Statements A, B and C correctly present teaching as a system with inputs, processes and outputs and recognise the role of feedback in adjusting teaching. Statement E is also true because classroom environment and interaction patterns are central elements of the process component. Statement D is false since outputs are expected to reflect the achievement of stated instructional objectives, and F is false because feedback should inform modifications to the teaching process. Therefore, the correct set of statements is A, B, C and E only, making option C the right answer.
Option A:
Option A includes A, B and C, which are correct, but omits E, a true statement about the role of classroom environment and interaction patterns in the process. Since E is also correct, its exclusion makes the combination incomplete. Hence A, B and C only cannot be the correct answer.
Option B:
Option B groups A, C and E as correct, but leaves out B, even though B accurately identifies learner characteristics, teacher competence and resources as important inputs. Without B, the description of inputs is incomplete. Therefore A, C and E only is not adequate.
Option C:
Option C brings together A, B, C and E, all of which correctly describe critical components of the teaching system, including inputs, processes, outputs and feedback. It excludes D and F, both of which contradict the idea of aligning outputs with objectives and using feedback for improvement. Because it contains all and only the true statements, A, B, C and E only is the correct option.
Option D:
Option D includes B, C, D and E but also contains D, which wrongly claims that outputs are unrelated to objectives. This conflicts with the idea that outputs indicate the level of objective achievement. Consequently B, C, D and E only mixes true and false statements and cannot be accepted.
Option E selects A, D, E and F, but both D and F are false statements that undermine the importance of objectives and adaptability in a system. Although A and E are true, the presence of these incorrect claims invalidates the combination. Thus A, D, E and F only is not the right answer.
Option F groups C, E and F, but F is a false statement suggesting that feedback should not lead to changes, which contradicts the very purpose of feedback in a system. Additionally, this set omits A and B, which define the system structure and inputs. Therefore C, E and F only cannot be considered correct.
Comment Your Answer
Please login to comment your answer.
Sign In
Sign Up
Answers commented by others
No answers commented yet. Be the first to comment!