Evaluation & Remedial Teaching
Assessment in science must measure more than recall. CTET expects evaluation across all three domains: the cognitive (knowledge, understanding, application), the psychomotor (handling apparatus, drawing diagrams, measuring, performing experiments) and the affective (scientific attitude, interest, cooperation). A pen-and-paper test alone cannot capture process skills such as observing, hypothesising or experimenting — these need performance-based assessment: practical work, projects, observation checklists, and continuous and comprehensive evaluation (CCE) rather than a single terminal exam. The purpose of evaluation is diagnostic and formative, not just to award marks: it should reveal WHERE and WHY a child struggles. The known problems of teaching science — overloaded content, abstract concepts, language difficulty, fear of the subject, and the gap between theory and the child's experience — feed into difficulties that remedial teaching addresses. Remedial teaching follows diagnosis: identify the specific misconception or weak skill, then reteach it differently (concrete materials, simpler language, more activity, peer help), and recheck. The correct CTET answer almost always frames a low score as a signal to diagnose and reteach, never as a reason to label the child a failure.
✅ 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 |