'.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Science = Product + Process (memorise both halves)
| Science as product | The organised body of knowledge: facts, concepts, laws, theories |
|---|---|
| Science as process | The method of inquiry: observing, questioning, experimenting, inferring |
| Scientific attitude | Open-mindedness, curiosity, objectivity, suspended judgement until evidence |
| Scientific temper | Reasoning over blind belief; demanding proof, rejecting superstition |
The basic science process skills
| Observing | Using the senses to gather information about objects and events |
|---|---|
| Classifying | Grouping things by shared, observable properties |
| Inferring & Predicting | Explaining an observation vs forecasting a future observation |
| Measuring & Experimenting | Quantifying, and testing a hypothesis by controlling variables |