Effective teaching involves thoughtful choice of strategies, responsiveness to learners and supportive feedback, which are captured in statements (A), (C) and (E). A highlights the need to use varied instructional strategies, C stresses monitoring understanding and adjusting teaching, and E recognises the value of timely feedback for improvement. B is wrong because effective teaching is not judged solely by content coverage but by learning outcomes, and D is wrong since ignoring learners' socio-cultural background can create barriers to learning. Thus the correct description of effective teaching behaviour is given by A, C and E only.
Option A:
Option A includes A and C, both key aspects of effective teaching, but omits E. Feedback is a critical component of effective instruction because it closes the loop between teaching and learning by informing learners about their progress. Without acknowledging this, the combination does not fully represent effective teaching behaviour.
Option B:
Option B brings together A, C and E, the three statements that align with accepted indicators of teacher effectiveness. It acknowledges variety in strategies, ongoing monitoring and adaptive teaching, and the provision of timely feedback that supports learner growth. By excluding B and D, which overemphasise coverage and neglect learner context, this option presents a balanced view of effective teaching.
Option C:
Option C adds statement B to the otherwise correct set. B suggests that effectiveness is solely about how much content the teacher covers, which neglects whether learners have actually understood or can apply the material. Including such a narrow view alongside broader effectiveness indicators makes this combination unsatisfactory.
Option D:
Option D selects B, D and E, combining one correct statement with two incorrect ones. E correctly highlights feedback, but B and D undervalue learning outcomes and learner diversity by stressing coverage and ignoring socio-cultural background. Because the option treats these problematic statements as correct, it cannot be accepted.
Option E pairs C and E, which are correct, with D, which is incorrect. D proposes that effective teaching excludes consideration of learners' socio-cultural background, yet inclusive teaching practice requires sensitivity to this context. The presence of D in the combination conflicts with contemporary views of effectiveness, so this option is not correct.
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