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Introduction to Cooperative Learning

Introduction to Cooperative Learning. EDTE 408 Principles of Teaching. Six Key Elements To Cooperative Learning. Teams Will to Cooperate Cooperative Management Skill to Cooperate Four Basic Principles Cooperative Structures. Concept 1: Teams. What is a cooperative team?.

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Introduction to Cooperative Learning

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  1. Introduction toCooperative Learning EDTE 408 Principles of Teaching

  2. Six Key Elements To Cooperative Learning • Teams • Will to Cooperate • Cooperative Management • Skill to Cooperate • Four Basic Principles • Cooperative Structures

  3. Concept 1: Teams • What is a cooperative team? Strong, positive team identity Four members Endures over time Heterogeneous

  4. Concept 1: Teams • How are teams formed? Variety of methods Friendships or interests Random teams Teacher assigns students to teams Heterogeneous - maximize the probability of peer tutoring and improving cross-race and cross-sex relations

  5. Concept 1: Teams • What is the best way to form teams? Teacher assignment teams Can be held together for a long time Students form a strong team identity Teams learn to learn together

  6. Concept 1: Teams • What are some problems with other methods? Random: The luck of the draw can put four low achievers on the same team Friends Choose: Classroom management problems, leaving someone out

  7. Concept 1: Teams • How big should teams be? Four members per team Allows pairs work Teams of more than four do not lend themselves to enough participation and they are harder to manage

  8. Concept 2: Will to Cooperate • Three ways in which the will to cooperate is created and maintained: Teambuilding Classbuilding Use of cooperative task and reward structures, including recognition systems

  9. Concept 2: Will to Cooperate • Teambuilding and Classbuilding Activities for team and classbuilding provide unique learning experiences not afforded by traditional exclusive emphasis on academic content Found in workplace - should be in classrooms too

  10. Concept 2: Will to Cooperate • Task and Reward Structures PAT Cooperative Task Structures - A Group Product Grading problems? Improvement Scoring Team Scores as a recognition system, not a report card

  11. Concept 3: Cooperative Management • Room Arrangement • Quiet Signal • Teacher and Student Modeling • Manageable Noise Level • Efficient Distribution of Materials • Class Rules and Procedures

  12. Concept 4: Skill to Cooperate • Developing Social Skills Modeling Defining Role-playing

  13. Concept 5: Basic Principles • Four Basic Principles to Cooperative Learning Positive Interdependence Individual Accountability Equal Participation Simultaneous Interaction

  14. Concept 5: Basic Principles • Simultaneous Interaction Distribute Supplies: Materials Monitor from each team distributes materials to teammates Discuss Topic: All students discuss views in pairs Form Teams: Students simultaneously look for names on tables Share Answers: All students engage in choral response Receive Help: Students ask a teammate and receive immediate help

  15. Concept 5: Basic Principles Weak Forms: The success of each team member is likely to contribute to success of others The success of teams is likely to be facilitated by success of individual members Intermediate Forms: The success of each team member contributes to success of all teammates, but a team member could succeed on own The success of a team is facilitated by the success of each member, but team could succeed without success or contribution of every member • Positive Interdependence

  16. Concept 5: Basic Principles • Positive Interdependence Strong Forms: The success of every team member is not possible without success/contributions of each The success of a team is not possible without success or contribution of each member

  17. Concept 5: Basic Principles • Individual Accountability Students can be made individually accountable by having each student receive a grade on his/her portion of the team project Each student responsible for a unique portion of a team learning product Whatever the form of individual accountability, the contribution of each individual is made known to the team

  18. Kagan’s Simple Cooperative Learning Strategies: Teacher Tools to Construct Learning

  19. Cooperative Structures • Agreement Circles • Students stand in a large circle, then step to the center in proportion to their agreement with a statement by a student or teacher.

  20. Cooperative Structures • Blind Sequencing • Students sequence all pieces without peeking at the pieces of teammates.

  21. Cooperative Structures • Circle-the –Sage • Students who know, stand to become sages; teammates each gather around a different sage to learn. • Students return to teams to compare notes.

  22. Cooperative Structures • Corners • Students pick a corner, write its number, go there, interact with others with same corner choice in a Rally Robin or Timed Pair Share.

  23. Cooperative Structures • Fan-N-Pick • Played with higher-level thinking Q cards. #1 fans, #2 picks, #3 answers, #4 praises. Students then rotate roles.

  24. Cooperative Structures • Find My Rule • The teacher places items in a frame (two boxes, Venn, on a line); students induce the role. • Two Box Induction • What’s My Line • Crack My Venn

  25. Cooperative Structures • Find Someone Who • Students circulate, finding others who can contribute to their worksheet. • People Hunt: Students circulate, finding others who match their own characteristics. • Fact Bingo: Find someone who played on bingo worksheet.

  26. Cooperative Structures • Find the Fib • Teammates try to determine which of three statements is a fib. • Fact or Fiction: Teammates try to determine if a statement is true or false.

  27. Cooperative Structures • Flashcard Game • Flashcards in pairs, with rounds progressing from many to no clues

  28. Cooperative Structures • Formations • Students stand together as a class to form shapes.

  29. Cooperative Structures • Four “S” Brainstorming • Sultan of Silly, Synergy Guru, Sergeant Support, and the Speed Captain play their roles as they quickly generate many ideas which are recorded by Synergy Guru. • Think Pad Brainstorming: No roles. Students generate items on think pad slips, announcing them to teammates and placing them in the center of the table.

  30. Cooperative Structures • Idea Spinner • Spin Captain “Shares an Idea” or “Quizzes a Pal” to Summarize, Evaluate, Explain, or Predict.

  31. Cooperative Structures • Inside/Outside Circle • Students in concentric circles rotate to face a partner to answer the teacher’s questions or those of the partner.

  32. Cooperative Structures • Jigsaw Problem Solving • Each teammate has part of the answer or a clue card; teammates must put their info together to solve the team problem.

  33. Cooperative Structures • Line Ups • Students line up by characteristics, estimates, values, or assigned items. • Value Lines: Students line up as the agree or disagree with a value statement. • Folded & Split Line Ups: Students fold the Line Up or Split and Slide it to interact with someone with a different point of view, characteristic, or estimate.

  34. Cooperative Structures • Lyrical Lessons • Students write and/or sing songs based on curriculum, often to familiar tunes

  35. Cooperative Structures • Match Mine • Receivers arrange objects to match those of Senders whose objects are hidden by a barrier. • Draw-What-I-Say: Receiver draws what sender describes. • Build-What-I-Write: Receiver constructs what Sender has described in writing.

  36. Cooperative Structures • Mix-Freeze-Group • Students rush to form groups of a specific size, hoping not to land in “lost and found.”

  37. Cooperative Structures • Mix-Pair-Discuss • Students pair with classmates to discuss question posed by the teacher.

  38. Cooperative Structures • Mix-N-Match • Students mix, then find partners with the matching card. • Snowball: Students toss crumpled papers over imaginary volleyball net, stop, pick up a snowball, then find the person with the matching “snowball.”

  39. Cooperative Structures • Numbered Heads Together • Students huddle to make sure all can respond, a number is called, the student with that number responds. • Paired Heads Together: Students in pairs huddle to make sure they both can respond, an “A” or “B” is called, the student with that letter responds.

  40. Cooperative Structures • One Stray • The teacher calls a number; students with that number “stray” to join another team, often to share. • Two Stray: Two students stray to another team, often to share and to listen. • Three stray: Three students stray to another team, often to listen to the one who stayed to explain a team project.

  41. Cooperative Structures • Pairs Check • Students work first in pairs each doing a problem and receiving coaching and praise from their partner; then pairs check and celebrate after every two problems.

  42. Cooperative Structures • Pairs Compare • Pairs generate ideas or answers, compare their answers with another pair, and then see if working together they can come up with additional responses neither pair alone had.

  43. Cooperative Structures • Paraphrase Passport • Students can share their own ideas only after they accurately paraphrase the person who spoke before them.

  44. Cooperative Structures • Partners • Pairs work to prepare a presentation, then present to the other pair in their team.

  45. Cooperative Structures • Poems for Two Voices • Partners alternate reading “A” and “B” lines of a poem, and read “AB” lines together in unison. • Songs for Two Voices: Partners alternate singing “A” and “B” lines of a song, and sing “AB” lines together in unison.

  46. Cooperative Structures • Q-Spinner • Students generate questions from one of 36 prompts produced by spinners.

  47. Cooperative Structures • Rally Robin • Students in pairs take turns talking. • Rally Toss: Partners toss a ball (paper wad) while doing Rally Robin.

  48. Cooperative Structures • Rally Table • Students in pairs take turns writing, drawing, pasting. (2 papers, 2 pencils per team) • Pass-N-Praise: Students in pairs take turns writing and hand their paper to the next person only after receiving praise.

  49. Cooperative Structures • Reading Boards • Students manipulate game pieces relating to the song as they sing along.

  50. Cooperative Structures • Rotating Review • Teams discuss topic; chart their thoughts; rotate to the next chart to discuss and chart their thoughts. • Rotating Feedback: Teams discuss, then chart their feedback to another team’s product; then rotate to do the same with the next team.

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