Plural of didactic
The word "didactics" is correct and can be used in written English. You can use it to refer to methods used in teaching and instruction, often referring to the way material or skills are taught. For example: "The professor implemented a variety of didactics, including lectures and discussions, to help the students learn more effectively.".
And there was not a wizard, but an angry old man- zealous, feverish from his own didactics- fractured and fallible and all too human.
Just look to Finland's education system, a world-renowned model of excellence, where primary and secondary teachers must have a masters degree in education (covering developmental psychology, classroom management and subject didactics) as a minimum.
The Roundabout Theater Company's elegant, eloquent and very funny production of Shaw's 1905 play sending up the societal worship of money -- and the convolutions of logic that defend it -- is less of an interpretation than a celebration of the playwright's winking, topsy-turvy didactics on the subjects of politics, poverty and faith.
Scrupulously refraining from didactics, they refuse to say exactly what viewers should think.
It's not didactic - it's very simple in its purpose".
There will always be those who argue that didactic art is bad art.
The cacophony of demands for actual ideas is just a chimera created by the paradigm of elitism to ensure the survival of the status quo to derail didactic cogitations about reality!
Being a terminologist, I care about word choice. Ludwig simply helps me pick the best words for any translation. Five stars!
Maria Pia Montoro
Terminologist and Q/A Analyst @ Translation Centre for the Bodies of the European Union