Topic 4

Teaching Skills

The specific classroom techniques a teacher uses — from setting up a lesson to keeping students engaged throughout. These are practised, refined, and improved over time.

A. Micro-Teaching

What is Micro-Teaching?

Micro-teaching is a teacher training technique where a trainee teacher delivers a short lesson to a small group in a controlled setting. The goal is to practise and isolate specific teaching skills — such as questioning, explaining, or reinforcement — and then improve through structured feedback.

FeatureDetail
Group size5–10 students (small, controlled audience)
Duration10–15 minutes per session
FocusOne specific teaching skill at a time
Followed byFeedback and critique from supervisor or peers
ThenRe-teaching — the same lesson is taught again after feedback
PurposeDevelop, refine, and build confidence in specific teaching skills
Group Size
Students5–10 students
Duration
Time10–15 minutes
Cycle
StepsTeach → Feedback → Re-teach

The micro-teaching cycle follows a clear sequence:

1
Plan — prepare a short lesson targeting one specific skill
2
Teach — deliver the 10–15 min lesson to 5–10 students
3
Observe & Record — supervisor or peers observe; may be video-recorded
4
Feedback — critique given on the specific skill being practised
5
Re-plan — teacher adjusts the lesson based on feedback
6
Re-teach — lesson delivered again with improvements applied
⚡ MCQ Tip Micro-teaching: 5–10 students, 10–15 minutes. Cycle = Teach → Feedback → Re-teach. Purpose is to develop and refine specific skills. It is a training technique, not a regular classroom method.

B. Core Teaching Skills

Essential Skills Every Teacher Needs

These skills form the practical toolkit of effective teaching. They are applied throughout every lesson.

Set Induction
Opening the lesson
The technique of engaging students at the beginning of a lesson. A good set induction captures attention, activates prior knowledge, and connects the topic to real life. Examples: a thought-provoking question, a short video, a surprising fact, or a demonstration.
Closure
Ending the lesson
The technique of wrapping up a lesson effectively at the end. Good closure summarises key learning, checks if objectives were met, and connects to the next lesson. Examples: recap questions, exit tickets, class summary, preview of the next topic.
Questioning
Probing student understanding
Asking questions at different cognitive levels (linked to Bloom's) to check understanding, stimulate thinking, and encourage participation. Good teachers use a mix of lower-order (recall) and higher-order (analysis, evaluation) questions.
Reinforcement
Strengthening correct responses
Giving positive feedback when students respond correctly or display good behaviour. Positive reinforcement (praise, acknowledgment) encourages repetition of the behaviour. Negative reinforcement removes an unpleasant condition when behaviour improves.
Explaining
Making ideas clear
The ability to communicate information clearly, logically, and at the right level for students. Good explaining uses examples, analogies, and sequenced steps. It avoids jargon and checks comprehension along the way.
Blackboard / Whiteboard Use
Visual communication
Effective use of the board — writing clearly, organising content visually, using diagrams, and building content step by step. A well-used board reinforces the lesson structure and gives students something to refer to and copy accurately.

C. Stimulus Variation

Keeping Students Engaged Throughout

Stimulus variation refers to deliberate changes in teaching behaviour, voice, pace, movement, and media during a lesson to sustain student attention. The human brain naturally disengages from monotony — varying the stimuli prevents fatigue and keeps focus sharp.

Type of VariationHow it's doneEffect
Voice variationChange pitch, tone, volume, pace while speakingPrevents monotony; signals important points
MovementMove around the room rather than standing fixed at the frontMaintains proximity; increases engagement
GesturesUse hands, facial expressions, and body language purposefullyReinforces verbal explanation; adds emphasis
PausingStrategic silence after a question or key pointGives thinking time; creates anticipation
Media changeShift from lecture → diagram → discussion → videoAddresses different learning styles; breaks routine
Interaction changeSwitch between whole-class, pairs, and group workVaries social dynamic; maintains interest
Voice Variation
MethodChange pitch, tone, speed
EffectPrevents monotony
Movement
MethodMove around the room
EffectKeeps students alert
Media Change
MethodLecture → diagram → discussion
EffectAddresses all VARK styles
⚡ MCQ Tip Set Induction = beginning of lesson. Closure = end of lesson. Stimulus variation = throughout the lesson to maintain attention. These are three distinct teaching skills frequently tested in MCQs.

Quick MCQ Revision

Skill / ConceptKey Fact
Micro-teaching students5–10 students in a controlled setting
Micro-teaching duration10–15 minutes per session
Micro-teaching cycleTeach → Feedback → Re-teach
Purpose of micro-teachingDevelop and refine specific teaching skills
Set InductionSkill used at the BEGINNING of a lesson — hooks and engages students
ClosureSkill used at the END of a lesson — summarises and reinforces
Stimulus VariationChanges in voice, movement, media DURING lesson to maintain attention
ReinforcementPositive feedback to strengthen correct responses
Questioning skillUses Bloom's levels — mix of lower-order and higher-order questions
Key