Read the Passage carefully and answer the questions that follow: If the vision…

2020

Read the Passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:

If the vision of the learner in the initial period was predominantly as an empty organism and in the next as an active organism, in the period that followed it was as a social organism. The beliefs regarding the nature of the learner in the first period drew heavily from the associationist view of the human being, in the second from the Gestalt and personalistic views; later they also drew from the emerging social psychological and group dynamic views.

The child as learner as envisioned as a social organism, and learning was perceived as occurring through interpersonal actions and reactions, each person in the classroom serving as a stimulus for every other person. It is hard to overemphasize the impact on the classroom of the "group climate" concepts and studies by Lewin and his associates beginning in the late 1930s, which were given added cogency by the ideological issues of World War II. Innumerable treatises, textbooks, and programs applied these ideas and findings to the classroom, and such terms as "authoritarian", "democratic", and "laissez-faire" became, for good or ill, integral parts of the educational vocabulary. Experimenters in the learning laboratory became concerned with such previously unheard-of matters as "interpersonal cohesion" and "small group processes", and teachers in the classroom with "sociometric structure" and "group dynamics".

Concomitant changes in the image of the ideal classroom could again be observed. If the child is primarily a social organism, then the objectives of his education should be primarily social in character. And if learning is a social or group process, then a circular or group-centred classroom where everyone faces everyone else (as once they had been forced to face only the teacher) is the most sensible and practical, even necessary, learning environment. And this indeed became a favourite image of the classroom.

Ques: The group climate of the classroom got reinforced by

  1. A.

    Social issues

  2. B.

    Ideological issues

  3. C.

    Inter-personal issues

  4. D.

    Individual issues

Attempted by 1 students.

Show answer & explanation

Correct answer: B

Concept

In a reading-comprehension item the answer is fixed only by the words on the page, not by outside knowledge. The technique is to find the exact sentence that states the asked relationship, then read the cause clause that the sentence attaches to it — the passage tells you precisely what strengthened or reinforced the idea in question.

Applying it to this passage

The question asks what reinforced the classroom's "group climate". Locate the sentence that names "group climate":

  • The passage says the "group climate" concepts and studies of Lewin and his associates from the late 1930s were "given added cogency by the ideological issues of World War II".

  • "Given added cogency" is the passage's own phrase for being reinforced/strengthened.

  • So the reinforcing factor named in the text is the ideological issues of World War II.

Therefore the group climate of the classroom got reinforced by the ideological issues.

Cross-check

Re-read the same sentence: the only thing the passage credits with adding cogency to the group-climate idea is the "ideological issues of World War II". No other cause is attached to group climate anywhere in the passage, so the choice is uniquely supported by the text.

Explore the full course: Ctet Paper 2