What are the different styles of teaching?
The following list of teaching styles highlights the five main
strategies teachers use in the classroom, as well as the benefits and potential
pitfalls of each respective teaching method.
Authority, or lecture style
The authority model is teacher-centered and frequently entails
lengthy lecture sessions or one-way presentations. Students are expected to
take notes or absorb information.
- Pros: This style is acceptable
for certain higher-education disciplines and auditorium settings with
large groups of students. The pure lecture style is most suitable for
subjects like history that necessitate memorization of key facts, dates,
names, etc.
- Cons: It is a questionable model
for teaching children because there is little or no interaction with the
teacher.
Demonstrator, or coach style
The demonstrator retains the formal authority role while
allowing teachers to demonstrate their expertise by showing students what they
need to know.
- Pros: This style gives teachers
opportunities to incorporate a variety of formats including lectures,
multimedia presentations and demonstrations.
- Cons: Although it’s well-suited
for teaching mathematics, music, physical education, arts and crafts, it
is difficult to accommodate students’ individual needs in larger
classrooms.
Facilitator, or activity style
Facilitators promote self-learning and help students develop
critical thinking skills and retain knowledge that leads to self-actualization.
- Pros: This style trains students
to ask questions and helps develop skills to find answers and solutions
through exploration; it is ideal for teaching science and similar
subjects.
- Cons: Challenges teacher to
interact with students and prompt them toward discovery rather than
lecturing facts and testing knowledge through memorization.
Delegator, or group style
The delegator style is best-suited for curriculum that requires
lab activities, such as chemistry and biology, or subjects that warrant peer
feedback, like debate and creative writing.
- Pros: Guided discovery and
inquiry-based learning places the teacher in an observer role that
inspires students by working in tandem toward common goals.
- Cons: Considered a modern style
of teaching, it is sometimes criticized as newfangled and geared toward
teacher as consultant rather than the traditional authority figure.
Hybrid, or blended style
Hybrid, or blended style, follows an integrated approach to
teaching that blends the teachers’ personality and interests with students’
needs and curriculum-appropriate methods.
- Pros: Achieves the inclusive
approach of combining teaching style clusters and enables teachers to
tailor their styles to student needs and appropriate subject matter.
- Cons: Hybrid style runs the risk
of trying to be too many things to all students, prompting teachers to
spread themselves too thin and dilute learning.
Because teachers have styles that reflect their distinct
personalities and curriculum — from math and science to English and history —
it’s crucial that they remain focused on their teaching objectives and avoid
trying to be all things to all students.
What you need to know about your teaching style
Although it is not the teacher’s job to entertain students, it
is vital to engage them in the learning process. Selecting a style that
addresses the needs of diverse students at different learning levels begins
with a personal inventory — a self-evaluation — of the teacher’s strengths and
weaknesses. As they develop their teaching styles and integrate them with
effective classroom management skills, teachers will learn what works best for
their personalities and curriculum.
Our guide encapsulates today’s different teaching styles and
helps teachers identify the style that’s right for them and their students.
Browse through the article or use these links to jump to your desired
destination.
- What is a
teaching style inventory, and how have teaching styles evolved?
- What
teaching method is best for today’s students?
- How does
classroom diversity influence teachers?
Emergence of the teaching style inventory
How have teaching styles evolved? This is a question teachers
are asked, and frequently ask themselves, as they embark on their careers, and
occasionally pause along the way to reflect on job performance. To understand
the differences in teaching styles, it’s helpful to know where the modern
concept of classifying teaching methods originated.
The late Anthony F. Grasha, a noted professor of psychology at
the University of Cincinnati , is credited with
developing the classic five teaching styles. A follower of psychiatrist Carl
Jung, Grasha began studying the dynamics of the relationship between teachers and
learning in college classrooms. His groundbreaking book, “Teaching with Style,”
was written both as a guide for teachers and as a tool to help colleagues,
administrators and students systematically evaluate an instructor’s
effectiveness in the classroom.
Grasha understood that schools must use a consistent, formal
approach in evaluating a teacher’s classroom performance. He recognized that
any system designed to help teachers improve their instructional skills
requires a simple classification system. He developed a teaching style
inventory that has since been adopted and modified by followers.
- Expert: Similar to a coach,
experts share knowledge, demonstrate their expertise, advise students and
provide feedback to improve understanding and promote learning.
- Formal authority: Authoritative teachers
incorporate the traditional lecture format and share many of the same
characteristics as experts, but with less student interaction.
- Personal model: Incorporates blended
teaching styles that match the best techniques with the appropriate
learning scenarios and students in an adaptive format.
- Facilitator: Designs participatory
learning activities and manages classroom projects while providing
information and offering feedback to facilitate critical thinking.
- Delegator: Organizes group learning,
observes students, provides consultation, and promotes interaction between
groups and among individuals to achieve learning objectives.
Although he developed specific teaching styles, Grasha warned
against boxing teachers into a single category. Instead, he advocated that
teachers play multiple roles in the classroom. He believed most teachers
possess some combination of all or most of the classic teaching styles.
How does differentiated instruction impact
teaching styles?
Carol Ann Tomlinson, a professor at the University of Virginia , is an early
advocate of differentiated instruction and a pioneer in the development of
learning-based teaching styles. If Grasha laid the groundwork for 20th-century
teachers to adopt styles tailored to match their personalities and strengths,
Tomlinson has advanced this theme into the 21st century by focusing on
differentiated instruction.
In the simplest terms, differentiated instruction means keeping
all students in mind when developing lesson plans and workbook exercises,
lectures and interactive learning. These student-focused differences
necessitate instructional styles that embrace diverse classrooms for students
at all learning levels and from various backgrounds without compromising the teacher’s
strengths.
What teaching style is best for today’s students?
Whether you’re a first-year teacher eager to put into practice
all of the pedagogical techniques you learned in college, or a classroom
veteran examining differentiated instruction and new learning methodologies,
consider that not all students respond well to one particular style. Although
teaching styles have been categorized into five groups, today’s ideal teaching
style is not an either/or proposition but more of a hybrid approach that blends
the best of everything a teacher has to offer.
Here is a recap from the list of teaching methods described
earlier.
- Authority, or lecture style: This traditional, formal
approach to teaching is sometimes referred to as “the sage on the stage.”
- Demonstrator, or coach style: This style retains the
formal authority role while allowing teachers to demonstrate their
expertise by showing students what they need to learn.
- Facilitator, or activity
style:
This approach encourages teachers to function as advisors who help
students learn by doing.
- Developer, or group style: This style allows teachers
to guide students in a group setting to accomplish tasks and learn what
works or doesn’t.
- Hybrid, or blended style: This approach incorporates
different aspects of the various styles and gives teachers flexibility to
tailor a personal style that’s right for their coursework and students.
The traditional advice that teachers not overreach with a
cluster of all-encompassing teaching styles might seem to conflict with today’s
emphasis on student-centered classrooms. Theoretically, the more teachers
emphasize student-centric learning the harder it is to develop a well-focused
style based on their personal attributes, strengths and goals.
In short, modern methods of teaching require different types of
teachers — from the analyst/organizer to the negotiator/consultant. Here are
some other factors to consider as teachers determine the best teaching method
for their students.
Empty vessel: Critics of the “sage on the stage” lecture
style point to the “empty vessel” theory, which assumes a student’s mind is
essentially empty and needs to be filled by the “expert” teacher. Critics of
this traditional approach to teaching insist this teaching style is outmoded
and needs to be updated for the diverse 21st-century classroom.
Active vs. passive: Proponents of the traditional lecture
approach believe that an overemphasis on group-oriented participatory teaching
styles, like facilitator and delegator, favor gifted and competitive students
over passive children with varied learning abilities, thereby exacerbating the
challenges of meeting the needs of all learners.
Knowledge vs. information: Knowledge implies a complete
understanding, or full comprehension, of a particular subject. A blend of
teaching styles that incorporate facilitator, delegator, demonstrator, and
lecturer techniques helps the broadest range of students acquire in-depth
knowledge and mastery of a given subject. This stands in contrast to passive
learning, which typically entails memorizing facts, or information, with the
short-term objective of scoring well on tests.
Interactive classrooms: Laptops and tablets,
videoconferencing and podcasts in classrooms play a vital role in today’s
teaching styles. With technology in mind, it is imperative that teachers assess
their students’ knowledge while they are learning. The alternative is to wait
for test results, only to discover knowledge gaps that should have been
detected during the active learning phase.
Constructivist teaching methods: Contemporary
teaching styles tend to be group focused and inquiry driven. Constructivist
teaching methods embrace subsets of alternative teaching styles, including
modeling, coaching, and test preparation through rubrics scaffolding. All of
these are designed to promote student participation and necessitate a hybrid
approach to teaching. One criticism of the constructivist approach is it caters
to extroverted, group-oriented students, who tend to dominate and benefit from
these teaching methods more than introverts; however, this assumes introverts
aren’t learning by observing.
Student-centric learning does not have to come at the expense of
an instructor’s preferred teaching method. However, differentiated instruction
demands that teachers finesse their style to accommodate the diverse needs of
21st-century classrooms.
The ‘sage on the stage’ meets the ‘tiger
mom’
The objective of blending teaching styles to leverage the
teacher’s strengths while meeting the demands of diverse students has become increasingly
difficult, as parents take a decidedly proactive role in child-learning
techniques.
The traditional authoritative/expert, or “sage on the stage”
lecture style, has come under attack by some parents — and contemporary
educational leaders — who emphasize that a more diverse approach to teaching is
necessary to engage students. This is compounded by the rise of “tiger moms,” a
term made popular by parents devoted to improving the quality of education with
laser-precision focus on A-list schools and a highly competitive job market.
Age of the proactive parent
Regardless of what style a teacher adopts, it’s important for
teachers to develop positive attitudes, set goals and establish high
expectations for students.
“Assume students can excel!” education authors Harry and
Rosemary Wong declare. As former teachers with a combined 80-plus years of
educational experience, the Wongs emphasize in their best-selling book, “The
First Days of School: How to Be an Effective Teacher” and their more recent,
“The Classroom Management Book” that successful teachers share three common
characteristics:
- effective classroom
management skills
- lesson mastery
- positive expectations
All instructors, when developing their teaching styles, should
keep in mind these three goals, as well as the primary objective of education:
student learning.
How does classroom diversity influence teachers?
It is abundantly clear that today’s teachers are responsible for
students with a diverse range of learning abilities. The 21st-century teacher
does not have the luxury of “picking the low-hanging fruit” and then leaving
the rest of the tree for experts who specialize in children with behavioral
issues or learning disorders.
Today’s teachers must develop instructional styles that work
well in diverse classrooms. Effective teaching methods engage gifted students,
as well as slow-learning children and those with attention deficit tendencies.
This is where differentiated instruction and a balanced mix of teaching styles
can help reach all students in a given classroom — not just the few who respond
well to one particular style of teaching.
The wonderment of teaching, what author/educator Dr. Harry Wong
refers to as “that ah-ha moment” when a child “gets it,” is one of the most
rewarding and seemingly elusive benefits of becoming a teacher. This
transference of knowledge from expert to student is an art form and a skill.
Fortunately, both can be learned and perfected.
Knowing how to engage students begins with selecting the
teaching style that’s right for you. And remember, even though you may prefer
one teaching style over another, you must find the style that works best for
your students! Try different styles to meet different objectives, and always
challenge yourself to find ways to reach each student.

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