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Answer

Teachers play multiple roles in the lives of their students, from being mentors to confidants. Understanding our teaching philosophy's impact on
student development over time is essential. We can make them fall in love with a subject by using the proper techniques that best resonate with
our students. When we say that different teachers have different styles, it is an informal way of understanding the differences between teaching
philosophies. We can gauge more about what techniques we can incorporate by understanding the different philosophies of education.

Realism

It understands the limitations of bias and asks teachers to Inculcate a desire for learning and to expand the mind. Realism encourages practical
knowledge and building upon that knowledge base for a more complex understanding of different subjects.

Pragmatism

We can also use pragmatism to help weaker students that need expedited assistance rn to improve their grades. These students may not have the
proper facilities to focus on subjects through the lens of realism, m which case teachers can strengthen their ability to solve problems directly.

Perennialism

Perenmalism may be perceived as non-collaborative, but it can be a strong pillar on which teachers can establish group learning. Schools often
use personalism during the earlier years of teaching to ensure consistency across classes for standardized testing.

Behaviourism

You can also create repeatability and course adherence by rewarding successful performance with stars, gifts, names on boards, and other
behaviorism tools. You can also set long-term and short-term rewards to Incentivize students to continue improving their performance.

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