Are you a teacher navigating different teaching methods? Curious about the didactic approach and how it could work for you?
This structured, teacher-centered method can help you clarify concepts and cover a lot of content in a session. But when should you use it? And how?
Explore the benefits, limitations, and strategies of the didactic teaching method to decide if it’s the right fit for your classroom!
What is didactic teaching?
In didactic teaching, instructors deliver the training using structured lesson plans, select the topic and prompts, give feedback to students, and evaluate them.
If we think of a class as a dialogue between teachers and students, the instructor initiates the conversation and decides its content.
Use it for:
Learning languages: Grammar and vocabulary need structure and repetition. Teachers can use this model to plan when, how, and how often to work on them.
Complex subjects: STEM subjects involve learning multi-step processes and abstract concepts. This didactic approach helps teachers break down complex concepts for the learners.
Don't use it for:
Creative subjects: Arts or creative writing are tools for individual expression, requiring a student-centered methodology, where learners are at the center.
Philosophy: This subject benefits from debates, discussions, and individual interpretations of texts and dilemmas. The teacher facilitates learning rather than directs it.
Leading a lesson with didactic teaching
Before the class
Create a lesson plan: Lesson plans define the structure of a class. They include:
An objective
The lessons' content
A list of activities
An evaluation rubric
Let's understand this better through an example of a language teacher preparing for a grammar lesson.
Objective: A sentence that shows what we will learn: We will be able to identify and use the simple perfect tense.
Lesson content: A Prezi presentation covering the "what" and "how" of the present simple tense.
Activities: Interactive grammar exercises like filling in the blanks and completing sentences, followed by working with partners to create a quiz for their classmates!
Evaluation rubric: A grid to measure students' success in learning the structure. Did students do very well, quite well, or need reinforcement?
Prepare additional materials: Stationery, printouts, or the software required in the computer.
During the class
Follow the lesson plan you created. They share the objective, present the content, and guide students to practice the new knowledge and skills.
During the lesson, you could:
Take notes
Observe students
Step in for support
Ask evaluation questions
Adjust difficulty
After the class
Gather the activities and:
Check for mistakes
Extract data from the results
Prepare further revision activities
Mark the progress of students
Common didactic teaching strategies
Lectures follow the didactic teaching model because the teacher structures them.
To make an effective class, you can use these strategies:
Demonstrations
This means showing the steps to perform a task or solve a problem. The demonstration guides the students to reach the solution.
Check out this video about doing demonstrations with an interactive touch:
Modeling
This means showing students a sample or model of how to do something, so they can learn by example.
Check out this video to learn more about modeling:
Presentations
They cover the main points in a lecture. They're a great way to cover a lot of content within one class.
Check out these presentation templates from Canva that you can use in class.
Other strategies are questioning, using slide shows, and asking students to take notes in class.
Check out this resource to support students organize their note-taking in class — with different templates to tackle different subject areas!
Quiz: Didactic teaching ideas
You're working on a Spanish lesson plan about animals for your 3rd-grade classroom and want to use the didactic teaching method.
Which ideas can you use in your classroom?
A. Read descriptions of different animals and have a vote to identify the most dangerous one.
B. Read a story about animals, guide students through a reading comprehension activity, and ask them to work in pairs to answer a quiz on interesting facts about animals.
C. Bring a pet to the class, and ask students to come up with rules for taking care of the animal in class.
D. Project a video about animals in a savanna, ask them to complete a quiz about the vídeo, do think-pair-share about animals in danger, elicit answers, and close the session with a reflection task.
Quiz
Select didactic teaching ideas that will work for this class:
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