tintojohnsvazhupadickal
97,387 views
26 slides
Aug 30, 2013
Slide 1 of 26
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
About This Presentation
CO CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES
PREPARED BY
MR. TINTO JOHNS
Size: 2.53 MB
Language: en
Added: Aug 30, 2013
Slides: 26 pages
Slide Content
IMPORTANCE OF CO-CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES IN EDUCATION
Co-curricular Activities Co-Curricular activities are those activities, which are undertaken side by side with the curricular activities. They supplement curricular activities and prepare the students in the “Art of Living and Working Together.”
Secondary educational commission (1952 - 1953) comments on the importance of co- curricular activities “co-curricular activities are as integral part of curricular activities of a school and their proper organization needs just as much care and forethought as the organization of curricular activities.”
According to Mahatma Gandhi “By education, I mean an all-round drawing out of the best in child and man - body , mind and spirit .” All-roundness is the theme of modern education which recognizes that when the child comes to the school, he comes for mental, physical, social, spiritual and vocational education and as such he must be educated and nourished in all of them. IMPORTANCE OF CO- CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES IN EDUCATION
According to the modern concept of education, the three traditional Rs should be replaced by seven Rs , i.e ., Reading, Writing and Arithmetic ( denoting school subjects in the old concept of education), Rights, Responsibilities, Recreation and Relationships (new four Rs in the context of democratic values). This can be achieved only by providing a well-organized and supervised program of co-curricular activities along with curricular program.
Co-curricular activities are instrumental for drawing out the best potentialities of the child. Boosting the place of the co-curriculum in schools will equip young people with the civic spirit, initiative and organizing skills to set up their own clubs, teams and activity groups when they leave education.
Changes in the philosophical and psychological ideas have now given a new direction to the school curriculum. Co-curricular activities prepare students practically for future. The normal curriculum can only go so far as to teach and educate students about academic theories.
It ensures that students are exposed to practical tasks, not just what is taught in the class. Students have a right to a broad education.
Successful co-curriculum often depends on building links between the school and the wider community, bringing local enthusiasts in to work with students, and sending students out to work on community projects, help in primary schools, perform for local audiences, etc.
Principles for the organization Of different co-curricular activities The school should have only those activities for which there are possibilities of making them success. As far as possible a wide variety of activities may be organized. Too many activities should not be introduced at a time. The activity should organize within school time.
Activity should organize under the supervision of teachers who are experts and are really interested. As far as possible activities should be of less expensive and feasible. Every student should be given equal opportunity. In each activity the role of the teacher should be that of a facilitator. Each activity should be evaluated and detailed records should be maintained.
TYPES OF CO-CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES Academic development activities Aesthetic development activities Cultural development activities Emotional development activities Leisure utilization activities Literacy development activities Moral development activities Physical development activities Productive activities Social development activities Scientific temperament development activities Spiritual development activities in vocational oriented activities Multipurpose activities and projects
1. ACADEMIC DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES Preparation of Charts, Models, etc. School Magazines, Essay writing, Story writing etc. Subject clubs: E.g.- Social science club, Geographical clubs, etc. Projects Symposiums Surveys Quiz
2. AESTHETIC DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES Sculpture Dramatics Drawing, Painting, Decoration Exhibition Fancy dress Music
3. CUTURAL DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES Visit to Assembly and Parliament Student’s council Youth Parliament Social service.
4. EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES Camps Celebration of National and International days Educational tours Speeches 5. LEISURE UTILISATION ACTIVITIES Album making, Coin collecting and Stamp collecting Photography Educational Tours.
6. LITERACY DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES Debates Recitation Public speaking Declamation contests Library work 7. MORAL DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES Celebration of birthdays of great men Morning Assembly Social service
8. PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES Athletics Cycling Mass drill NCC Swimming Yogic Indoor and outdoor games
9. PRODUCTIVE ACTIVITIES Clay work, Manufacture of teaching aids etc Embroidery and tailoring Craft work, book binding Leather work Kitchen gardening Soap making Toy making Card board work
10. SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES Scouting Girl guiding Community service Junior Red Cross National service scheme, NCC etc
11. SCIENTIFIC TEMPERAMENT DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES Science Fairs Science clubs Science quiz Science models Field trips, etc.
SPIRITUAL DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES IN VOCATIONAL ORIENTED ACTIVITIES School choir, Yoga Meditation MULTI PURPOSE ACTIVITIES AND PROJECTS Tree plantation, Adult education, Community service and awareness, Beautification and cleanliness of school campus. Social service, Social survey.
ROLE OF A TEACHER IN CO-CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES Teachers should take an active interest in organizing co curricular activities as an integral part of the school program. In the teaching of subjects, they get innumerable opportunities to suggest a variety of activities. The scope of activities is very fast. The language teachers can organize essay competitions, handwriting competitions, debates, spelling competitions, etc.
Social studies teachers can take up projects on the lives of great historical figures. Several types of maps could be prepared. Excursions to places of historical importance may be organized. Social surveys could be undertaken. The science teachers can develop scientific creativity among the students by providing appropriate creative thoughts. As a matter of fact , scope of organizing co- curricular activities is unlimited .
Hary C. Mckown has very aptly observed : “A school with only co-curricular activities would be as absurd as a school without them.” In other words an ideal balance has to be struck between the curricular and co-curricular program. conclusion