How to Teach Religion eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 220 pages of information about How to Teach Religion.

How to Teach Religion eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 220 pages of information about How to Teach Religion.

The plan of the topical method.—­It is evident that the topical method of reciting will require more independence of thought than the question-and-answer method.  To ask the child to “give the account of Noah’s building of the Ark,” or to “tell about Joseph being sold by his brothers” is to demand more of him than to answer a series of questions on, these events.  The topical method will, therefore, find its greatest usefulness in the higher grades rather than with the younger children.  This does not mean, however, that children in the earlier grades are to be given no opportunity to formulate their thought for themselves and to express their thought without the help of direct questions.

This power, like all others, is developed through its use, and is not acquired at a certain age without practice.  Even young children may be encouraged to retell stories in their own words, or to tell what they think about any problem that interests them; and all such exercises are the best of preliminary training in the use of the topical method.

Narrative topics.—­The easiest form of the topical method is that dealing with narration.  Children are much more adept at telling what happened—­recounting a series of events in a game, a trip, an incident, or an accident—­than in giving a description of persons, places, or objects.  The Bible narratives will therefore afford good starting places for topical recitations in the younger grades.  Older pupils may be called upon to discuss problems of conduct, or to make applications of lessons to concrete conditions, or carry on any other form of analysis that calls for individual thought and ability in expression.

Report topics.—­A modified form of the topical method is sometimes called the report method, or the research method.  In this use of the topical method some special and definite topic or problem is assigned a pupil to be prepared by special study, and reported upon before the class.  This plan, at least above the elementary grades, has great possibilities if wisely used.  The topics, if interesting, and if adapted to the children, will usually receive careful preparation.  Especially is this true if well-prepared pupils are allowed in the recitation to make a brief report to an interested audience of classmates.

Care must be taken in the use of this method not to permit the time of the class to be taken with uninteresting and poorly prepared reports by pupils, for this will kill the interest of the class, set a low standard of preparation and mastery, and render the method useless.  When a topic of special study is assigned to a pupil, care must be taken to see that the exact references for study are known and that the necessary material is available.  The devoted teacher will also try to find time and opportunity to help his pupil organize the material of his report to insure its interest and value to the class.

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How to Teach Religion from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.