Definition
Cooperative learning consists of
instructional techniques that
require positive interdependence
between learners in order for
learning to occur.
Basic Elements
Research shows that both
competitive and cooperative
interaction are a healthy part
of a child's repertoire of
behavior. By second grade,
however, urban children have
effectively extinguished their
cooperative behavior and persist
in competition, even when it's
counterproductive. By developing
deliberately cooperative
techniques, educators aim to
correct the unconscious societal
and educational bias that favors
competition.
Research has also found an
interesting racial implication
in cooperative learning:
Minority children are more
likely to retain these
cooperative strategies. In fact,
when educators introduce
cooperative learning into the
classroom, minority learners
show a disproportionate
improvement in achievement.
Patterns for student
interaction are called
structures. Together,
teachers and students develop a
repertoire of these structures.
So when the teacher announces
that the class will use a
particular exercise to explore
today's lesson topic, students
know what type of interaction to
expect. For example, when the
teacher says the class will use
the "Think-Pair-Share" exercise
to study African wildlife,
students know they will work
independently to write down
their thoughts on elephants or
lions, then find a partner,
share their ideas with their
partner, and probe each other
for complete understanding.
It is up to the instructor to
integrate the interactive
exercises with the specific
lesson content. The teacher must
give careful thought to who
should collaborate with whom and
why, how to manage the classroom
while unleashing cooperative
activity, and how to balance the
attention to both content and
cooperative skill building.
Reading
Spencer Kagan, Cooperative
Learning, Resources for
Teachers, 1992.
The content on this page was written
by On Purpose Associates in
http://www.funderstanding.com/cooperative_learning.cfm.