Friday, December 4, 2009

7 Laws of Learning

If you are one of our awesome volunteers, read through this next list of "laws" before you teach. I was greatly annoyed about how many of these I do not regularly consider.

The Seven Laws of Teaching:

1. The Law of the Teacher: Teachers must know what it is they teach.

If it hasn’t been run through our own lives, it will sound and feel hollow and lifeless.

2. The Law of the Learner: The learner must be interested in the truth to be learned.

If we’re answering questions kids aren’t asking, we’ll just be wasting our time!

3. The Law of Language: The language used must be common to the teacher and the learner.

If we use big words, “baggage heavy” words, or “Christian-ese” kids may not get it!

4. The Law of the Lesson: The truth to be taught must be learned through knowledge already taught.

If they haven’t learned the basics, the new stuff won’t make any sense. In other words, don’t assume children know the basics.

5. The Law of the Teaching Process: We learn best what we discover for ourselves.

If we spoon-feed, students will never learn to self-feed. The whole point is to teach self-feeding.

6. The Law of the Learning Process: The truth learned must be reproduced in the life of the student.

If they only get head knowledge, they haven’t learned a thing. It’s all about the “So what?” and “Now what?”

7. The Law of Review and Application: The best way to build retention is through review and application with accountability.

If there’s no accountability, there’s not much motivation to own and live the truth.

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