Pedagogy of Science • Topic 4 of 5

Innovation & Teaching Aids

CTET strongly rewards creativity and resourcefulness, especially the use of improvised, low-cost or no-cost teaching aids built from everyday materials — a working lung model from a plastic bottle and balloons, a pinhole camera from a carton, a circuit from a torch bulb and used cells. The message is that lack of a well-equipped lab is no excuse: a good teacher improvises. Teaching aids are valued because they make abstract ideas concrete, sustain interest and support children who learn better visually or by doing; the right principle is that an aid is a means, not an end — it must serve the concept, not become a distraction. The range CTET refers to includes models and charts, science kits (such as the NCERT kits), ICT tools (simulations, videos, virtual labs) used to supplement rather than replace real experiments, and the school science laboratory and a science corner / club / exhibition for extending inquiry. A recurring correct answer: prefer a cheap improvised apparatus that every child can handle over a costly readymade one the teacher only demonstrates.

✅ Solved examples

1. A teacher makes a model of the human respiratory system using a plastic bottle, two balloons and a straw. This best demonstrates the use of:
Improvised, low-cost teaching aids — building learning materials from easily available everyday items rather than relying on expensive apparatus.
2. The MAIN justification for using teaching aids in a science class is that they:
Make abstract concepts concrete and sustain interest, helping children understand and retain ideas; the aid is a means to learning, never an end in itself.
3. How should ICT tools such as simulations and virtual labs be used in school science, according to CTET's stance?
As a supplement that enriches and supports real hands-on experiments, not as a replacement for them.
4. Given a choice, CTET would prefer a teacher who:
Provides cheap improvised apparatus that every child can handle, over a costly readymade instrument the teacher only shows from the front.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. Apparatus made from waste or household materials to teach a concept cheaply is called an:
Built, not bought.
Low-cost / no-cost.
Improvised teaching aid
2. A teaching aid is best described as a:
Serves the concept.
Not the goal itself.
Means to learning, not an end in itself
3. Ready-to-use boxes of materials and instructions for doing experiments, supplied for schools, are called:
NCERT supplies these.
Science kits
4. A place in the school where pupils perform experiments and handle apparatus is the:
Hands-on room.
Science laboratory

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

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