Impact Factor:
ISRA (India) =
6.317
ISI (Dubai, UAE) =
1.582
GIF (Australia) =
0.564
JIF = 1.500
SIS (USA) =
0.912
РИНЦ (Russia) =
3.939
ESJI (KZ) =
9.035
SJIF (Morocco)
= 7.184
ICV (Poland)
= 6.630
PIF (India)
= 1.940
IBI (India)
= 4.260
OAJI (USA)
= 0.350
Philadelphia, USA
612
The traditional “Teacher - course book - student”
paradigm requires the replacement with the “Student
– course book - teacher” paradigm in accordance with
the concept of transforming the student into a subject
of educational process, as outlined in the National
Training Program. The education system in the
developed countries of the world is based on this
paradigm.
In the behavioristic education system, the course
book and the teacher are the main sources of any
lesson and the supervisory force of education.
According to the paradigm based on cognitive
methodology, the teacher
acts as an organizer of
independent activities, a competent advisor and
assistant. The implementation of this method should
not be limited with the terms of the teaching
assignments given in the course book. The
development of speaking skills is closely related to the
further development of students ’mental abilities,
which can be done in the process of consolidating the
knowledge gained over several lessons. The students
can learn theoretical information from their teachers’
lectures, course books, additional literature, internet
and other sources, but the most important aspect is to
put the acquired knowledge into practice.
A communicative,
cognitive approach to
language teaching encourages students to be
proactive. This type of approach is one of the main
psychological and pedagogical factors in educating
young people to be creative thinkers. General,
educational and developmental goals occur in the
implementation of communicative goals. Through the
communicative-cognitive approach, students develop
their skills in working with materials in Uzbek and
Kazakh languages. As a result of students'
independent use of lexical and grammatical
pronunciation materials in their communicative
activities, they develop writing and speaking skills,
i.e. communicative-cognitive competencies.
At
present,
communicative-cognitive
approaches are significantly formed and widely used
in educational institutions.
“The average teacher can retell a theme, a good
teacher can explain it, a best teacher can show it, but
a great teacher can inspire students to a theme”
(William Arthur Ward). It is important for the teacher
to make each lesson feel like a world of miracles and
news, to inspire students
to discover something on
their own, to discover and master the unknown secrets
of the subject and to create a strong need for
knowledge.
From the beginning of humanity, the issue of
perfection and spiritual perfection is of paramount
importance to all at once [3, 175]. Confucius state the
following in his doctrine: “Tell me - I'll forget, show
me - I'll remember, teach me to do everything - it will
definitely be mine”. Indeed, if students are able to
satisfy their needs for knowledge by their own efforts
and hard work, this
knowledge will certainly be
consciously assimilated. “In the course of the lesson,
the realities of life and knowledge should be presented
not in a ready form, but in the form of case studies,
questions that make students think, tasks that direct
them to feel and try the things themselves” [9, 18]. In
order to create conditions for the students to master
the knowledge on their own and to rediscover the
knowledge they need to learn, it is necessary to turn
that knowledge into an interesting case or a puzzle.
Man is naturally eager to know what is behind the
scenes [5, 16-17].
“It is not necessary to teach students, but it is
necessary to make them study on their own. It is
impossible to succeed in
education unless the child
doesn’t explore or study himself/herself” [9, 39].
However, this does not mean that the teachers should
be spectators, on the contrary, in order to develop
students’ independent learning skills they must
carefully prepare the tasks, materials etc. and analyze
their students’ results systematically. Our rapidly
evolving society requires studying, cognition and
learning as the main driving forces of education, and
students are considered to be as a main subject of the
educational process.
According to Professor B. Tukhliev, there has
been a significant shift in
the educational system of
Western countries from a behavioral approach to a
cognitive approach. In the assessment of human
activity, cognitivism (English “educated, learned,
mastered”) differed in some respects from the
behaviorist approach that prevailed in pedagogy and
psychology until the 1960s.
It is well known that in the behavioral approach,
human behavior is understood as a set of unconscious
reactions, often determined by the influence of the
external factors.
Behaviorism is derived from an English word
that means “behavior, ethics”.
It studies the human
psyche, and analyses human appearance, his behavior
and speech, the qualities which are easily observed.
In the cognitive approach, however, the
superiority of the skills and abilities formed on the
basis of consciousness are admitted. The essence of
the method of teaching a cognitive approach is that a
student is engaged in the discovery of new ideas or the
creation of something in the process of completing the
tasks set by the teachers.
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