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Hands-on, Practical Guidance for Educators

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The Teacher's Sourcebook for Cooperative Learning

Practical Techniques, Basic Principles, and Frequently Asked Questions
A dynamic team of authors have combined their firsthand experience and in-depth research to create this essential guidebook. In The Teacher's Sourcebook for Cooperative Learning, the authors demonstrate how any classroom teacher can use cooperative learning (CL) techniques for lesson planning and classroom management. Learn how to:
  • Incorporate the basic principles of CL into everyday learning experiences
  • Improve students' collaborative skills, positive interdependence, and individual accountability
  • Prepare for, manage, and create tasks for CL lessons
  • Handle special situations, avoid trouble spots, and collaborate with other teachers, administrators, and parents 

Full description


Product Details
  • Grade Level: PreK-12
  • ISBN: 9780761946090
  • Published By: Corwin
  • Year: 2002
  • Page Count: 184
  • Publication date: August 01, 2002

Price: $40.95

Price: $40.95
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Description

Description

"The Teacher's Sourcebook for Cooperative Learning has ideas and activities that can be used by all teachers who want to improve their classroom management and promote community building."
Rebecca Den Hartog, Elementary Classroom Teacher
Mercer Island School District
Mercer Island, WA

"I unreservedly recommend this important resource to any preservice or inservice teachers of young children."
Chris Iddings, Assistant Professor of Language and Literacy
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN

"The authors reveal considerable wealth of experience as teachers and as users of CL. This will be a very successful book."
Jon A. Scaife, Lecturer in Education
School of Education, University of Sheffield
Sheffield, England

Can today's students excel individually by working in tandem with their peers? Yes! says this dynamic team of authors who have combined their first-hand experience and in-depth research to create this essential guidebook. In The Teacher's Sourcebook for Cooperative Learning, the authors demonstrate how any classroom teacher can use CL techniques for lesson planning and classroom management. Learn how to:

  • Incorporate the basic principles of CL into everyday learning experiences
  • Improve students' collaborative skills, positive interdependence, and individual accountability
  • Prepare for, manage, and create tasks for CL lessons
  • Handle special situations, avoid trouble spots, and collaborate with other teachers, administrators, and parents

This exciting book represents best practice based on hands-on experience and in-depth research. Incorporate these principles into your lesson plan and see how you can achieve one of every educator's most rewarding contributions . . . helping students to help themselves, and each other.

Author(s)

Author(s)

George M. Jacobs photo

George M. Jacobs

George M. Jacobs has a PhD in Educational Psychology from the University of Hawaii and a master’s degree in Linguistics from the University of Illinois—Chicago. He has been teaching courses on cooperative learning since 1988. He has published many articles on the topic and is also a coauthor of Learning Cooperative Learning via Cooperative Learning: A Sourcebook of Lesson Plans for Teacher Education (1997). He is a member of the Executive Board of the International Association for the Study of Cooperation in Education and editor of its newsletter. He also specializes in second-language learning and helped compile an annotated bibliogra-phy of works on group activities in second-language instruction. Contact him at gmjacobs@ pacific.net.sg.
Michael A. Power photo

Michael A. Power

Michael A. Power has a PhD in Educational Psychology and a master’s degree in English as a Second Language from the University of Hawaii. He is the Director of Instruction and Assessment for the Mercer Island, Washington, school district. He has taught English as a second language in the United States, Japan, and the Republic of Korea, and has, for many years, conducted training throughout the Pacific in instructional strategies for teachers (including cooperative learning).
Loh Wan Inn photo

Loh Wan Inn

Loh Wan Inn has an EdD in Science Education from the State University of New Jersey and master’s degrees in Education (First Honors) and in Arts from Trinity College, University of Dublin. She is a chartered biolo-gist (Institute of Biology, UK). She has lived and worked in the United States, Singapore, Ireland, and Australia. She has taught courses on science, mathematics, science education, environmental education, coop-erative learning, curriculum design, and multiple intelligences. Through her interest in cooperative learning, she has seen it introduced in science by preschool and secondary school teachers as part of their science educa-tion modules. She also designs and trains teachers for camps on multiple intelligences and science. Her previous books include storybooks for young children and books on science and science education. She is also a member of a number of environmental organizations.
Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Introduction

What Is Cooperative Learning?

The Benefits of Cooperative Learning

How to Get the Most From This Book

About the Authors

Part I: Getting Started With Cooperative Learning


1. Principle: Cooperation as a Value

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?

2. Principle: Heterogeneous Grouping

How can I form cooperative groups?

How can I help my students work together smoothly?

What are some strategies for team building?

3. Principle: Positive Interdependence

What is positive interdependence?

How can I help my students develop positive interdependence?

How can we encourage an "all for one, one for all" spirit among students?

4. Principle: Individual Accountability

How can I encourage all students to participate and learn?

How can I help students learn to take responsibility for their group?

5. Principle: Simultaneous Interaction

How can I give students lots of opportunities to express their ideas?

Should students report on their group work to the whole class?

How can I encourage students to explain their thinking to their group?

6. Principle: Equal Participation

How can I promote equal participation in groups?

How might CL help with differences in student ability levels?

What about the students whose main strengths do not lie in academic skills?

7. Principle: Collaborative Skills

Is it necessary to teach students how to cooperate?

Can students learn collaborative skills while learning content, or does it have to be done separately?

How might cooperative learning help students develop thinking skills?

8. Principle: Group Autonomy

How can I help groups become more independent of the teacher?

How much should I intervene when students are working in their CL groups?

What is the teacher's role when students have become more autonomous?

9. Assessment in Cooperative Learning

How can I assess learning in cooperative groups?

What are my options for grading students, and what are the pros and cons of giving all group members the same grade?

How might I involve students in assessing themselves and each other?

What about assessing how cooperative students are?

Part II: Frequently Asked Questions About Cooperative Learning


10. Preparing Our Classes for Cooperative Learning

What size should groups be?

What if there is an uneven number of students?

How long should CL groups stay together?

What if students want to choose their own partners?

How can CL work when students don't believe they can learn from their peers?

Should anything special be done when groups end?

11. Managing Cooperative Learning Classes

Isn't CL a recipe for behavioral chaos?

Should I use time limits with group tasks?

Won't there be a lot of disruption and wasted time while students are moving into groups?

How can I quickly get students' attention when they are working in groups?

How do you deal with groups that are too noisy?

What if some groups are not carrying out the task or activity properly?

Is it a problem when groups finish at different times?

How can group reporting be a learning experience for everyone in the class?

How can I listen in as students are working together in their groups?

12. Creating CL Tasks

How often should I use CL?

How can I find the time necessary to prepare structured CL activities?

How are CL lessons different from teacher-fronted lessons?

Won't group activities take too long?

Won't students complain about using the same CL technique, or even using CL, again and again?

What if CL tasks are too difficult for students of different ability levels?

13. Enhancing Thinking When Using CL

How can I encourage students working in groups to show creativity or other evidence of higher-order thinking?

How can I ensure that group members avoid reaching quick consensus and have richer discussions?

14. Using CL in Special Situations

How do I use CL with preschool and lower elementary school students?

How do I use CL with students learning in a second language?

How should we respond when students use their first language in CL groups using another language?

How do I use CL with large classes?

15. Helping Groups That Aren't Functioning Well

What can I do when students don't get along with their groupmates?

My students argue with one another. How can I turn arguing into productive disagreement?

What can I do about students who don't participate much in CL activities?

What about students who really want to work alone?

What about students who dominate the group?

What can I do when less able students hurt their group's performance?

What can I do when students give each other the wrong information?

What can I do when there is cooperation within groups but not between groups?

16. Collaborating With Other Teachers

Most other teachers at my school don't seem interested in CL. Should I give up on them?

A few other teachers I know are using CL. How can we help each other?

What goals should my teacher support groups strive for?

With what other changes in teaching does CL fit well? Why?

17. Working With Administrators and Parents

How can I respond to administrators and parents who worry that CL won't prepare students for multiple-choice tests such as the SAT?

Will CL give me enough time to cover the syllabus and finish the textbook?

How can I work with administrators who do not support CL?

Part III: Resources for Cooperative Learning


CL Print Resources

Web Sites

Index

Reviews

Reviews

Price: $40.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

For Instructors

Request Review Copy

When you select 'request review copy', you will be redirected to Sage Publishing (our parent site) to process your request.