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- Teaching | Definition, History, Facts | Britannica
Teaching, the profession of those who give instruction, especially in an elementary school or a secondary school or in a university Measured in terms of its members, teaching is the world’s largest profession, with about 80 million teachers throughout the world
- Teaching - Education, Pedagogy, Mentoring | Britannica
Teaching - Education, Pedagogy, Mentoring: In the 19th century, systems of public education developed in order to meet the recognized need for universal literacy in an industrializing society Teaching at this primary level was at first no more than a high-level domestic service, in which the teacher took over some of the child-rearing
- Teaching Definition Meaning | Britannica Dictionary
TEACHING meaning: 1 : the job or profession of a teacher; 2 : something that is taught the ideas and beliefs that are taught by a person, religion, etc usually plural often + of
- Pedagogy | Methods, Theories, Facts | Britannica
Pedagogy, the study of teaching methods, including the aims of education and the ways in which such goals may be achieved It relies heavily on scientific theories of learning, and to some extent on the philosophy of education, which considers the aims and value of education from a philosophical perspective
- Teaching Theories, Educational Psychology - Britannica
Pedagogy - Teaching Theories, Educational Psychology: The earliest mental-discipline theories of teaching were based on a premise that the main justification for teaching anything is not for itself but for what it trains—intelligence, attitudes, and values
- Teaching - In Loco Parentis, Education, Pedagogy | Britannica
Teaching - In Loco Parentis, Education, Pedagogy: When minor children are entrusted by parents to a school, the parents delegate to the school certain responsibilities for their children, and the school has certain liabilities
- Teaching - Unions, Associations, Education | Britannica
Teaching - Unions, Associations, Education: In most countries there is one major teachers’ organization to which all or nearly all teachers belong and pay dues Sometimes membership is obligatory, sometimes voluntary
- Buddha | Biography, Teachings, Influence, Facts | Britannica
Buddha (born c 6th–4th century bce, Lumbini, near Kapilavastu, Shakya republic, Kosala kingdom [now in Nepal]—died, Kusinara, Malla republic, Magadha kingdom [now Kasia, India]) was the founder of Buddhism, one of the major religions and philosophical systems of southern and eastern Asia and of the world Buddha is one of the many epithets of a teacher who lived in northern India sometime
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