A. What Is Cooperative Learning?
A. What Is Cooperative Learning?
others learn and making sure that team members are ready for quiz
without teammates help.
c. Equal opportunities for success mean that all students can contribute to
their teams by improving over their past performance. This ensures that
all the students equally to do their best to value individual contributions.
D. The Comparison Among Cooperative Learning, Competitive Learning,
and Individual Learning
Goal structure
Cooperative Learning
Competitive Learning
Individual Learning
To have an objective is
An objective and an
essential
students to have an
important.
Everyones last
to lose
expectation is to
Learning Goal
Teaching Activities
It focuses on practice
objective
Acquisition of simple
review of knowledge
participate in the
resources of
resources to assist
groups so as to instruct
reconciliation
feedback, reinforce
cooperative skills
and support
Interaction between
Interaction among
Encourage students to
2
answers
The homogeneous
There are is no
student
Teaching materials
interaction among
competition , which is
students
relationship to positive
a type of negative
interdependence
The arrangement of
interdependence
It is to arrange teaching
The arrangement of
teaching materials is
teaching materials
individual
courses
and the process of solving problems. Vygotasky viewed learning and development
as dynamic processes that are situated in social and cultural contexts. He believed
that learners are interactive agents in communicative, socially situated
relationships and that the true direction of the development of thinking is not from
the individual to the socialized but from the social to the individual (Vygotsky,
1962, p.20). He stated that students must interact with a person who is more
expert than themselves to go beyond their current development. From this
statement, teachers should give students guidance and provide opportunities to
work with more capable peers. Without cooperative activities to provide such
learning environment, students will not grow intellectually.
From the perspective of cognitive science, cognitive psychology research has
found that if information is to be retained in memory, the learner must engage in
elaboration of the material. The learner must cognitively rehearse and restructure
information for it to be retained in memory and incorporated into existing
cognitive structures (Webb, 1985). Therefore, an effective way of restoring
information is to explain the learning materials to the other students. Students
receiving elaborated explanations learn more than those who worked alone. And
mentally rehearsing and then presenting information to others enhances ones own
retention of the content (Putnam, 1997). Thus, that cooperative learning
incorporates cognitive science can increase students interaction and develop their
thinking skills (Johnson and Johnson, 1998). So dialogues among students help
them explore and clarify difficult concepts. And learning is often achieved most in
conversation.
4. Social Independence Theories
The central notion of Social Interdependence Theory is that social
interdependence exists when individuals share common goals and each
individuals outcomes are affected by the actions of others (Johnson & Johnson,
1998). Social interdependence can be differentiated from social dependence and
social independence. Social interdependence occurs when each persons gains and
losses influence the gains or losses of other individuals. From this viewpoint,
learning takes place through social interaction and communication. Group
members who have positive interactions will bring about good results. When both
social interdependence and social dependence are absent, there are only individual
efforts (Chien, 2004). Without integration, learning cant increase.
In the 1970s, Aronson and his colleagues (Aronson, Blaney, Stephan, Sikes &
Snapp 1978) applied Jigsaw, the well-known cooperative learning technique. Each
member of the group has unique information that they must share with their
teammates in order to achieve its common goal. Jigsaw II, has been used in
second language teaching using print, (Geddes 1981; Johnson & Johnson 1998) ,
and spoken texts (Harmer, 1998). Moreover, the concept of offering each group
with particular information that must be elaborated has been popular in second
language teaching. Jigsaw II emphasizes interdependence among group members.
McGroarty, (1993) indicated that during the process of exchanging information,
there are more communicative functions and oral practice opportunities. From
these points, choosing Jigsaw II enables students to experience active listening,
and speaking, and to share what they have learned with their group members.
F. Techniques of Cooperative Learning
1. Student-Team-Achievement Division (STAD)
STAD is a prevailing and simple technique in cooperative learning, it
contains five major components:
a. Class presentation: students involve audio and visual presentation, and
then students can do quizzes well afterward to gain good scores for their
team.
b. Team: it consists four to five students, and each person has their own duty.
c. Quizzes: the quizzes are used to compare the previous score and the new
score to see the improvement of the student ability. The group with
progressive score will have their group improved.
d. Team recognition: if students average score exeed a certain criterion,
teams can learn certificate or other rewards.
2. Jigsaw II
Group member share information each other in this technique:
a. Six or seven students begin their original team. Then, each member is
given any dialogue or an article to work on.
b. Student from expert team, each of which is made of one person from each
of the original team to study their part of topic.
5
Positive
interdependence
was
encouraged
by
creating
individual
accountability
and
positive
interdependence