The Teacher's Sourcebook for Cooperative Learning
eBook - ePub

The Teacher's Sourcebook for Cooperative Learning

Practical Techniques, Basic Principles, and Frequently Asked Questions

  1. 184 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Teacher's Sourcebook for Cooperative Learning

Practical Techniques, Basic Principles, and Frequently Asked Questions

Book details
Book preview
Table of contents
Citations

About This Book

  • A comprehensive guide for teachers of all experience levels
  • Engaging and effective
  • Easy to use in your own classroom


Have you ever wondered how to make cooperative learning work in your classroom? Are you still learning what cooperative learning is? If so, then this book is for you! This teaching guide will coach the reader through using cooperative learning techniques in their classroom. Useful for administrations and teachers alike, The Teacher's Sourcebook for Cooperative Learning provides tools for instruction, creating positive habits, and having effective classroom management. This manual belongs on each teacher's bookshelf.

Frequently asked questions

Simply head over to the account section in settings and click on ā€œCancel Subscriptionā€ - itā€™s as simple as that. After you cancel, your membership will stay active for the remainder of the time youā€™ve paid for. Learn more here.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Both plans give you full access to the library and all of Perlegoā€™s features. The only differences are the price and subscription period: With the annual plan youā€™ll save around 30% compared to 12 months on the monthly plan.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, weā€™ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes, you can access The Teacher's Sourcebook for Cooperative Learning by George M. Jacobs, Michael A Power, Loh Wan Inn in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Education & Education Teaching Methods. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Skyhorse
Year
2016
ISBN
9781510701267
Part I
Getting Started With Cooperative Learning
1
Principle: Cooperation as a Value
KEY QUESTIONS
How can I get my class started using cooperative learning (CL)?
What classroom management techniques might work well with CL?
How might the room be arranged for CL?
COOPERATIVE LEARNING TECHNIQUES INTRODUCED IN THIS CHAPTER
Find Someone Who
Two Facts, One Fiction
Classroom Classifieds
Cooperative Games
COOPERATION AS A VALUE
This chapter highlights the cooperative learning principle of Cooperation as a Value. In other words, cooperation offers not just a way of learning but also a way of life. Cooperation represents a value that we hope students will come to espouse. This does not mean that students should never compete or never work on their own. Both competition and working alone play important roles in life.
Cooperation as a Value means encouraging students to see mutual assistance as a goal to strive for, to view others as potential collaborators, and to choose cooperation as often as possible as a viable alternative to competition and individual work. Dickinson Chan (personal communication to George Jacobs, Hong Kong, October 2001), a primary school language arts teacher, put it beautifully: ā€œThe development of cooperation starts in the classroom (a small river), but students take this spirit of cooperation with them as they go out into the wide world (the ocean).ā€
CL is not just part of the how (the method) of learning; it can also be part of the what (the content), as cooperation is woven throughout the learning environment. For instance, students can study about how organisms cooperate with one another within and across species (Forest, 2001). Furthermore, cooperation does not stop when a CL group activity ends. To build a learning climate in which students voluntarily choose cooperation, students need opportunities to do things not just as a small group but also as a class working together toward common goals.
Some classrooms seem to be based on principles that discourage cooperation among students. Table 1.1 lists a number of the differences between such classrooms and cooperative classrooms.
What Can I Tell My Students to Get Them to Give Cooperation a Try?
Here are a few talking points for persuading students that CL is worth a go:
Research shows that students working cooperatively learn more. Thus it makes them more successful academically.
Table 1.1 Classroom Cooperation
Classrooms That Discourage Cooperation
Cooperative Classrooms
Eyes on your own paper.
Look at what peers are doing in order to learn from them, help them, and share ideas and materials.
No talking to your neighbor.
Talk to your neighbor in order to exchange ideas, debate, explain, suggest, and question.
Do your own work and let others do theirs.
Share your work with others so that the work you do together becomes better than the sum of its parts.
If you need help, ask the teacher.
If you need help, ask groupmates and others before asking the teacher.
Compete for the teacherā€™s attention.
Allow each student an opportunity to be spokesperson for the group.
Compete for extrinsic rewards, e.g., grades.
Cooperate for both extrinsic and intrinsic rewards.
Learning to cooperate is important in working with others within a family, with friends and neighbors, on the job, and in life generally.
Cooperation helps students learn how to make friends and to get along with a wide variety of people.
Cooperation makes learning activities more enjoyable.
Some students respond to the honey analogy: A spirit of cooperation helps the class stick together and makes it a sweeter place to be, a place where everyone wants to be. When students like a class, they learn more.
Parents and other caretakers can also help encourage students to work cooperatively. Therefore it is often valuable to inform parents that the class will be using CL and why. This can be done via notes home or on parentsā€™ nights. Furthermore, students can get a broader perspective on the value of cooperation by asking their parents and other adults about their experiences working cooperatively in groups at school, at work, and in the community.
BUILDING A CLIMATE OF COOPERATION
Classroom atmosphere forms a key ingredient in the success of cooperative learning. For instance, students need to
ā€¢ Feel comfortable working with classmates
ā€¢ Be willing to share ideas, ask questions, take risks
To create such a cooperative atmosphere and to make the principle of Cooperation as a Value come alive, we can do classbuilding activities. Classbuilding means working to build a feeling of trust and solidarity among all the members of the class. Creating the right environment is crucial. Everyone has experienced how the setting we are in greatly affects what we do and how we feel.
Working with students to develop a set of behaviors, policies, or norms offers one means of promoting Cooperation as a Value. Here are some that various classes have come up with. Note the positive way they are worded, for example, ā€œI listen when others are talkingā€ instead of ā€œDonā€™t talk when others are talking.ā€ It is helpful to have these norms posted on the wall for all (including visitors) to see.
ā€¢ I listen when others are talking.
ā€¢ I encourage everyone to participate.
ā€¢ I help others without doing the work for them.
ā€¢ I ask for help when I need it.
ā€¢ I am critical of ideas, not people.
ā€¢ I remember that we are all in this together.
ā€¢ I value and respect each person as an individual, as a groupmate, and as part of our class regardless of race, religion, nationality, or academic performance.
ā€¢ I come to class on time.
We call these norms rather than rules because norms flow from shared values, such as the value of cooperation.
Class Meetings
Classroom norms are one of many possible items for the agenda of class meetings. Some teachers encourage regular class meetings to provide a safe venue for students and the teacher to air feedbackā€”positive and negativeā€”and suggestions on how the class is functioning. In order for students to really feel free to voice their opinions, the classroom norms listed above should also apply to class meetings.
Team Then Teacher (TTT)
TTT encourages students to see classmates as a resource rather than as competitors and helps students move away from relying exclusively on the teacher. TTT simply means that students should consult with groupmates before asking the teacher. This refers to asking about procedures as well as about content. TTT promotes group autonomy, a concept discussed in Chapter 8. Furthermore, because we want to promote classwide solidarity, students can also consult other groups before going to the teacher. Similarly, groups that finish early can offer to help others who are still working. By helping other groups, students live the principle of Cooperation as a Value.
RSPA
Teachers introducing CL often need a strategy to get studentsā€™ attention when they are working in groups. For instance, teachers need to get studentsā€™ attention when it is time to move to another activity or to share a good idea from one group with the rest of the class. Some teachers ring a bell; some bang on the board or switch the lights on and off. Weā€™ve even heard of a high school teacher who starts to sing. Similarly, some early childhood teachers begin singing a short song and then the children sing along. When the song ends, the whole class is ready to pay attention to what the teacher wants to announce.
Different attention techniques will be right for different teachers. One commonly used signal is RSPA. Here is how it works. The teacher claps and raises one hand. When students hear or see these signals, they
ā€¢ Raise a hand.
ā€¢ Stop talking.
ā€¢ Pass the signal.
ā€¢ Attend to the teacher.
Pass the signal means that if students notice others who have not seen or heard the teacherā€™s signal, they tap them on the shoulder, whisper pssst, or otherwise pass the signal to them.
We should discuss with students why such a signal is needed, just as we explain and involve them in other classroom decisions. Furthermore, students will enjoy using the signal themselves when they are leading the class. RSPA is an example of a class routine that helps classwide cooperation flow smoothly.
Establishing Routines
Classrooms have many routines, such as passing out papers, handing them in, or getting into groups. RSPA and signals like it are useful routines for classes using cooperative learning. Students need to spend time to understand why these routines are important and to figure out how to do them as efficiently as possible. Equally important, students can spend time practicing the routines. Additionally, after a period of time, such as a month, the routines may not be working as well as before. If so, we should again spend time with the class to evaluate and renew the routines. This is time well spent, because routines save precious time for learning.
Another way to promote the use of effective classroom routines is for the teacher to call the classā€™s attention to groups that are working well together, for instance, heeding the attention signal. We point out what specific behavior the group is using. In this way, that group becomes a model for the entire class. Some teachers even time how long it takes for the c...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Introduction
  6. About the Authors
  7. Dedication
  8. Part I. Getting Started With Cooperative Learning
  9. Part II. Frequently Asked Questions About Cooperative Learning
  10. Part III. Resources for Cooperative Learning
  11. Index