Pedagogical Knowledge Base of Religious and Moral Education Teachers in Assessing Students’ Academic Performance
Table 1.
The Views of RME Teachers concerning their PedagogicalKnowledge
| Statement | M | SD | | I teach RME with real, concrete and present situation of learners as basis. | 4.24 | .88 | | Religious concepts only come alive when they are related to life experiences. | 4.21 | .91 | | RME should help students to build conceptual bridges between existential experiences and the central concepts of religion. | 4.24 | .77 | | Assessment procedures that give students opportunity to relate Biblical stories to life are adopted during RME lessons. | 4.42 | .65 | | I am conversant with the concept cracking approach to the teaching of RME. | 3.95 | .81 | | Students who are able to relate Biblical stories to real life experiences are given rewards to serve as motivation. | 3.74 | 1.04 | | The teacher-learner interaction is very minimal because I mostly use the lecture method in teaching. | 2.13 | 1.15 | | Any concept could be taught to any child provided it could be appropriately interpreted. | 3.06 | 1.42 | | Concrete, real and present situation of learners are considered in asking questions in class. | 4.45 | .89 | | Students’ experiences are considered in grouping them in the classroom during RME lessons. | 3.51 | 1.36 | | Students’ real life experiences form the basis of discussions in the classroom. | 3.63 | 1.19 | | I relate RME topics to the life of students to a limited extent. | 3.81 | 1.07 | | I do not relate RME topics to real life experiences of learners during teaching. | 1.81 | .95 | | Through the use of role- play, students are offered the opportunity to relate RME lessons to `their own life. | 4.56 | .50 | | I am conversant with the Existential Approach to teaching RME. | 3.82 | .71 | Scale: 1 = Strongly Disagree, 2 = Disagree, 3 = Uncertain, 4 = Agree, 5 = Strongly Agree Mean of means = 3.71 Mean of Standard Deviation = 0.98
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Mean of Standard Deviation = 0.98 |