Engaging Students Through Cooperative Learning: Ideas For Success
Engaging Students Through Cooperative Learning: Ideas For Success
What is a Team?
Teams differ from groups because they include the following basic elements of cooperative learning:
Goals are shared Information is circulated Roles are assigned Materials are managed Teammates depend on each other to complete tasks successfully Students gain respect for each others contributions to the team
We Learn:
10% of what we read 20% of what we hear 30% of what we see 50% of what we both see and hear 70% of what is discussed with others 80% of what we experience personally 95% of what we teach someone else
William Glasser
According to Fortune 500 Companies: The Top Skills sought by employers 1970
3. READING 2. COMPUTATION 1. WRITING
2000
3. INTERPERSONAL SKILLS 2. PROBLEM SOLVING 1. TEAMWORK
BREAK TIME
Cooperative learning is the instructional use of small groups so that students work together to maximize their own and each other's learning (Johnson, Johnson, & Holubec, 1993).
Within cooperative learning groups students discuss the material to be learned with each other, help and assist each other to understand it, and encourage each other to work hard.
Cooperative learning groups may be used to teach specific content (formal cooperative learning groups), to ensure active cognitive processing of information during a lecture or demonstration (informal cooperative learning groups), and to provide long-term support and assistance for academic progress (cooperative base groups) (Johnson, Johnson,
& Holubec, 1993).
Any assignment in any curriculum for any age student can be done cooperatively.
Additional Benefits of Cooperative Learning Students take responsibility for their own learning Students translate teacher talk into student speak for their peers Students engage in cognitive collaboration. They must organize their thoughts to explain ideas to classmates Students have FUN learning Students social nature is used to their advantage
Positive Interdependence
Students must feel they need each other in order to complete the groups task Mutual Goals Joint Rewards Shared Materials and Information Assigned Roles
Face-to-Face Interaction
Discussing Summarizing Explaining Elaborating
Receiving Feedback
Individual Accountability
Teams succeed when:
Every member has learned the material Every member has helped complete tasks Frequently teachers assess individual learning
Conflict Management
Active Listening Challenging Ideas Not People Compromising
Group Processing
Giving students the time and the procedures to analyze how well their teams are functioning with: Learning tasks Social skills Self-assessment
To enable students to take something from one anothers notes to improve their own
Directions In Brief: 1. Assign or allow students to select partners. 2. Teach
3. Students retrieve their own notes and make any needed changes.
Objectives:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. To move students in a purposeful way To gather data in a quick, visual way that is engaging Identify the kind of data you want to gather. Post four multiple choice responses, one in each corner. Students select their responses. Members of groups discuss their choices. Spokespersons summarize/present group members thoughts.
Directions:
SCARED
Fearless
Cautiously Optimistic
Other
CORNERS
Go to the corner
Directions:
Present a problem, idea or question to be discussed Pair students randomly Allow time for individuals to think in silence Allot time for students to write responses (independently) Give time for partners to compare their responses Give the whole class time to discuss responses
4 CORNERS
in your subject area(s).
Formations
Objectives: to make abstract concepts more concrete while incorporating movement
Directions in Brief: 1. Identify an abstract concept 2. Translate it to a living model 3. Compose steps in the process of constructing the model 4. Engage students in construction of the model 5. Engage students in processing the concept
Formations 1. Meet with others in your subject area 2. Decide upon one abstract concept and a formation that makes it concrete. 3. Be prepared to present your formation to your colleagues in other subject areas.
Note: Every member of your group does not have to be a part of your formation
Restructuring does not mean throwing out everything from before block scheduling. Incorporate the best of the tried and true methods, build adapt and reincorporate them in the new time frame.
List the most important concepts/skills you want students to understand before the end of the course List effective activities now used to address each goal Indicate which concepts you wish to address in more depth Think of ways to contextualize each goal with reality based activities Consider various strategies you might add to address each goal
Warm up/ Problem Solving Homework Review New Material Practice Activity Closure Writing
Warm-Up Direct Instruction Work in Small Groups Small Group Presentations Large Group Interaction Closure/Writing/Assignments
15-40 60-85
Objective: to get students to recall, summarize or brainstorm Directions: State the problem, topic or issue Distribute one sheet of paper to each group Give a time limit and ask students to begin to write
Round Table Each person at your table should write one thing he/she has learned about cooperative learning.