Statements A, C and E correctly describe learner-centred teaching because they emphasise active involvement, use of prior knowledge and collaborative, problem-based activities. B is false as a purely lecture-based class without interaction is typically teacher-centred, not learner-centred. D is false because in learner-centred classrooms the teacher still guides, scaffolds and structures learning rather than remaining a mere observer. Therefore, the correct set of statements is A, C and E only, making option B the right answer.
Option A:
Option A includes A and C, which are true, but omits E, even though collaborative and problem-based activities are strong examples of learner-centred approaches. Because it leaves out one true statement, this combination is incomplete and cannot be correct.
Option B:
Option B contains A, C and E, all of which highlight active engagement, attention to learners’ backgrounds and use of collaborative tasks, so it captures the full set of true statements. It correctly excludes B and D, which misrepresent lecture reliance and teacher passivity. Hence A, C and E only is the correct combination.
Option C:
Option C adds B to A and C, but B incorrectly labels exclusive, non-interactive lecture as learner-centred, which clashes with the principle of active learner participation. Since it mixes a false statement with true ones, A, B and C only is not valid.
Option D:
Option D groups C, D and E, but D wrongly suggests that learner-centred teaching eliminates teacher guidance entirely. Including D as if it were true, and omitting A, results in an inaccurate description of learner-centred approaches. Thus C, D and E only cannot be accepted.
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