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Individualized instruction

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Msalser (talk | contribs) at 08:43, 15 May 2004. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Individualized Instruction is a method of instruction in which content, instructional materials, media, and pace are based upon the abilities and interests of each individual learner.

Individualized Instruction is not:

A one-to-one student/teacher ratio, as many people would assume. It is not even one-to-one tutoring.

At the very least, neither of these is even realistically possible. No school system could afford anything close to a one-to-one student/teacher ratio or private tutoring. Even the most expensive public school system in the United States (Washington, DC, 2003, approximately $11,000 per student per year) would require at least 5 students per teacher to pay teacher salaries, without anything left for buildings or non-teaching staff.

A method of managing the instructional process without requiring live lectures from teachers. Because lectures consume approximately 80% of an average teacher's in-class time, to say nothing of the time needed to prepare lessons. Freeing that time allows teachers the luxury of more time to work privately with individual students as needed.

Lecturing is an inherently inefficient method of conveying information. The average student retains only approximately 10% of what is presented in a lecture, but without substantial reinforcement that figure falls to an abysmal 2% or less within 24 hours.

Why waste the time of either teacher or student on a process that is so ineffective?

Instead, Educational Research Associates concluded that placing greater reliance upon well-designed instructional materials – whether audio, video, multimedia CAI, or simply a good textbook – can hardly be less efficient than the lecture method, but yields a huge net benefit by freeing teachers to focus upon the needs and problems of individual students.

The initial content for this article was provided by Educational Research Associates, Portland OR.