Maxims and principles of teaching are like “traffic rules” for a teacher. They reduce confusion and make learning smooth. Maxims tell the best order of teaching (how to move from one step to another). Principles tell the best teaching behavior (how a teacher should plan, motivate, and guide learners).
In Real Life: When a teacher starts from students’ daily life and then moves to theory, students feel “I can understand this.” Because students’ everyday knowledge gets faster attention and better results.
Exam Point of View: NET questions mostly test direction words like known→unknown, concrete→abstract, induction vs deduction, and mix them to create traps.
Maxims of Teaching
A maxim is a short “teaching direction” that improves sequencing and clarity. These are widely used in teacher-training notes and pedagogy modules.
Complete List of Maxims of Teaching
Below is a “full coverage” list that includes the common maxims plus the other maxims that appear in standard pedagogy notes.
| S. No. | Maxim (Rule) | Simple meaning | Easy example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Known → Unknown | Start from what learners already know | Use “shopping bill” before “profit & loss” |
| 2. | Simple → Complex | Easy ideas first, then harder | Basic sentence → complex sentence |
| 3. | Easy → Difficult | Confidence first, challenge later | 2-mark sums → 5-mark word problems |
| 4. | Concrete → Abstract | Real objects first, ideas later | Use real coins before “money value” |
| 5. | Particular → General | Specific cases first, then rule | Give examples, then form definition |
| 6. | Whole → Part | Show full picture first, then break | Read full poem, then explain lines |
| 7. | Part → Whole | Teach pieces first, then combine | Letters → words → sentences |
| 8. | Analysis → Synthesis | Break into parts, then join into whole | Parts of paragraph → write full answer |
| 9. | Empirical → Rational | Experience/observation first, then reason | Show boiling water, then explain why |
| 10. | Induction → Deduction | Examples first, rule later | Many examples → grammar rule |
| 11. | Deduction → Induction | Rule first, practice later (then deeper pattern) | Formula first → practice → notice pattern |
| 12. | Psychological → Logical | Student interest/level first, then logical order | Story first, then textbook structure |
| 13. | Near → Far | Nearest environment first, then distant | Home → school → town → country |
| 14. | Seen → Unseen | Visible/observable first, then invisible | See plants → discuss “oxygen” idea |
| 15. | Actual → Representative | Real object first, then picture/model | Real leaf → later diagram/model |
| 16. | Indefinite ↔ Definite | Move from unclear to clear OR clear to less-clear (based on topic) | Start vague idea → make it precise OR firm base → then exceptions |
Note: Some notes write Definite → Indefinite, others write Indefinite → Definite. The exam-safe idea is: first build clarity and certainty, then handle vagueness, exceptions, and wider cases.
How to choose the right maxim quickly
- If students are scared/confused → use known/simple/easy/concrete first
- If students need “big picture” → use whole → part
- If students must build a skill step-by-step → use part → whole
- If students must “discover the rule” → use induction → deduction
- If time is short and practice is needed → use deduction → practice
Situational Example:
A teacher starts algebra directly with formulas. Students freeze.
If the teacher starts with number patterns (known + concrete), students accept algebra as “pattern rules.”
Exam Point of View: Many MCQs hide the maxim inside verbs:
- “observe examples and form rule” = induction
- “teacher states rule and gives practice” = deduction
- “local to global” = near to far
Principles of Teaching
A principle is a guiding rule that tells what a teacher should do to make learning meaningful, active, and long-lasting. Many pedagogy modules group them into General principles and Psychological principles.
Complete List of Principles of Teaching
A) General Principles (Teacher planning + classroom direction)
These shape lesson planning and classroom organisation.
| Principle | Simple meaning | Quick example |
|---|---|---|
| Goal setting / Definite aim | Clear objective before teaching | “Today we will learn 3 causes” |
| Planning | Plan steps, time, materials | Plan intro, activity, recap |
| Child-centeredness | Focus on learner needs, not only syllabus | Adjust speed and method |
| Activity | Students learn by doing | Group task, demo, worksheet |
| Individual differences | Not all learners are same | Easy/medium/hard tasks |
| Linking with life | Connect content with environment | Use local examples |
| Flexibility | Change method if needed | Switch lecture → activity |
| Material selection | Choose suitable content/material | Use simple chart/model |
| Co-operation | Teacher–student cooperation | Pair work, supportive class |
| Conducive environment | Supportive classroom setting | Light, seating, discipline |
B) Psychological Principles (How the learner’s mind learns)
These come from learning psychology (motivation, readiness, practice, feedback, etc.).
| Principle | Simple meaning | Quick example |
|---|---|---|
| Motivation | Create interest to learn | Puzzle, reward, purpose |
| Stimulation | Provide the right “push” | Use questions, prompts |
| Repetition & exercise | Practice makes learning permanent | Mixed practice weekly |
| Readiness | Learner must be prepared | Pre-questions, warm-up |
| Creativity | Encourage new ideas | “Find a new method” task |
| Rest & recreation | Breaks avoid fatigue | Short break, fun recap |
| Self-learning | Build independent learning | Homework as exploration |
| Feedback & reinforcement | Correct + strengthen learning | Quick correction + praise |
| Association | Link related ideas together | Connect causes with effects |
Your given “must-know” principles (Explained deeper)
Principle of motivation
Motivation means an inner push to learn. Without it, attention drops fast.
A motivated student tries again even after a mistake.
- Ways to apply:
- Start with a curiosity question
- Show real-life use
- Praise effort, not only marks
Principle of activity and participation
Students learn more when they do something, not only listen.
Activity can be speaking, writing, experimenting, discussing, or solving.
- Simple classroom activities:
- Think–pair–share
- 1-minute quiz
- Group worksheet
Principle of individual differences
Learners differ in speed, language level, background, and confidence.
So one teaching style for all creates gaps.
- Easy ways:
- Level-based questions
- Extra help for slow learners
- Extension tasks for fast learners
Principle of reinforcement and feedback
Feedback tells what is correct/wrong and how to improve. Reinforcement strengthens correct learning.
Quick feedback prevents “wrong learning” from becoming a habit.
Principle of linking with life / environment
When learning connects with home, market, school life, and local examples, it becomes meaningful.
This reduces rote learning (rote = memorising without understanding).
Principle of revision and practice
Revision means revisiting learned points. Practice means applying again and again.
This improves retention and exam speed.
Exam Point of View: Options like “same method for all students” usually break individual differences. Options like “no feedback needed” break feedback & reinforcement.
Key Points – Takeaways
- Maxims guide the sequence of teaching; principles guide the quality of teaching.
- Known→unknown builds connection and confidence.
- Concrete→abstract improves understanding before definitions.
- Simple/easy first reduces fear and increases participation.
Exam Point of View: If the stem shows “familiar life example first”, maxims like known→unknown / linking with life are strong answers.
- Whole→part is best for overview topics; part→whole is best for skill building.
- Induction means examples first and rule later; deduction means rule first and practice later.
- Near→far is common in EVS/social science teaching.
- Psychological→logical means student suitability first, then textbook logic.
Exam Point of View: “Students discover rule” = induction; “teacher states rule first” = deduction.
- General principles include planning, child-centeredness, activity, flexibility, cooperation, conducive environment.
- Psychological principles include motivation, readiness, repetition, feedback/reinforcement, self-learning, association.
- Revision + practice converts learning into long-term memory.
- Feedback must be quick and specific for best effect.
Exam Point of View: NET loves confusing pairs (whole–part vs part–whole, induction vs deduction). Always identify “start point” and “end point” in the question.
The “Connect–Build–Check–Reinforce” Teaching Flow
This framework is a simple way to apply maxims and principles in one lesson.
- Connect (Known→Unknown + Motivation)
Start with a familiar situation and a curiosity question. - Build (Simple→Complex + Concrete→Abstract)
Teach step-by-step using objects/examples, then definitions. - Check (Activity + Individual differences)
Ask questions, use group work, and give level-based tasks. - Reinforce (Feedback + Revision & practice)
Correct quickly, recap key points, give short practice.
| Step | Maxim support | Principle support | Expected result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Connect | Known→Unknown | Motivation | Attention & interest |
| Build | Simple→Complex, Concrete→Abstract | Linking with life | Clear understanding |
| Check | Whole/Part as needed | Activity, Individual differences | Participation + support |
| Reinforce | Deduction practice | Feedback, Revision | Better retention |
Situational Example:
While teaching “Fractions”, start with pizza slices (connect), then symbols (build), then group worksheet (check), then recap + practice (reinforce).
Examples
- Classroom Example (Known→Unknown):
Teacher asks: “Where do you see angles?” Students say: scissors, clock hands, road turns.
Then teacher introduces acute/obtuse angles using those objects. - Classroom Example (Induction→Deduction):
Teacher writes 6 example sentences of past tense. Students notice “-ed”.
Teacher states the rule and gives new sentences for practice. - Classroom Example (Whole→Part):
Teacher reads the full paragraph once with meaning.
Then explains keywords, main idea, and finally each sentence. - Daily-life Example (Linking with life):
For percentages, teacher uses shop discount tags (10%, 25%, 50%).
Students calculate final price and understand real use. - Classroom Example (Individual differences):
Same topic, three worksheets: Level-1 basic, Level-2 medium, Level-3 challenge.
Every student works without feeling “too slow” or “too bored”. - Story-style Example:
Rani feared science definitions.
Her teacher first showed boiling water in class.
Students touched the warm steam (safe distance) and observed bubbles.
Then the teacher explained “molecules move faster on heating.”
Rani said, “Now the definition feels like my own experience.”
Quick One-shot Revision Notes
- Maxims = order of teaching steps; principles = rules for effective teaching.
- Known→unknown connects old knowledge to new learning.
- Simple/easy→complex/difficult builds confidence.
- Concrete→abstract: object/example first, definition later.
- Whole→part: overview first; part→whole: skill-building first.
- Particular→general: examples first, rule later.
- Induction→deduction: discover then apply.
- Deduction: rule first, practice next.
- Analysis→synthesis: break then combine.
- Empirical→rational: experience first, explanation later.
- Psychological→logical: student suitability first, textbook logic later.
- Near→far: local environment first, then distant.
- Seen→unseen: visible first, invisible concept later.
- Actual→representative: real object first, then picture/model.
- Key principles: goal, planning, child-centeredness, activity, flexibility.
- Psychological principles: motivation, readiness, repetition, feedback, self-learning.
Mini Practice
Q1 (Scenario MCQ)
A teacher begins “Global warming” by discussing the rise in heat students feel in their town during summer, then moves to global causes and data. Which maxim is most suitable?
A) Near to far
B) Deduction to induction
C) Definite to indefinite
D) Part to whole
Answer: A
Explanation: The teacher starts from local environment (near) and moves to wider world (far).
Q2 (Comparison/Difference MCQ)
“Examples first, rule later” is:
A) Deduction
B) Induction
C) Analysis
D) Revision
Answer: B
Explanation: Induction moves from specific examples to a general rule.
Q3 (Statement-based MCQ)
Which principle is violated if a teacher teaches in the same speed and same method for all students, ignoring slow learners?
A) Principle of cooperation
B) Principle of individual differences
C) Principle of rest and recreation
D) Principle of stimulation
Answer: B
Explanation: Learners differ in ability and speed, so teaching must be adjusted.
Q4 (Assertion–Reason MCQ)
Assertion (A): Quick correction after a test improves learning.
Reason (R): Feedback and reinforcement help students know mistakes and strengthen correct responses.
A) Both A and R are true, and R explains A
B) Both A and R are true, but R does not explain A
C) A is true, R is false
D) A is false, R is true
Answer: A
Explanation: Feedback shows the gap and reinforcement strengthens correct learning, so the reason supports the assertion.
Q5 (Scenario MCQ)
A teacher first shows the full diagram of the human heart, then explains chambers, valves, and blood flow step-by-step. Which maxim is used?
A) Part to whole
B) Whole to part
C) Concrete to abstract
D) Indefinite to definite
Answer: B
Explanation: The teacher shows the complete picture first and then breaks it into parts.
FAQs
What is the difference between maxims and principles of teaching?
Maxims guide teaching order; principles guide teaching behaviour and classroom planning.
Which maxim is best for teaching beginners?
Known→unknown and concrete→abstract work best for beginners.
Is “near to far” useful only in social science?
Mostly yes, but it also works in science and environment-based lessons.
Which principle supports exam preparation most?
Revision and practice, along with quick feedback, improves retention and speed.
Can a teacher use induction and deduction together?
Yes. Start inductive for discovery, then use deduction for practice and application.
Why is “psychological to logical” important?
It matches teaching to learner interest and level first, then arranges content logically.
