Prof Ed
LIST OF KEYWORDS
1. Idealism – spiritual, values, ideal
2. realism- science/ what is real
3. empiricism- senses
4. naturalism- innate
5. existentialism- choice,decision,unique
6. essentialism- specialization, basic, fundamental
7. perrenialism- classic, literature, traditional
8. pragmatism- activation of skills
9. progressivism-child-centered
10. Epicureanism- perfection
11. Agnosticism- aetheist, unknown
12. stoicism- passionate emotions
13. hedonism- pleasure
14. humanism- humans
15. constuctivism- prior knowledge activation
16. reconstructionism- solution to problem
17. scholasticism- rationalization of church
Theories
1.Stages of development- jean piaget, thinking
2. Cognitivism- discovery learning, Jerome bruner,
concrete rto abstract
3. behaviorism- environment, watson
4. connectionism- classroom environment, thorndike
5. humanism- carl rogers, child centered
6. operant conditioning- reinforcement/punishment,
Bf skinner
7. Classical conditioning- habit and stimuli Ivan Pavlov
8. Meaningful learning- conceptual, graphic organizers,
Ausubel
9. Insightful learning- Activation of prior knowledge,
problem solving, kohler
10. Moral development- value formation, Kohlberg
11. Hierarchy of need theory- needs, maslow
12. attachment theory- caregiver, john Bowlby
13. identity statuses- jame marcias, confusion
14. field theory- internal and external environment
15. bioecological- system of environment, Brofenbrenner
16. choice theory- glasser, decision
17. social learning- bandura, modeling
18. socio-cultural- Vygotsky, scaffolding more
Knowledgeable
Domains of learning
Cognitive: mental processes (knowing, reasoning, problem solving)
Affective: feelings, attitudes, values
Psychomotor: physical skills, coordination
Behaviorist theories
Ivan Pavlov: classical conditioning—learning by association of stimuli and
responses
Edward Thorndike: law of effect—behaviors followed by satisfying
outcomes are repeated
B. F. Skinner: operant conditioning—reinforcement (positive, negative) and
punishment shape voluntary behavior
Cognitive development theories
Jean Piaget: four stages (sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete
operational, formal operational); learners construct schemas through
assimilation and accommodation
Lev Vygotsky: sociocultural theory; zone of proximal development and
scaffolding; learning is mediated by language and social interaction
Jerome Bruner: discovery learning and spiral curriculum; learners build
understanding by revisiting concepts at increasing levels of complexity
Information processing theory
Atkinson and Shiffrin: sensory register, short-term memory, long-term
memory
Cognitive load principle: manage intrinsic, extraneous, and germane load
to optimize learning
Robert Gagné: nine events of instruction aligning external teaching events
with internal cognitive processes
Social cognitive theory
Albert Bandura: observational learning and modeling; self-efficacy beliefs
determine effort, persistence, and resilience
“Bobo doll” experiments demonstrate learning through watching others,
not direct reinforcement
Humanistic theories
Abraham Maslow: hierarchy of needs (physiological, safety,
love/belonging, esteem, self-actualization); unmet needs hinder learning
Carl Rogers: person-centered approach; learning thrives under conditions
of empathy, genuineness, and unconditional positive regard
Motivation theories
Intrinsic vs. extrinsic motivation: internal satisfaction vs. external rewards
Deci and Ryan’s self-determination theory: autonomy, competence, and
relatedness fuel intrinsic motivation
Bernard Weiner’s attribution theory: how learners explain success/failure
(ability, effort, task difficulty, luck) affects future motivation
Expectancy-value theory: motivation = expectancy of success × value of
task
Carol Dweck’s mindset theory: growth vs. fixed mindset influences
resilience and achievement
Developmental and personality theories
Sigmund Freud: psychosexual stages shape personality and can influence
attitudes toward authority and learning
Erik Erikson: eight psychosocial stages from trust vs. mistrust to integrity
vs. despair, each involving a social crisis
Urie Bronfenbrenner: ecological systems theory; development occurs
within nested environments (microsystem to macrosystem)
Memory and retention
Hermann Ebbinghaus: forgetting curve; spaced practice combats rapid
forgetting
Encoding strategies: elaboration, organization, imagery to enhance
transfer to long-term memory
Metacognition and self-regulation
John Flavell: metacognitive knowledge (awareness of one’s cognitive
processes) and regulation (planning, monitoring, evaluating) improve
learning outcomes
Gestalt principles in learning
Max Wertheimer: perception organized into meaningful wholes; “whole is
more than sum of parts” applies to problem solving and concept formation
Multiple intelligences and diversity
Howard Gardner: distinct intelligences (linguistic, logical-mathematical,
spatial, musical, bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal, intrapersonal,
naturalistic)
Instruction should engage varied intelligences to reach diverse learners
Implications for teaching practice
Use reinforcement and feedback (behaviorism) to shape desired
classroom behaviors
Scaffold instruction within learners’ ZPD (Vygotsky) and provide hands-on
discovery experiences (Bruner, Dewey)
Create supportive environments that meet basic needs (Maslow) and
foster autonomy (Rogers)
Incorporate collaborative and observational activities (Bandura) to
leverage social learning
Apply cognitive principles: chunk information, reduce extraneous load, use
advance organizers (Ausubel)
Instructional strategies
Direct instruction and drill for foundational skills (behaviorist, essentialist)
Inquiry-based projects and problem solving for higher-order thinking
(cognitive, constructivist)
Cooperative learning groups to build social skills and shared knowledge
(social interdependence theory)
Reflective journals and self-assessment for metacognitive growth
Assessment aligned with psychological principles
Frequent low-stakes quizzes for reinforcement and feedback (behaviorism)
Performance tasks, portfolios, and projects to assess problem solving and
creativity (constructivist, authentic assessment)
Self- and peer-assessment to develop metacognitive skills and ownership
of learning
Classroom management grounded in psychology
Establish clear expectations and consistent consequences (operant
conditioning)
Monitor student engagement and use “with-itness” (Kounin) to prevent
disruptions
Build a positive classroom climate that satisfies belonging needs (Maslow)
and motivates intrinsic engagement
Continuous reflection and adaptation
Collect data on student performance and behaviors to evaluate
effectiveness of strategies
Reflect on personal teaching beliefs in light of psychological research and
adjust practices accordingly
These notes cover key psychological
Bloom’s Taxonomy is a hierarchical classification system that categorizes
educational learning objectives into different levels of complexity and
specificity. Developed originally by Benjamin Bloom and collaborators in
1956 and later revised by Anderson and Krathwohl in 2001, it has been
instrumental in designing curricula, assessments, and instructional
strategies.
1. Historical Background
Original Taxonomy (1956):
Created by a team led by Benjamin Bloom, this framework was developed
to help educators classify and structure learning outcomes.
It comprised six major categories in a cognitive domain: Knowledge,
Comprehension, Application, Analysis, Synthesis, and Evaluation.
Revised Taxonomy (2001):
Anderson and Krathwohl updated the original taxonomy to reflect changes
in educational theory and practice.
The revised version not only reorders the categories but also renames
them using active verbs: Remember, Understand, Apply, Analyze,
Evaluate, and Create.
This revision emphasizes the dynamic nature of learning and encourages
educators to design learning experiences that foster higher-order thinking
skills.
2. The Structure and Levels
A. Original Taxonomy
Knowledge:
Focuses on recall of factual information, terminology, and basic concepts.
Comprehension:
Involves understanding the meaning of the material, summarizing, and
explaining ideas.
Application:
Entails using learned information in new and concrete situations.
Analysis:
Requires breaking information into parts to explore relationships and
underlying structure.
Synthesis:
Involves compiling information in a different way by combining elements
in a new pattern or proposing alternative solutions.
Evaluation:
Focuses on making judgments based on criteria and standards through
checking and critiquing.
B. Revised Taxonomy
Remember:
The ability to recall facts, basic concepts, and answers.
Example activities: Listing, naming, defining.
Understand:
Comprehending the meaning, translation, interpolation, and interpretation
of instructions and problems.
Example activities: Summarizing, explaining, interpreting.
Apply:
Using information in new situations to solve problems.
Example activities: Demonstrating, executing, implementing.
Analyze:
Breaking down information into its components to understand its
structure.
Example activities: Differentiating, organizing, attributing.
Evaluate:
Making judgments about the value of ideas or materials based on criteria.
Example activities: Critiquing, checking, assessing.
Create:
Putting elements together to form a coherent or functional whole;
reorganizing elements into a new pattern or structure.
Example activities: Designing, constructing, planning.
3. Applications in Education
Curriculum Development:
Educators use Bloom’s Taxonomy to frame learning objectives and
outcomes, ensuring that courses address both lower-order (e.g.,
Remember, Understand) and higher-order (e.g., Analyze, Evaluate, Create)
cognitive skills.
Assessment Design:
The taxonomy guides the creation of assessments that test various levels
of understanding. For example, multiple-choice questions might assess
knowledge and comprehension, while essays or projects are more suited
to evaluating analysis, evaluation, and creation.
Instructional Strategies:
Teachers design lessons that move learners through the hierarchy,
encouraging students to not only recall facts but also to apply concepts,
analyze scenarios, evaluate alternatives, and create original work.
Differentiated Instruction:
By understanding the different levels, educators can tailor their instruction
to meet diverse student needs and foster advanced critical thinking skills.
Complete Review Summary | General and Professional Education
BEHAVIORISM – change
ESSENTIALISM – basic
EXISTENTIALISM – choice
HUMANISM – build
IDEALISM – enough in mind
PERRENIALISM – constant
PRAGMATISM - practice (T&E)
PROGRESSIVISM – improve
REALISM – enough to see
UTILITARIANISM - best
SOCIAL RECONSTRUCTIVISM – benefit of all
AIMS OF ERAS
PRE-SPANISH – survival and conformity
SPANISH – Christianity
AMERICAN – democratic ideals and way of life
COMMONWEALTH – moral character, efficiency
JAPANESE – progress
PROF. ED PROPONENTS
B.F. SKINNER – Operant Conditioning
BANDURA – Modeling
BANDURA & WALLACE – Social Learning
CARL JUNG – Psychological
CONFICIUS – Education for all, Golden Rule
EDWARD THORNDIKE – Connectionism
ERICK ERIKSON – Psychosocial
IVAN PAVLOV – Classical Conditioning
JEAN PIAGET – Cognitive
FROEBEL - Father of Kndrgrtn
PEZTALLOZI – realia, Froebel’s protégé
JEROME BRUNER – Instrumental Conceptualism
JOHN DEWEY – learning by doing
JOHN LOCKE – Tabula Rasa (blank sheet)
KOHLERS – Insight Learning
LAURENCE KOHLBERG – Moral Development
LEV VGOTSKY – Social Cognitivist, Scaffolding
SIGMUND FREUD – Psychosexual
WILLIAM SHELDON – Physiological
PRINCIPLES OF EDUCATION
HEDONISM – pleasure principle
DOUBLE EFFECT – sacrifice for the good or bad
FORMAL COOPERATION – cooperation with will
LESSER EVIL – choice of the less one from two bad things
MATERIAL COOPERATION – cooperation without will
FREUD’S PSYCHOSEXUAL/PSYCHOANALYTICAL THEORY
1. ORAL (0-1 yrs. old) – Infant
2. ANAL (1-3 yrs. old) – Toddler
3. PHALLIC – Preschool
4. LATENCY – School Age
5. GENITAL – Adolescense
OEDIPUS – son to mom
ELECTRA – daughter to dad
LAWS IN EDUCATION
PRC BR 435 – Code of Ethics for Professional Teachers
PD 1006 – Decree Professionalizing Teachers
RA NO. 1425 – inclusion of the works of Jose Rizal
RA NO. 4670 – “Magna Carta for Public School Teacher”
RA 7722 – CHED
RA 7796 – “TESDA Act of 1994”
RA 7836 – Phil. Teachers Professionalization Act of 1994
RA 9155 – BEGA (Basic Educ.) or DepEd Law
RA 9293 – Teachers Professionalization Act
RA 10533 – K-12 Law
ACT NO. 2706 – “Private School Law”
COMMONWEALTH ACT NO. 578 – “persons in authority”
KAUTUSANG PANGKAGAWARAN BLG 7 - PILIPINO NatlLng
PROKLAMA BLG 12 - Linggo ng Wika (Balagtas,Mr29-Ap4)
PROKLAMA BLG. 186 – Linggo ng Wika (Quezon,Ag13-19)
PROKLAMA BLG. 1041 – Buwan ng Wika (Ramos)
PHIL. CONSTITUTION ACT 14 – ESTACS
RA 1079 – no limit of Civil Service eligibility
RA 6655 – “Free Public Secondary Educ. Act of 1988”
RA 6728 – “Act Providing Government Assistance to
Students and Teachers in Private Education
RA 7277 – Magna Carta for PWD
RA 7610 – Anti-Child Abuse Law (Amendment: RA 9231)
RA 7743 – establishment of public libraries
RA 7877 – “Anti Sexual Harassment Act of 1995”
RA 7880 – “Fair and Equitable Access to Education Act”
RA 8049 – Anti-Hazing Law
RA 8187 – Paternity Act
RA 10627 – Anti-Bullying
SB 1987 ART. 14 SEK. 6-9 – FILIPINO (National Language)
BRUNER’S THREE MODES OF REPRESENTATION
1. ENACTIVE (0-1 yrs. old) – action-based information
2. ICONIC (1-6 yrs. old) – image-based information
3. SYMBOLIC (7+) – code/symbols such as language
TAXONOMY OF OBJECTIVES
COGNITIVE:
BLOOM (LOTS) ANDERSON (HOTS)
o Knowledge
o Comprehension
o Application
o Analysis
o Synthesis
o Evaluation o Remembering
o Understanding
o Applying
o Analyzing
o Evaluating
o Creating
AFFECTIVE:
o Receiving
o Responding
o Valuing
o Organizing
o Characterization
PSYCHOMOTOR:
SIMPSON HARROW
o Perception
o Set
o Guided Response
o Mechanism
o Complex Overt Response
o Adaptation
o Origination o Reflex movement
o Fundamental Movement
o Physical Movement
o Perceptual Abilities
o Skilled Movements
o Non-discursive communication
DALES CONE OF EXPERIENCE
Read
Hear
Picture
Video
Exhibit
Demonstration
Collaborative Work
Simulation
Real thing
ERIKSON’S PSYCHOSOCIAL TASKS
1. TRUST VS. MISTRUST (0-12 months)
2. AUTONOMY VS. SHAME/DOUBT (1-3 years old)
3. INITIATIVE VS. GUILT (3-6 years old)
4. INDUSTRY VS. INFERIORITY (6-12 years old)
5. INDENTITY VS. ROLE CONFUSION (12-18 years old)
6. INTIMACY VS. ISOLATION (early 20s-early 40s
7. GENERATIVITY VS. STAGNATION (40s-mid 60s)
8. INTEGRITY VS. DESPAIR (mid 60s-death)
PIAGET’S COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT THEORY
1. SENSORY – senses
2. PRE-OPERATIONAL - imagination
3. CONCRETE 4. FORMAL
GENERATIONS OF COMPUTER
1. VACUUM TUBES (1940-1956)
2. TRANSISTORS (1956-1963)
3. INTEGRATED CIRCUITS (1964-1971)
4. MICROPROCESSORS (1971-present)
5. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE (present-future)
MISTAKEN GOALS
1. ATTENTION SEEKER – “teacher, notice me”
2. REVENGE – “teacher, I am hurt”
3. POWER-SEEKING – “teacher, may I help?”
4. INADEQUACY – “teacher, don’t give up on me”
5. WITHDRAWAL – “teacher, please help me”
KOHLBERG’S THEORY OF MORAL DEVELOPMENT
LEVEL 1: PRE-CONVENTIONAL MORALITY
Stage 1: Obedience and Punishment Orientation
Stage 2: Individualism and Exchange
LEVEL 2: CONVENTIONAL MORALITY
Stage 3: Good Interpersonal Relationships
Stage 4: Maintaining the Social Order
LEVEL 3: POST-CONVENTIONAL MORALITY
Stage 5: Social Contract and Individual Rights
Stage 6: Universal Principles
CENTRAL TENDENCY -Central (middle location) Tendency
MEAN – Average MODE – most occurring
RANGE – highest score minus lowest score
LOW SD–Homogenous, scores near to mean(almost same)
HIGH SD – Heterogenous, scores far to mean (scattered)
DECILE – 10 grps (D1…D10) QUARTILE – 4 grps (Q1…Q4)
SUSPENSION – time REVOKATION – condition
DIFFICULTY INDEX
0-0.20 VERY DIFFICULT
0.21-0.40 DIFFICULT
0.41-0.60 MODERATELY DIFFICULT
0.61-0.80 EASY
0.81-1.00 VERY EASY
POSITIVELY SKEWED (LEFT FOOT)
- low scores, mean greater than mode
NEGATIVELY SKEWED (RIGHT FOOT)
- high scores, mean is lower than mode
HORN/HALO EFFECT
- overcoming other trait, either bad/good
GENERAL EDUCATION
FILIPINO/ENGLISH:
MGA TEORYA NG PINAGMULAN NG WIKA
1. BOW-WOW –kalikasan at hayop
2. DING-DONG – bagay
3. POOH-POOH – masidhing damdamin
4. YOHEHO – pwersang pisikal
FILIPINO POETS AND PEN NAMES
BENVENIDO SANTOS – American Culture Writings
DANIEL DEFOE – “Robinson Crusoen” (novel)
EDILBERTO TIEMPO – made “Cry Slaughter” that has been
translated many times
ERNEST HEMINGWAY – Ring Lardner Jr.
JOSE GARCIA VILLA – “Comma Poet”, Dove G. Lion
MIGUEL DE CERVANTES/ESCALANDE - Masterpiece is
“Don Quixote” that is most influential
NICK JOAQUIN – Quijano de Manila
– Spanish Culture Writing
PAZ MARQUEZ BENITEZ – made “Dead Stars” that is the 1st
modern English short story
SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS – Mark Twain
- “Adventures of Tom Sawyer”
- “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” (best novel)
SINTAKS/SINTAKSIS/PALAUGNAYAN
- sangay ng barirala na tumatalakay sa masistemang pagkaka-ayus-ayos
ng mga salita sa pagbuo ng mga parirala at pangungusap
PEN NAMES OF FILIPINO PROTAGONISTS
ANDRES BONIFACIO – May Pag-asa, Agapito
Bagumbayan
ANTONIO LUNA – Taga-Ilog
EMILIO AGUINALDO - Magdalo
EMILIO JACINTO – Di Masilaw, Tingkian
GRACIANO LOPEQ JAENA – Diego Laura
JOSE MA. PANGANIBAN ¬– JoMaPa
JOSE RIZAL – Dimas alang, Laon laan
JUAN LUNA – Buan
MARCELO DEL PILAR – Plaridel, Dolores Manapat,
Piping Dilat
MARIANO PONCE – Tikbalang, Naning (Satanas),
Kalipulako
MGA URI NG PANGUNGUSAP
WALANG PAKSA:
1. EKSISTENSYAL – mayroong isa o higit pang tao
Halimbawa: Mayroon daw puno sa bakuran.
2. MODAL – nais/pwede/maari (Gusto ko matulog.)
3. PANLIPUNAN – pagbati, pagbigay galang atbp.
4. SAGOT LAMANG – “Talaga?”, “Oo”
5. SAMBITLA – masidhing damdamin (Aray!)
6. TEMPORAL – panandaliang kalagayan o panahon
KAYARIAN:
1. PAYAK – iisang kaisipan
2. TAMBALAN – dalawang sugnay na ‘di makapag-iisa
3. HUGNAYAN – madalas nagsisimula sa kung, dahil sa
4. LANGKAPAN – mahabang pangungusap
MGA URI NG KWENTO
1. PABULA (fable) – hayop
2. PARABULA (parable)– Bibliya
3. ANEKDOTA (anecdote) – tunay na buhay
4. MITOLOHIYA (myth) – diyos at diyosa (pinagmulan)
ASPEKTO NG PANDIWA (Verb)
1. PERPEKTIBO – tumakbo
2. IMPERPEKTIBO – tumatakbo
3. KONTEMPLATIBO – tatakbo
KAANTASAN NG PANG-URI (Adjective)
1. LANTAY – walang pinaghahambingan
2. PAHAMBING ¬– inihahalintulad
3. PASUKDOL – nangingibabaw (H: pinakamataas)
MGA URI NG TULA
1. PATULA (Moro-moro)
2. PASALAYSAY (Epiko, Awit, Korido)
MGA AWITING BAYAN
1. DALIT/HIMNO – pagsamba sa anito o pang-relihiyon
2. DIONA – kasal
3. DUNG-AW – patay (pagdadalamhati)
4. KALUSAN – paggawa
5. KUMINTANG – tagumpay (pandigma)
6. KUNDIMAN – pag-ibig
7. OYAYI – pagpapatulog ng bata
8. SOLIRANIN – pagsasagwan
9. TALINDAW – pamamangka
PAGBABAGONG MORPONEMIKO
1. ASIMILASYON – Parsyal (pangsukli), Ganap (panukli)
2. MAY ANGKOP – wikain mo – “kamo”
3. MAYSUDLONG/PAGDARAGDAG NG PONEMA
- muntik – muntikan, pagmuntikan, pagmuntikanan
4. METATESIS – linipad – nilipad
5. PAGKAKALTAS NG PONEMO – takipan – takpan
6. PAGLILIPAT-DIIN – laRUan (playground) - laruAN (toy)
7. PAGPAPALIT NG PONEMA – madapat – marapat
MGA URI NG PANGHALIP/PRONOUNS
1. PANAO/PERSONAL PRONOUN – ako/I etc.
2. PAMATLIG/DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUN – ito/this etc.
3. PANAKLAW/INDEFINITE P. - isa, all, anyone etc.
4. PATULAD – ganito, ganyan atbp.
5. PANANONG/INTERROGATIVE P. – sino, when etc.
6. PAMANGGIT/RELATIVE P. – daw, umano, which, who
MGA AKDANG NA MAY IMPUWENSYA SA MUNDO
AKLAT NG MGA ARAW – China (by Confucius)
AKLAT NG MGA PATAY – Egypt cults & myths (by Osiris)
AWIT NI ROLANDO-France (by Doce Pares, Roncesvalles)
BIBLIYA – Palestino at Greece
CANTEBURY TALES – Kingdom of England (by Geoffrey Chaucer) 14th
century
DIVINE COMEDIA – Italy (by Dante)
EL CID COMPEADOR – katangian at history ng Spain
ILIAD o ODYSSEY – Myths of Greece made by Homer.
ISANG LIBO’T ISANG GABI – Ugali sa Arabia at Persia
KORAN – Arabia (Muslim Bible) MAHABRATA – India
UNCLE TOM’S CABIN – about slaves that becomes the basis of democracy.
(by Harriet Beecher Stowe of U.S.)
MGA URI NG PANITIKAN
1. TULUYAN – binubuo ng mga pangungusap
A. NOBELA – binubuo ng mga kabanata
B. DULA – pagtatanghal sa entablado
MGA DULANG PANLIBANGAN:
a. TIBAG – Sta. Elena
b. LAGAY – Pilarenos ng Sorsogon
c. PANUNULUYAN – pagtatanghal bago mag-alas dose (12PM) ng gabi ng
kapaskuhan
d. PANUBOL – parangal sa may kaarawan
e. KARILYO – ala-puppet show
f. KURIDO – katapangan, kabayanihan, kababalaghan, pananampalataya
g. SARSUELA – musical tungkol sa pag-ibig, paghihiganti atbp. masisidhing
damdamin
C. ALAMAT – pinagmulan
D. ANEKDOTA – ugali, may mabuting aral
2. PATULA - may sukat,pantig,tugma,taludtod,saknong
A. TULANG PASALAYSAY - mahahalagang tago o pangyayari sa buhay.
a. EPIKO – kabayanihan sa kababalaghan
o BIDASARI, PARANG SABIR – Moro
o BIAG NI LAM ANG – Iloko
o MARAGTAS, HARAYA, LAGDA AT HARI SA BUKID – Bisaya
o KUMINTANG – Tagalog
o DAGOY AT SUDSUD – Tagbanua
o TATUANG - Bagobo
b. AWIT o KORIDO - kaharian
c. TULA NG DAMDAMIN o LIRIKI – own feeling
MGA TULANG LIRIKO:
o AWITING BAYAN – kalungkutan
o ELEHIYA – yumao
o DALIT – pagpupuri sa Diyos
o PASTORAL – buhay sa bukid
o ODA – papuri
B. TULANG DULA O PANGTANGHALAN
a. KOMEDYA
b. MELODRAMA – musical
c. TRAHEDYA – death of main character
d. PARSA – mga pangyayaring nakakatawa
e. SAYNETE
-karaniwang pag-uugali ng tao/ pook
C. TULANG PATNIGAN
a. KARAGATAN – alamat ng singsing ng prinsesa na naihulog niya sa dagat
sa hangaring mapangasawa ang kasintahang mahirap.
b. DUPLO – paligsahan ng husay sa pagtula
c. BALAGTASAN – pumalit sa Duplo
FIGURES OF SPEECH/TAYUTAY
PAG-UUGNAY O PAGHAHAMBING:
1. SIMILE/PAGTUTULAD – mayroong pangatnig
2. METAPHOR/PAGWAWANGIS – walang pangatnig
3. ALUSYON – iba’t ibang aspekto ng buhay ng tao
4. METONYMY/PAGPAPALIT-TAWAG
5. SYNECDOCHE/SINEKDOKE – pagbanggit ng isa upang tukuyin ang
kabuuan
Hal: Dalawang bibig ang umaasa kay Romeo.
PAGLALARAWAN:
6. HYPERBOLE/ PAGMAMALABIS o EKSAHERASYON
7. APOSTROPHE/PAGTAWAG – pakikipag-usap sa hindi buhay o malayong
tao. Hal: Ulan, tumigil ka na.
8. EXCLAMATION/PAGDARAMDAM – strong feeling.
9. PARADOX/PARADOKS -“malayo ma’y malapit pa rin”
10. OXYMORON/PAGTATAMBIS - paradox w/ extra words
PAGSASALIN NG KATANGIAN:
11. PERSONIFICATION/PAGSASATAO
PAGSASATUNOG:
12. ONOMATOPOEIA/PANGHIHIMIG – tunog ang paksa
13. ALLITERATION/PAG-UULIT – repetition of 1st letter in the 1st word. Ex:
Dinggin mo ang Diyos na Dinadakila
14. REPITASYON – repetition of phrase. Ex: Tama! Tama!...
IBA PANG TAYUTAY NA GAMIT SA TULA:
ALITERASYON – unang titik o pantig ay pare-pareho
ANADIPLOSIS – paggamit ng salita sa unahan at hulihan
EPIPORA – pag-uulit ng salita sa hulihan
PAG-UYAM – sarcasm
LITOTES – pagtanggi o pagkukunwari.
TALUDTOD – linya sa tula
UNFAMILIAR PARTS OF THE SPEECH
1. PREPOSITIONS-on, under, off, by, in near, for, to, since
2. CONJUNCTIONS (PANGATNIG)
- para/for, at/and, nor, or, pero/but, yet, so, ni, ngunit
3. INTERJECTION – with exclamation mark
PROPER SEQUENCE OF WORDS IN A SENTENCE
1. ARTICLES – a, an, the 2. OPINION 3. SIZE
4. AGE 5. SHAPE 6. COLOR
7. MATERIAL 8. PURPOSE
CLASSIFICATIONS OF POEM
1. BALLAD – narrative, less folk tale/legend, to be sung
2. BLACK VERSE – with meter but no rhyme
3. DRAMATIC MONOLOGUE – written in form of speech for individual
character.
4. ELEGY –death of individual
5. EPIC – tells a story about heroic figure
6. EULOGY – message for the dead
7. FREE VERSE (vers libre) – without meter but with rhyme
8. HAIKU – Japanese poem about nature. 5, 7, 5 (3 lines and 17 syllables)
9. IDYLL (Idyl) – peaceful, idealized country scene
10. LYRICS - thoughts and feelings
11. NARRATIVE – tells story
12. ODE -typically serious/meditative nature, type of Lyric
13. PASTORAL –rural life in peaceful & romanticized way
14. SONNET – Lyric poem consists of 14 lines
15. TANKA – Japanese poem: 5 lines, 31 syllables
PHILIPPINE CONSTITUTIONS
BIAK NA BATO – pact, thought of 1st Republic.
- Spainards paid P200 000
1. MALOLOS CONSTITUTION – Apolinario Mabini
- rights of soldiers
- no Visayas yet in right of territories
2. 1935 CONSTITUTION – adapted from American Const.
3. 1943 CONSITUTION - Jose P. Laurel
- Japan invades but gave freedom for Phil. to rule.
4. 1973 CONSTITUTION – Ferdinand Marcos
- Martial Law – 60days max
- Nat’l Territory forced Kalayaan grp. of Islands & Saba
5. 1987 CONSTITUTION - 18 articles
- past chairwoman: Cecilla Muñoz Palma (Feb 2, 1987)
- Bill of Rights are for the criminals
JUS SANGUINI – blood JUS SOLI – place
SOME TYPES OF GOVERNMENTS
1. COMMUNIST – classless society
- State plans and controls economy
2. PARLIAMENTARY – majority of people voted
3. REPUBLICAN – power comes from people
PHILIPPINE PRESIDENTS
(AgQueLaOsRoQuiMagGarMaMarAquiRaEsArAquiDut)
ACTS
1. ASSOCIATION OF SE ASIAN NATIONS (ASEAN)
- Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Brunei, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand,
Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia
2. BELL TRADE (PHILIPPINE TRADE ACT) – bet. Phil. & U.S.
3. KYOTO PROTOCOL (UNNCC)
- fight global warming decreasing green house gases
4. RIO DE JANEIRO CONVENTION
- environment and sustainable development
5. TEJEROS CONVENTION – election
- Bonifacio elected as Director Imperior
6. TREATY ON GENERAL RELATIONS
- recognition of U.S. to Philippine freedom
7. UNDERWORLD-SIMMONS ACT – full free foreign trade
8. PAYNE ALDRICH ACT – partial free foreign trade
MISSIONARIES AND EXPEDITIONS
1. AUGUSTINIAN – most intelligent
2. FRANCISCAN – sends medical aids
3. JESUITS
4. DOMINICANS – richest
5. RECOLECTS – most killed schools
MARTYR PRIESTS
1. BURGOS – youngest, mastermind of secularization
2. GOMEZ – Oldest, likes “sabong” and hid there
HOMO HABILIS – man of steel (bighead, uses muscle)
HOMO ERECTUS – man who discovered fire & clothes
HOMO SAPIENS – thinking man (can produce materials)
UNFAMILIAR BRANCHES OF BIOLOGY
ANATOMY – inner organs ENTOMOLOGY – insects
BIOCHEMISTRY – chemical patterns of animals
ECOLOGY – living things bet. Each other in environment
EMBRYOLOGY – developmental patterns fr. zygote-birth
GENETICS – heredity MYCOLOGY – fungi
HERPETOLOGY – reptiles and amphibians
HISTOLOGY – plant and animal tissues
MORPHOLOGY – phenotype (appearance)
ORNITHOLOGY – birds PARASITOLOGY – parasites
PALEONTOLOGY – fossils of animals and plants
PHYSIOLOGY – function of tissue, organ & system
TAXONOMY – classification of living organisms
SCIENCE PROPONENTS
CAROLUS LINNAEUS – Father of Taxonomy
ROBERT HOOKE – termed “cells” (cellulae)
ANTON VAN LEUWENHOEK – 1st person to observe microscopic organisms
(animal cule)
ROBERT BROWN – discovered Nucleus
MATTHIAS SCHIEDEN (Botanist) & THEODORE (Zoologist)
- found all plants consist of cells
RUDOLF VIRCHOW – proposed cells come fr. existing cells
EARTH’S SPHERES
ATMOSPHERE – gaseous sphere protection from meteors
Divided into five:
Troposphere
Stratosphere
Mesosphere
Thermosphere
Exosphere
HYDROSPHERE – water
LITHOSPHERE – oceanic and continental crust
BIOSPHERE – all life forms in Earth
CRYOSPHERE – ice ANTHROSPHERE – ancestors
PLANETS AND THEIR SEQUENCE
1. SUN – 99.86% of Solar System
- believed was formed 4.6 billion years ago
- Responsible for weather and climate
2. MERCURY – named after Roman God
- no satellite and atmosphere
- discovered by Mariner Ten
3. VENUS – Goddess of Love and Beauty (Mariner 2)
- Perfect sphere, sister planet of Earth
4. EARTH
5. MARS – God of War, red planet (Mariner 9)
6. JUPITER -Gas Giant, fastest rotating planet (10hrs less)
- has Great Red Spot: huge storm for 350yrs
7. SATURN – God of Agriculture (chunks of rocks)
- made mostly of hydrogen
8. URANUS – Frederick William Herscel
- Sky & Ice Giant, 3rd largest planet
Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920): established the first experimental
psychology laboratory in Leipzig and introduced introspection as a method
to analyze conscious experience, laying the groundwork for psychology as
a distinct scientific discipline.
Sigmund Freud (1856–1939): developed psychoanalysis, proposing that
unconscious drives, particularly those revealed through psychosexual
stages (oral, anal, phallic, latent, genital), shape personality and behavior.
Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi (1746–1827): Swiss educator who founded
modern pedagogy, emphasizing the harmonious development of “head,
heart, and hands” and advocating learning through activity and direct
experience.
Ivan Pavlov (1849–1936): discovered classical conditioning by showing
that dogs could learn to associate a neutral stimulus (bell) with food,
producing a conditioned salivary response.
Burrhus F. Skinner (1904–1990): formulated operant conditioning,
demonstrating that behavior is shaped by its consequences
(reinforcement or punishment) and introducing schedules of
reinforcement.
David Ausubel (1918–2008): proposed the theory of meaningful learning,
arguing that new information is best acquired when connected to relevant
concepts already present in the learner’s cognitive structure, often using
advance organizers.
Jerome Bruner (1915–2016): championed discovery learning and the spiral
curriculum, suggesting that learners build knowledge by exploring
concepts themselves and encountering core ideas repeatedly at
increasing levels of complexity.
Albert Bandura (1925–2021): developed social cognitive learning theory,
emphasizing observational learning, imitation, and the role of self-efficacy
in regulating behavior.
Edward L. Thorndike (1874–1949): articulated the laws of readiness
(learning is more effective when the learner is prepared) and exercise
(practice strengthens associations), forming the basis of connectionism.
Kurt Lewin (1890–1947): introduced field theory and the concept of “life
space,” describing behavior as a function of the person and their
environment (B = f(P, E)).
Wolfgang Köhler (1887–1967): demonstrated insight learning through
experiments with chimpanzees, showing that problem solving can occur
suddenly once the relationships among elements are perceived.
Urie Bronfenbrenner (1917–2005): proposed the ecological systems
theory, mapping human development across nested environmental
systems from the microsystem (immediate settings) to the macrosystem
(cultural context).
Sandra Bem (1944–2014): developed gender schema theory, explaining
how individuals internalize societal gender norms into cognitive structures
that guide processing of gender-related information.
Howard Gardner (b. 1943): introduced the theory of multiple intelligences,
identifying distinct modalities of intelligence such as linguistic, logical-
mathematical, musical, spatial, bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal,
intrapersonal, and later naturalistic.
Elliot Turiel (b. 1940): formulated social domain theory, distinguishing
moral, social-conventional, and personal domains of social reasoning and
how children evaluate rules and norms.
Lawrence Kohlberg (1927–1987): outlined the stages of moral
development—preconventional, conventional, and postconventional—
showing how moral reasoning matures through experience and social
interaction.
Robert Sternberg (b. 1949): proposed the triarchic theory of intelligence,
defining analytical, creative, and practical components of intelligence and
how they interact in real-world problem solving.
Erik Erikson (1902–1994): described eight psychosocial stages from
infancy to old age, each characterized by a central conflict (for example,
trust vs. mistrust) that must be resolved for healthy development.
Maria Montessori (1870–1952): pioneered child-centered education in the
“prepared environment,” promoting self-directed activity, hands-on
learning, and transfer of learning through sensorial materials.
E. Paul Torrance (1915–2003): developed creative problem-solving models
and the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking, emphasizing fluency,
flexibility, originality, and elaboration as measures of creativity.
Noam Chomsky (b. 1928): introduced the theory of universal grammar
and the language acquisition device, arguing that humans have an innate
capacity for language learning.
Jean Piaget (1896–1980): formulated the cognitive development theory
with four stages—sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational,
formal operational—describing how children construct knowledge.
John B. Watson (1878–1958): founded behaviorism, asserting that
psychology should focus on observable behavior shaped by environmental
stimuli rather than on internal mental states.
Edward C. Tolman (1886–1959): advanced purposive behaviorism and the
concept of cognitive maps, showing that rats form mental representations
of mazes rather than merely learning stimulus-response pairs.
Bernard Weiner (b. 1935): developed attribution theory, examining how
individuals explain their successes and failures in terms of ability, effort,
task difficulty, and luck, and how these attributions affect motivation.
Daniel Goleman (b. 1946): popularized the concept of emotional
intelligence, identifying competencies such as self-awareness, self-
regulation, empathy, and social skills as key to personal and professional
success.
Edward B. Titchener (1867–1927): led structuralism, aiming to analyze the
structure of the mind by breaking conscious experience into its basic
elements through introspection.
Robert M. Gagné (1916–2002): proposed the conditions of learning and
nine events of instruction, outlining how teaching events correspond to
internal cognitive processes to facilitate learning.
Abraham Maslow (1908–1970): introduced the hierarchy of needs, positing
that physiological, safety, love and belonging, esteem, and self-
actualization needs must be met in sequence to motivate behavior.
Benjamin Bloom (1913–1999): created Bloom’s taxonomy of cognitive
objectives—remembering, understanding, applying, analyzing, evaluating,
creating—to classify educational goals and learning outcomes.
David R. Krathwohl (1921–2016): co-developed the taxonomy of the
affective domain, describing learning outcomes related to attitudes,
values, and emotional growth in five hierarchical levels from receiving to
internalizing.
Lev Vygotsky (1896–1934): formulated the sociocultural theory of
cognitive development, highlighting the zone of proximal development
and the role of social interaction and scaffolding in learning.
John Locke (1632–1704): advocated the concept of tabula rasa (blank
slate), arguing that all knowledge comes from sensory experience and
reflection, laying the foundation for empiricism.
Charles Horton Cooley (1864–1929): proposed the looking-glass self,
suggesting that a person’s self-concept develops through imagining how
others perceive them.
John H. Flavell (b. 1928): introduced metacognition, emphasizing
awareness and regulation of one’s own cognitive processes as critical to
effective learning.
Arnold Gesell (1880–1961): formulated maturation theory, asserting that
child development unfolds according to an innate biological timetable,
with the environment playing a supportive role.
John Dewey (1859–1952): championed “learning by doing,” promoting
experiential education, democratic classrooms, and the idea that
education should address real-world problems.
Friedrich Froebel (1782–1852): founded the kindergarten movement,
emphasizing play, creativity, and social interaction as central to young
children’s education.
Auguste Comte (1798–1857): recognized as the father of sociology and
positivism, advocating the scientific study of society using empirical
observation and analysis.
John Amos Comenius (1592–1670): regarded as the father of modern
education, promoting universal schooling, student-centered instruction,
and the use of visual aids and vernacular language in teaching.