Instructional Materials
Instructional Materials
Instructional Materials
MATERIALS
The role of materials
(Cunningsworth, 1995)
Disadvantages:
Most abstract form of reality
Immediate feedback limited
Proper reading level essential for full
usefulness
Less useful with low literate learners or
visually or cognitively impaired learners
Inappropriate for illiterate learners
Evaluating Printed Materials
Consider:
Nature of the audience
Literacy level required
Linguistic variety available
Brevity and clarity
Layout and appearance
Opportunity for repetition
Concreteness and familiarity
Kinds of Instructional Materials
I. Printed Materials
a. Textbooks
b. Supplemental materials
1. Workbooks
2. Duplicated Outlines
3. Teacher-prepared study guides
4. Reference Books
5. Pamphlets
6. Magazine Articles
7. Newspapers
Kinds of Instructional Materials
GUIDELINES EXAMPLES
High school students
read an assigned
. . . reading printed chapter from the
information for course textbook.
which they will be
held accountable Student use library
books, encyclopedias,
or newspapers to add
. . . supplementing to their knowledge of
teacher-presented a topic.
material
. . . using handouts Students use a step-
that guide them by-step guide to
through learning write a book report.
activities
Workbooks also hold an advantage because they are usually smaller and lighter
than textbooks, which equates to less trouble when the student brings the book
home to complete theirhomework.
Articles in magazines are often a good way to gain an overview of your topic,
but will seldom give full information on where the author found the information
included. That is, a bibliography of sources is generally not included.
Some examples of magazines (among many others) that might have information
on our example topic include:
Newsweek
Time
Scientific American