From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishpedagogicalped‧a‧go‧gi‧cal /ˌpedəˈɡɒdʒɪkəl $ -ˈɡɑː-/ (also pedagogic /-ˈɡɒdʒɪk $ -ˈɡɑː-/) adjective formal SErelating to teaching methods or the practice of teaching → educational —pedagogically /-kli/ adverb
Examples from the Corpus
pedagogical• The reason there is so much activity in these classrooms is often personal as well as pedagogical.• This is as close as I can come to having my pedagogical cake and eating it too.• At the end of the collation the objects of this relentless pedagogical experiment were suddenly in the drawing room.• And this, too, was a consequence of sheer experience and of the pedagogical focus.• Alternatively, you may be confronted with several pedagogical grammars in the same language.• Moreover, they suffer from a scarcity of books, and from pedagogical methods that rely on the memorization of class lectures.• the need to review current pedagogical practices• In all of these areas, there are concepts and insights from linguistics which can contribute to pedagogical understanding.