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Collaborative and Collaborative Learning. Richard Yuretich and Heather Macdonald. Traditional Teaching. Cartoons courtesy of Karl Smith. Collaborative Learning. Cartoons courtesy of Karl Smith. Cooperative/Collaborative Learning.
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Collaborative and Collaborative Learning Richard Yuretich and Heather Macdonald
Traditional Teaching Cartoons courtesy of Karl Smith
Collaborative Learning Cartoons courtesy of Karl Smith
Cooperative/Collaborative Learning • “Students work together to maximize their own and each others’ learning” (Johnson et al., 1990) • Structured environment in which students learn in cooperative groups • Question or activity should benefit from group approach
Collaborative Learning Example • Individually, list 10 organisms that live in the marine environment • Sort your list of 10 into groups, and explain the reasons for your grouping. • Compare your list with those of others in your team, and discuss the similarities and differences in your classification. • Each team prepares one classification scheme for all the organisms identified by members and explains the rationale for the system.
Examples of Collaborative Learning Activities • Informal Learning Groups • Think-pair-share • Discussion or problem-solving groups • Gallery walk • Formal Learning Groups • Jigsaw groups • Simulations and role-playing exercises • Debates • Research groups
The Jigsaw Structure • Teams of students investigate different aspects of the same problem/issue (each member of a team works on the same thing). • Members of each team then disperse among mixed groups and teach other group members what they have learned. • The group puts the pieces together and addresses a question that can be answered once all the team pieces are together)
Groups The Jigsaw Structure Teams
Critical Aspects for Success • Team assignments carefully crafted • Overlapping assignments • Each valuable in its own right • Lend themselves to comparison • Appropriate level • Students come prepared • Build in individual accountability
Benefits of Well-designed Collaborative Learning Activities • Active engagement of students and improved learning • Peer-teaching • Practice in speaking the language of the discipline • Practice in the skills of teamwork: • Students are responsible for contributing to the team’s success. • Students are individually accountable for their own performance.