Levels of Teaching UGC NET Paper 1 | Memory, Understanding & Reflective Level | Chapter 2
📚 This is the first chapter of Teaching Aptitude. No prior reading needed — start here and build your foundation before moving to Levels of Teaching.
What You Will Learn
- What are the 4 Levels of Teaching
- Who proposed each level (Proponents)
- Key features, objectives & techniques
- Real-life examples for each level
- How to compare all levels in the exam
- Exam traps and what NOT to confuse
- Solved PYQs from 2023 & 2024
- One-glance quick revision table
What Are Levels of Teaching?
Think of levels of teaching like gears in a car. First gear gets you moving (memorise). Second gear takes you deeper (understand). Third gear is where real thinking happens (reflect and apply).
The framework was originally proposed by Morris L. Bigge (1976) and describes how a student’s engagement with learning grows from simple recall to critical, independent thought.
There are 4 levels: Memory Level, Understanding Level, Reflective Level, and Autonomous Development Level. The first three are the most exam-critical and appear almost every year in UGC NET Paper 1.
Don’t confuse Levels of Teaching with Phases of Teaching. Phases (Pre-active, Inter-active, Post-active) are about when teaching happens. Levels are about how deep the learning goes. These are two completely different concepts.
The 3 Phases of Teaching
1. Memory Level of Teaching (MLT)
Proposed by Johann Friedrich Herbart
Core Idea:
The lowest level of teaching. Students learn by memorising facts, names, dates, and definitions — without needing to understand why. The focus is on recall.
Real-life Example
A Class 2 child memorising the multiplication table: “2×3=6, 2×4=8…” — they don’t know why it works, they just remember it. That’s Memory Level.
Key Features:
Objective:
Sudents a base of factual knowledge through repetition. Useful for foundational content like alphabets, capitals, formulas, and definitions.
Teaching Techniques:
- Repeating content until it sticks in memory
-
Flashcards, charts, posters to reinforce recall
- Students recite answers aloud in class
Evaluation:
Objective-type questions, fill-in-the-blanks, oral tests — anything that checks whether the student can recall the fact
2. Understanding Level of Teaching (ULT)
Proposed by Morrison
Core Idea:
A step above memory. Students don’t just remember — they understand why and how. They can explain concepts in their own words and use examples.
Real-life Example
Key Features:
Objective:
Enable students to grasp the underlying principle of a concept — not just its surface fact. Students should be able to compare, explain, and use what they’ve learned.
Teaching Techniques:
- Explaining concepts with dialogue and Q&A
Demonstrations
- Showing how and why something works
- Using real situations to apply concepts
Evaluation:
Descriptive questions, field visits, project work, case study analysis — tasks that require students to demonstrate understanding, not just recall.
3. Reflective Level of Teaching (RLT)
Proposed by Hunt
Core Idea:
The highest and most advanced cognitive level. Students apply knowledge to real-life problems, think critically, and make independent decisions. This level focuses on what should be done — not just what is known.
Real-life Example
Key Features:
Objective:
To develop students who can independently analyse situations, form judgements, and solve problems — without always needing the teacher’s guidance.
Teaching Techniques:
- Students defend positions and think on their feet
- Real-world tasks with no single right answer
- Students document their thinking and growth
Teacher’s Role at Reflective Level:
The teacher becomes a facilitator — not a lecturer. The classroom is unstructured and democratic. The teacher guides, questions, and encourages — but does not dominate.
Evaluation:
Project-based assessment, presentations, creative assignments, internships, and reflective reports — tasks that show thinking, not just knowledge.
4. Autonomous Development Level
Proposed by Morris L. Bigge (who first proposed the full framework)
Core Idea:
Learning happens entirely on the learner’s own initiative, driven by personal curiosity. There’s no formal instruction — the student decides what, when, and how to learn.
Key Features:
Objective:
To develop students who can independently analyse situations, form judgements, and solve problems — without always needing the teacher’s guidance.
Memory Trick — Never Forget the Order
Monkeys Understand Reality Autonomously
Memory → Understanding → Reflective → Autonomous
Quick Comparison: All 4 Levels
One glance — everything you need for the exam
|
Level |
Proponent |
Focus |
Student Role |
Teacher Role |
Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Memory |
Herbart |
Rote recall of facts |
Passive receiver |
Dominant, drill-based |
Memorising the periodic table |
|
Understanding |
Morrison |
Grasping concepts & principles |
Active participant |
Explainer, questioner |
Explaining why plants need sunlight |
|
Reflective |
Hunt |
Critical thinking & application |
Independent thinker |
Facilitator, guide |
Debating solutions to river pollution |
|
Autonomous |
Morris L. Bigge |
Self-directed lifelong learning |
Fully independent |
Minimal / absent |
Self-teaching a language out of curiosity |
