Best Notes on Teaching Aptitude, UGC NET Exam 2025

Paper 1, Unit -1 Teaching Aptitude

1. Teaching: Concept and Nature

1.1 Concept of Teaching

Teaching is a systematic, planned and purposeful process in which a teacher helps learners to:

  • Acquire knowledge

  • Develop skills

  • Form values, attitudes and habits

It is an interactive process involving:

  • Teacher

  • Learner

  • Content

  • Environment / context

Teaching is not mere information delivery. It is a guided process of learning aimed at bringing desirable changes in behaviour and performance of learners.

Teaching vs related terms

  • Teaching – broader process of facilitating learning and development.

  • Instruction – more structured, often short-term, mostly cognitive focus.

  • Training – skill-oriented, performance focus, usually for specific tasks.

  • Indoctrination – uncritical acceptance of ideas; discourages questioning (not desirable in modern education).


1.2 Nature of Teaching (explain each of your bullets)

  1. Teaching is intentional and goal-oriented

    • A teacher always has objectives (e.g., “students should be able to explain Piaget’s stages”).

    • Teaching activities, methods and evaluation are planned to achieve these objectives.

  2. Teaching is both an art and a science

    • Art: Creativity, intuition, humour, empathy, classroom “feel” – different teachers teach the same topic in different styles.

    • Science: Based on learning theories, psychology, tested methods, data (results, feedback). Good teaching uses systematic planning, experimentation and reflection.

  3. Teaching is psychological and social in nature

    • Psychological: Understanding motivation, attention, memory, cognition, emotion, individual differences.

    • Social: Teaching happens in a group; social norms, culture, language, peer influence and classroom climate all affect learning.

  4. Teaching is dynamic and continuous

    • Teaching changes with learners’ needs, societal changes, technology, and curriculum.

    • A good teacher continuously updates knowledge and modifies methods.

  5. Modern teaching is learner-centred

    • Focus shifts from “what the teacher will teach” to “what the learner will learn and can do”.

    • Teacher is a facilitator / guide, not just a “chalk-and-talk” lecturer.

    • Emphasis on activity, interaction, collaboration, problem solving, critical thinking.


2. Objectives of Teaching

Objectives give direction and standards for teaching and evaluation.

  1. Cognitive (knowledge) objectives

    • To help students know, understand, apply, analyse, evaluate and create (Bloom’s taxonomy).

    • Example: Define “MOOC”, compare offline and online teaching.

  2. Affective (attitude, value) objectives

    • To develop interest, respect, motivation, value systems, social sensitivity.

    • Example: Develop a positive attitude towards lifelong learning and research ethics.

  3. Psychomotor (skill) objectives

    • To develop practical and performance skills (e.g., ICT use, lab skills, communication).

  4. Social and personal development objectives

    • To promote cooperation, leadership, responsibility, self-discipline, confidence.

  5. National and global objectives

    • To help learners become productive citizens, contribute to national development, respect diversity, and cope with global challenges.


3. Levels of Teaching (Memory, Understanding, Reflective)

In teacher education, three levels of teaching are usually discussed:

Level Main Proponent / Model
Memory Level J.F. Herbart (Herbartian model)
Understanding

W.S. Morrison (Morrison’s model)

Reflective Hunt (Reflective teaching model)

These levels represent depth of learning – from simple recall to critical thinking.


3.1 Memory Level of Teaching (MLT) – Herbart

  • Lowest level of teaching, least thoughtful.

  • Aim: Recall and recognition of facts, definitions, formulas, dates, names.

  • Teacher is dominant, students mostly listen and repeat.

  • Methods: Lecture, drill, recitation, rote learning, question-answer.

Usefulness

  • For beginners or primary level.

  • For learning basic facts, vocabulary, symbols, formulae, etc.

Limitations

  • Promotes rote learning, little understanding.

  • Low motivation; not suitable for higher education or complex concepts.


3.2 Understanding Level of Teaching (ULT) – Morrison

  • Middle level – more thoughtful than memory level.

  • Aim: Comprehension – learners understand meaning, interpret, compare, classify, explain.

  • Teacher is still leader but encourages questions and clarifications.

  • Methods: Explanation, demonstration, discussion, examples, illustrations, analogies.

Usefulness

  • Appropriate for secondary and higher secondary stages.

  • Basis for applying knowledge to new situations.

Limitations

  • May still be teacher-centred if teacher talks too much.

  • Learners may understand but not automatically become critical / creative.


3.3 Reflective Level of Teaching (RLT) – Hunt

  • Highest level – most thoughtful, problem-solving oriented.

  • Aim: Develop critical thinking, inquiry, reflection, creativity, decision-making.

  • Learners identify problems, generate hypotheses, collect data, test solutions, and reflect.

  • Teacher acts as facilitator, guide, co-learner.

Methods

  • Problem-based learning, projects, case studies, seminars, research tasks, reflective journals.

Usefulness

  • Suitable for higher education, research, professional courses.

  • Leads to deep learning and independent thinking.

Limitations

  • Requires mature learners, time, resources, and trained teachers.

  • Not always feasible for large classes or very basic topics.


3.4 Quick Comparison

Aspect Memory Level Understanding Level Reflective Level
Cognitive level Low (recall) Moderate (comprehension, application)

High (analysis, evaluation, creation)

Teacher role Authority, controller Explainer, organiser Facilitator, guide
Learner role Passive, imitator Active listener, participant

Inquirer, problem-solver

Suitable for Basic facts, beginners Concept learning Higher education, research

4. Characteristics & Basic Requirements of Effective Teaching

4.1 Main Characteristics

  1. Goal directed – aligned with clear learning objectives.

  2. Learner-centred – addresses learners’ needs, level, background.

  3. Scientifically planned – uses instructional design, sequencing, time management.

  4. Stimulating and motivating – uses real-life examples, questions, variety.

  5. Interactive – encourages questions, discussion, feedback.

  6. Flexible – adapts to classroom situation, feedback, time constraints.

  7. Ethical and value-based – promotes honesty, respect, inclusiveness.


4.2 Basic Requirements of Good Teaching

  • Mastery of subject matter

  • Understanding of learners (age, background, difficulties)

  • Clear objectives and lesson plans

  • Effective communication (voice, language, body language, use of examples)

  • Appropriate methods and support systems (boards, PPTs, ICT, activities)

  • Classroom management skills

  • Continuous assessment & feedback

  • Professional growth – reflective practice, research, training

  • Use of ICT and open resources (e.g. SWAYAM, SWAYAM PRABHA, MOOCs)


5. Learner’s Characteristics

UGC NET specifically mentions:

  • Adolescent and adult learners

  • Academic, social, emotional, cognitive characteristics

  • Individual differences


5.1 Dimensions of Learner Characteristics

  1. Academic

    • Prior knowledge, achievement level, learning pace, study habits.

  2. Social

    • Interaction with peers, cooperation, social roles, communication style.

  3. Emotional

    • Self-esteem, anxiety, motivation, emotional stability.

  4. Cognitive

    • Intelligence, memory, attention, reasoning, problem-solving, creativity.


5.2 Adolescent Learners

Roughly 12–18 years, mostly in secondary / higher secondary.

Cognitive (Piaget’s formal operational stage)
Jean Piaget proposed four stages of cognitive development: sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational and formal operational. Formal operational stage (around 12+ years) is when adolescents can think logically about abstract ideas, hypotheticals and future possibilities.

  • Can do abstract thinking (e.g. justice, democracy, climate change).

  • Can use hypothetical-deductive reasoning.

Social

  • Strong need for peer acceptance and group identity.

  • More influenced by friends, may resist authority if not respected.

Emotional

  • Identity formation, emotional ups and downs.

  • Sensitive to criticism, need encouragement and understanding.

Academic

  • Can handle complex concepts.

  • Need guidance in study skills, time management, career choice.

Implications for teaching

  • Use discussion, debate, projects, not only lecturing.

  • Connect content with their real-life interests.

  • Provide emotional support and constructive feedback.


5.3 Adult Learners

Adult learning is often explained through Malcolm Knowles’ Andragogy (adult learning theory).

Key assumptions about adult learners:

  1. Self-concept

    • Adults are self-directed and want control over their learning.

  2. Experience

    • Bring rich life and work experience to learning; this is a resource.

  3. Readiness to learn

    • Related to their social roles (job, parent, citizen); they are ready when they feel a need.

  4. Orientation to learning

    • Problem-centred and application-oriented, not just content-minded.

  5. Motivation

    • More internally motivated (self-development, career growth) than by external rewards.

Implications for teaching adults

  • Involve them in planning (choice of topics/projects).

  • Use experiential methods – case studies, problem-solving, role-play.

  • Connect content to workplace, family, community situations.

  • Respect their experience and autonomy.


5.4 Individual Differences

Learners differ in:

  • Intelligence & aptitude

  • Learning styles (visual, auditory, kinesthetic etc.)

  • Personality, attitude, motivation

  • Language proficiency

  • Socio-economic and cultural background

  • Special needs / disabilities

Implications

  • Use varied methods and materials.

  • Provide remedial teaching for slow learners and enrichment for advanced learners.

  • Ensure inclusive education.


6. Factors Affecting Teaching

UGC NET highlights: teacher, learner, support material, instructional facilities, learning environment, institution.

  1. Teacher-related factors

    • Subject knowledge, pedagogical skill, attitude towards students, personality, communication skills, expectations, professional ethics.

  2. Learner-related factors

    • Prior knowledge, motivation, interest, attention, readiness, individual differences, home environment.

  3. Support Material

    • Textbooks, reference books, handouts, worksheets, models, charts, PPTs, OERs (Open Educational Resources).

  4. Instructional Facilities

    • Classroom size and seating, laboratory, library, ICT facilities (computers, internet, LMS), AV equipment.

  5. Learning Environment

    • Physical: light, noise, ventilation.

    • Psychological: trust, respect, freedom to question, absence of fear.

    • Socio-cultural: inclusiveness, absence of discrimination.

  6. Institution-related factors

    • Vision and mission, leadership, policies, academic calendar, teacher workload, class size, support for innovation and research.


7. Methods of Teaching in Institutions of Higher Learning

We classify methods in two broad ways:

  1. Teacher-centred vs learner-centred methods

  2. Offline vs online methods (SWAYAM, SWAYAMPRABHA, MOOCs, etc.)


7.1 Teacher-centred Methods

Teacher is the main source of knowledge; learners mostly receive.

  • Lecture method – structured presentation of content by teacher.

  • Demonstration – teacher shows procedure/experiment while students observe.

  • Tutorial with teacher dominance – explanation plus directed questioning.

Advantages

  • Covers large syllabus quickly.

  • Good for large classes and introductory topics.

Limitations

  • Learners are relatively passive.

  • Less scope for critical thinking and creativity.


7.2 Learner-centred Methods

Teacher acts as facilitator or guide; learners are active.

Common learner-centred strategies:

  • Group discussion, seminars, symposium

  • Project work and problem-based learning

  • Case study, role play, simulation

  • Flipped classroom – learners study content at home (videos, readings), class time is used for problem solving and discussion.

  • Collaborative learning, team-based learning

Advantages

  • Promotes higher-order thinking, communication, cooperation.

  • Increases motivation and interest.

Limitations

  • Requires more time, planning, smaller groups.

  • Needs teacher skill in classroom management.


7.3 Offline vs Online Methods

Offline (Face-to-face) Methods

  • Conducted in physical classroom.

  • Includes lecture, lab work, seminars, workshops, tutorials.

  • Easier to manage practical work, immediate feedback, non-verbal cues.

Online Methods

Use ICT and internet for teaching–learning.

Major initiatives (India):

  1. SWAYAM (Study Webs of Active Learning for Young Aspiring Minds)

    • Government of India’s MOOC platform offering free online courses from school to postgraduate level.

    • Supports e-tutorials, e-content, discussion forums, and self-assessment; allows credit transfer to universities.

  2. SWAYAM PRABHA

    • Group of DTH TV channels (now expanded) that telecast high quality educational programmes 24×7 using satellite.

  3. MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses)

    • Open, often free online courses (NPTEL, Coursera, edX, etc.).

    • Suitable for self-paced learning and lifelong learning.

Advantages of online methods

  • Anytime, anywhere learning; flexible pace.

  • Access to best teachers and institutions.

  • Supports multimedia, interactive quizzes, forums.

Challenges

  • Digital divide (devices, connectivity).

  • Self-discipline required; risk of low completion rates.

  • Limited hands-on practice in some disciplines.

Blended learning combines offline and online methods to take advantage of both.


8. Teaching Support System: Traditional, Modern, ICT-based

Teaching Support System = all the aids and resources used to facilitate teaching–learning (also called teaching aids).

8.1 Traditional Support System

  • Blackboard / chalkboard, whiteboard

  • Textbooks, reference books

  • Charts, posters, maps, globes, models, specimens

  • Flashcards, flip charts, worksheets

  • Lab equipment, realia (real objects)

Plus points – simple, low-cost, suitable where technology is limited.


8.2 Modern Support System

  • Overhead projector, slide projector (older), LCD projector

  • Printed modules, self-learning materials (SLMs)

  • Workbooks, programmed texts

  • Models and simulations (physical or simple electronic)


8.3 ICT-based Support System

  • Computers, laptops, tablets, smart phones

  • Internet, email, Learning Management Systems (LMS), Google Classroom, Moodle, etc.

  • Multimedia presentations (PPT, animations, videos)

  • Educational software, simulations, virtual labs

  • Online platforms like SWAYAM, NPTEL, SWAYAM PRABHA, MOOCs

  • Digital libraries, e-books, OER repositories

Principles for using any teaching aid

  • Must be relevant to objectives.

  • Should be simple, accurate, visible and attractive.

  • Should support, not replace the teacher.

  • Must be integrated into lesson (not used randomly).


9. Evaluation Systems in Higher Education

Evaluation = systematic process of determining the extent to which learners achieve instructional objectives, using appropriate tools and interpretation.

UGC NET syllabus highlights:

  • Elements and types of evaluation

  • Evaluation in Choice Based Credit System (CBCS)

  • Computer-based testing

  • Innovations in evaluation


9.1 Elements of Evaluation

  1. Objectives – what is to be measured (knowledge, skills, attitudes).

  2. Learning experiences – teaching and activities.

  3. Assessment tools – tests, assignments, projects, observations, portfolios.

  4. Measurement – scores or ratings.

  5. Interpretation & judgement – what scores mean, whether objectives are met.

  6. Feedback & remedial action – improving teaching and learning.


9.2 Types of Evaluation

  1. Formative Evaluation

    • During instruction; for improvement.

    • Examples: quizzes, class tests, assignments, classroom questions.

  2. Summative Evaluation

    • At end of unit/semester/course; for grading and certification.

    • Examples: final exam, term-end project.

  3. Diagnostic Evaluation

    • Before or during course to identify learning difficulties and causes.

    • Example: pre-test to see mathematical basics before statistics course.

  4. Placement Evaluation

    • To place students in appropriate course, level or group.

  5. Norm-referenced vs Criterion-referenced

    • Norm-referenced: compares a learner to others (percentile ranks, relative grading).

    • Criterion-referenced: compares to fixed standard/criterion (e.g., 50% mastery).


9.3 Evaluation in Choice Based Credit System (CBCS)

CBCS is a credit-based semester system promoted by UGC.

Key features:

  • Semesters – programme divided into semesters (e.g. 6 for UG).

  • Credits – each course has credits based on teaching hours and workload.

  • Course types – Core, Elective, Skill-based, Ability Enhancement, etc.

  • Cafeteria model – students can choose courses from a basket (flexibility & interdisciplinarity).

  • Grading system – performance in each course is graded (O, A+, A, B+, etc.), converted to SGPA / CGPA.

Evaluation pattern under CBCS

  • Combination of Continuous Internal Assessment (CIA) and End-Semester Examination (ESE).

    • CIA: quizzes, internal tests, assignments, attendance, presentations.

    • ESE: final written exam / practical / viva.


9.4 Computer-based Testing (CBT) and Online Evaluation

Computer-based Test = test delivered using a computer instead of pen-paper.

Advantages

  • Efficiency – easier to prepare, administer, and grade large numbers of students.

  • Scalability – can test thousands of candidates.

  • Auto-grading for objective items (MCQs, matching, true-false).

  • Faster feedback – often instant results.

  • Reduced human error and bias in scoring objective items.

Limitations / Challenges

  • Requires reliable hardware, software and internet.

  • Not all question types (e.g., essays, performance tasks) can be easily auto-graded.

  • Accessibility issues for learners with limited digital literacy or disabilities.

  • Security issues: cheating, impersonation, data breaches (needs strong proctoring).


9.5 Innovations in Evaluation Systems

Modern trends in higher education assessment include:

  • Continuous and comprehensive evaluation (CCE) – focus on both scholastic and co-scholastic aspects.

  • Outcome-Based Education (OBE) – evaluation aligned with clearly defined learning outcomes and graduate attributes.

  • Rubrics – transparent scoring guides for assignments and projects.

  • Portfolio assessment – collection of student work over time to show growth.

  • Open-book and take-home exams – emphasise application and analysis instead of recall.

  • Project-based and performance assessment – real-world tasks, presentations, demonstrations.

  • Peer and self-assessment – students evaluate their own and peers’ work (with guidance).

  • AI-assisted and automated scoring – especially for MCQs and some written work (though still debated).


Quick Revision Pointers (UGC NET Focus)

  • Remember three levels of teaching and their proponents (Herbart – memory, Morrison – understanding, Hunt – reflective).

  • Know characteristics of effective teaching and basic requirements.

  • Distinguish clearly between teacher-centred and learner-centred methods, with examples.

  • Be able to write short notes on SWAYAM, SWAYAM PRABHA and MOOCs as online teaching methods.

  • Understand Piaget (adolescent cognition) and Knowles (adult learning) under learner characteristics.

  • Learn the features of CBCS and how evaluation works under it.

  • Know the advantages & limitations of computer-based testing and the types of evaluation (formative, summative, diagnostic, placement).

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