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Module 3 • Teaching Methods


Activities that can develop sensing and knowing Preparing a vegetable/fruit salad – to develop the awareness of a multisensory memory activity.


Making popcorn – to relate to a situation which requires or entails multisensory action. UNIT 3 8. Shaping and relating


Introduction • Focus on shape as a property and on properties related to the space occupied by objects. • The children will learn to recognise the diverse shapes of objects around them. • They will also learn to describe them graphically and verbally. • The childmust familiarise himself with spatial properties to improve his ability to observe and describe.


• When examining the shape of an object, we use geometrical terminology, e.g. straight lines, circles, triangles, curves.


• Some objects have basic, definable shapes: these are man-made objects, e.g. a ball shaped like a sphere, a building block shaped like a cube.


• Natural objects are not always a specific shape, e.g. trees, clouds, rocks, leaves, animals.We therefore have to find other terms in order to describe them.


• All objects are solid figures – they are three-dimensional and occupy space. A stone is a solid figure which occupies space.


• All flat shapes are two-dimensional. Some flat shapes have a simple geometrical definition, e.g. a square, a rectangle, or a circle and a triangle.


This unit consists of five chapters Chapter 1:


Chapter 2: Chapter 3: Chapter 4: Chapter 5:


Glossary


LINE: Can be considered as a continuous motion of a point in space, is infinite in length, without a beginning or an end. A line is one-dimensional. STRAIGHT LINE: A basic notion undefined.


Shapes of objects Linear shapes Planar shapes


Lines and shapes Solid shapes – object and shapes


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