k-12 and Collaborative Learning
k-12 and Collaborative Learning
OVERVIEW
The Common Core Curriculum Standards were devised to “provide a consistent, clear understanding of what
students are expected to learn, so teachers and parents know what they need to do to help them.” Additionally, “The
standards are to be designed to be robust and relevant to the real world, reflecting the knowledge and skills that our
young people will need for success in college and careers, which will place American students in a position in which
they can compete in a global economy.”
This educational reform and restructuring make information literacy skills a necessity as students seek to construct
their own knowledge and create their own understandings. Today instruction methods have changed drastically from
the mostly one-directional teacher-student model, to a more collaborative approach where the students themselves
feel empowered. (see: Common Core Initiative).
This section takes a look at the various delivery platforms that are being devised to bridge the new Common Core
educational materials and the assessment of student proficiency in those curriculums. The Common Core does not
dictate any one teaching/learning platform for the delivery of what will be the Common Core aligned K-12 curriculum.
This choice is left up to the teacher as each teacher has difference experience, teaching style and insights to what
works.
Educators are selecting various platforms of resource-based learning (authentic learning, problem-based learning
and work-based learning) to help students focus on the process and to help students learn from the content.
Information literacy skills are necessary components of each. Within a school setting, it is very important that a
students’ specific needs as well as the situational context be kept in mind when selecting topics for integrated
information literacy skills instruction. The primary goal should be to provide frequent opportunities for students to
learn and practice information problem solving. (see: K-12 Education Restructuring)
BEST PRACTICES
The term “Best Practice” is used as a blank term for all of the various Learning/Teaching Platforms being used in K-
12 education. The concept was first developed in college instruction and has been used to describe “what works” in a
particular situation or environment. When data support the success of a practice, it is referred to as a “research-
based practice or scientifically based practice.” However, a particular practice that has worked for someone within a
given set of variables may or may not yield the same results across educational environments.
Evidence-based education has been defined as “the integration of professional wisdom with the best available
empirical evidence in making decisions about how to deliver instruction.” Professional wisdom allows educators and
family members to adapt to specific circumstances or environments in an area in which research evidence may be
absent or incomplete. But without at least some empirical evidence, education cannot resolve competing approaches,
generate cumulative knowledge, and avoid fads and personal biases (see: SERC).
Some of the more common attributes of a “Best-Practices’ Teaching & Learning Platforms:
A Clear and Common Focus hat all students can learn and improve their performance
High Standards and Expectations means that all students are engaged in rigorous course of study in which the high
standards of performance are clear and consistent and the conditions for learning are modified and differentiated
Strong Leadership creates a common culture of high expectations based on the use of skills and knowledge to
improve the performance of all students
Supportive, Personalized, and Relevant Learning provide positive personalized relationships for all students while
engaging them in rigorous and relevant learning
Parent/Community Involvement means that the school community works together to actively solve problems and
mentoring and outreach programs provide for two-way learning between students and community/business members
Monitoring, Accountability, and Assessment are continually adjusted on the basis of data collected through a variety
of reliable methods that indicate student progress and needs
Curriculum and Instruction are aligned through rigorous, research-based teaching and learning strategies and
students are actively involved in their learning through inquiry, in-depth learning, and performance assessments
Professional Development means appropriate instructional support and resources are provided to implement
approaches and techniques that are learned through teacher training
Time and Structure are flexible to accommodate the varied lives of students, staff, and community in order to improve
student performance in programs that extend beyond the traditional school day, year and beyond the school building
COMMON CORE FOCUS
In an effort to remediate our international K-12 test score rankings, an independent organization examined
shortcomings and strengths in our system. The result was the Common Core State Standards (CCSS), intended to
raise rigor, embed real-world relevance into our curriculum, and keep students on the same academic page
regardless of their home state. The anchor standards explicitly instruct students to research, assess sources, and
avoid plagiarism.
The CCSS authors correctly assessed this generation’s needs and supported a student-centered inquiry-based
research model rather than a teacher-defined task. Now, those research endeavors would be rigorous, arguable,
open-ended, and worthy of debate. Those debates are aligned with the Common Core.
The following is a list of some of the Common Core Learning/Teaching objectives:
Students need to be prepared to compete in a global economy
Instruction needs to reflect the knowledge and skills necessary for success in college and careers
Instruction needs to contain clear understanding of what students are expected to learn
Real-world relevance needs to be embedded into K-12 curriculum
Curriculum needs to be designed to be robust and relevant to the real world
Curriculum needs to develop integrated information literacy skills in students
Curriculum needs to be written so students can draw knowledge from the text
Curricula should provide opportunities for students to build knowledge through close reading of a text
All curriculum needs to raise rigor
The assessment of the realigned standards should be both challenging and rigorous
Students need to master deeper levels of critical thinking and comparative text analysis
Students need to construct their own knowledge and create their own understandings
Students need to research, assess sources, and avoid plagiarism
Students need to focus on the process and learn from the content
High-quality questions should be included in all curriculums
Such questions should encourage students to “read like a detective”
Questions should be written so they can only be answered through close attention to the text
Students should be assigned tasks that are text dependent
Text should prompt relevant and central inquiries into the meaning of source material
Students should uncover and discover rather than merely cover material
Students need to communicate and demonstrate their ability to comprehend the details of what is explicitly
stated in the text
Student background knowledge and experiences can illuminate the reading but should not replace attention
to the text itself
Students need to make valid inferences that logically follow from what is stated in the text
Students need to use evidence to back up their written responses
In math, students have to learn more than one way to solve the same problem, and they must explain their
methods
Students need to be kept on the same academic page regardless of their home state
TEACHER FACILITATION
Core Success: Student Motivation, Teacher Collaboration
All over the world, teachers are learning to repackage their curriculum so that students uncover and discover, rather
than merely cover material. The Common Core Initiative Standards goes on to state that the assessment of the
realigned standards should be both challenging and rigorous. Today instruction methods have changed drastically.
There is a real potential to promote a deeper engagement with the subject matter and enhance the student
experience by creating opportunities for group learning but this does require the
An unanticipated issue with problem based learning is the traditional assumptions of the student. Most students have
spent their previous years assuming their teacher was the main disseminator of knowledge. Due to this orientation
towards the subject-matter expertise of their instructor and the traditional memorization of facts required of students,
many students appear to have lost the ability to “simply wonder about something.” This is especially seen in first year
students who often express difficulties with self-directed learning.
Although students generally prefer problem based learning courses, and their ability to solve real-life problems
appears to increase over traditional instruction, there are issues to be aware of in moving towards this type of
learning. Contributing to this divergence is the time requirement placed upon academic staff to assess student
learning, prepare course materials, and allow students to complete the reduction in coverage of course material.
Students all seek approval from their teachers. They need guidance and role models that they can respect and trust.
It is essential for teachers to be honest with students. Even though effective teacher avoid the ‘expert’ role, they can
have a powerful impact on students.
Induction Process
Considering problem-based learning, before students go into the curriculum proper, a PBL orientation is essential to
prepare students for PBL and enables them to make full use of the PBL process for life-long learning. Such an
orientation can cover the following:
Knowing and using PBL;
Guest speakers from graduates on their views of PBL;
Guest speakers from clients/employers on their views of the type of employees that they are looking for and
their experience with students who learnt via PBL approach;
Coping with change;
PBL Small Group Learning Process;
Assessment for PBL;
Concept Mapping
Within the orientation, a specific focus on teamwork is vital, in particular, it can include problem-challenging and self-
esteem games alongside how effective feedback in group situations is going to be constructed and conveyed.
Academic Achievement
Few academics doubt the ability of students prepared in problem based learning to exhibit strong reasoning and team
building skills. Concern has been raised, however, over the breadth of content covered. As the focus of problem
based learning centers on a specific problem, academic achievement scores often favor traditional teaching methods
when standardized tests are used, but favor neither method when non-standardized forms of assessment are
employed. These measures include problem-solving ability, interpersonal skills, peer-tutor relationships, the ability to
reason, and self-motivated learning. In contrast, traditional instruction is judged better in the coverage of science
content areas and in evaluating students’ knowledge content. Although problem based learning tends to reduce initial
levels of learning, it can improve long-term retention.
Resources
A continuing challenge for CPBL and PBL groups is “How much detail is enough?” Students should be encouraged to
bring books and previous class notes and use them in the learning, if necessary,
Sample projects should be provided to show students the scope of project in order to help students form a realistic
picture of what they are expected to achieve;
Course teams should be aware of the importance of a Project Guide (a document containing guidelines for
undertaking the relevant project) and strive to make it as clear and as helpful as possible;
It should be recognized that extra demands will be made on teachers both in terms of personal involvement and of
time commitment in evaluating and assessing projects. Collaborative project-based methods also imply more teacher
involvement in terms of reassurance and guidance.
Assessment will also be more demanding, and more resources may need for assessment than would be required on
“teacher-directed” courses. Teachers also need guidance on the extent to which they should allow students to follow
an independent path and at which point they should intervene if a student’s chosen direction seems to be going badly
off-course. The flexibility of tutorial contact makes it easier to remedy the problem of students taking a “wrong”
direction.
From an academic point of view, teachers also need to be clear about the rewards and penalties that students may
incur by pursuing an unconventional solution to their project problem. They need to know the balance that the course
aims to achieve between encouraging students to produce unique solutions and rewarding a successful arrival at the
“end goal.”
Role of the Student in Project-based Learning
Project-based Learning is a student centered learning strategy which is intended to develop student skills as an
independent learner and project execution facilitate this. A project takes the student
work.
A large amount of information is available electronically and the students will need to be able to use the library
catalogues, databases and internet search engines. It is best to start with a visit to the library and librarians will give
advice and guidance. It is very easy at this point to branch off in a variety of directions and spend a lot of time
researching literature that is not directly relevant. In order to avoid this possibility it is good practice for the students to
keep in front of them the project title which will support them to search through the literature using key words and
thereby locate relevant material. Having located the literature it is important that the students take notes and record
the main ideas gleamed from the text and think about how these relate to what they already know. It will be
necessary to think critically and form conclusions based on a systematic evaluation of the available evidence.
Also the students should take care to record reference sources correctly as failure to do this will mean that at a later
stage they may have to revisit all the literature consulted in order to check references and this can be very time
consuming. It is expected in academic work that sources are correctly referenced and always avoid plagiarism, which
is presenting somebody’s work as their own without acknowledging it.
Stage 3 – First Draft
Having located and evaluated the relevant information the students can now move logically to the next stage, which is
to write a first draft of their section of the project. All good writers produce a draft, which they revise and edit to
produce a final version. Once they begin to write they will find that they will begin to clarify their thinking. The students
should try to get all their ideas down on paper first and they can reorganize later to ensure that there is logic to the
draft and that their writing is clear and coherent and meets academic expectations. The students must be very careful
to reference the work of other people so as there is no plagiarism in the finished work. In producing a collaborative
project, there will be a need to decide as a group how best to synthesize the individual elements into a coherent
whole. A number of approaches can be taken to do this but it will be essential that the final document is logical and
consistent.
There is a common formula for writing an assignment that may appear simplistic but does provide a good structure
for a project:
Introduction: Provide the reader with a clear outline of what the students are going to do in the project and
relate it to the project title.
Main Body: Draw on relevant material and present student arguments in a structured way.
Conclusion: Bring everything together so that there is a sense of completion. This involves summarizing the
main points, making recommendations and highlighting issues for further investigation.
Stage 4 – Rewriting
It is important to understand that all writing involves rewriting and that even the most gifted writers will revisit work
and edit and revise. Pay attention to the following as you make annotations and amendments:
he document clearly adheres to the project brief
The objectives are achieved and there are no gaps in the work
There is a logical flow to the document
Formal academic language is used
The conclusions are clear to the reader
The document is clear and well-presented and adheres to the conventions laid down in the assignment brief
Conclusion
It could be argued that the skill of the twenty first century graduate will be to articulate the right questions and to
understand where and how they can search for knowledge, not remember
Lecturing is without doubt effective for transmitting information but if we wish to develop thinking skills, problem
solving abilities and lifelong learning skills a more student-centered approach must be taken. This involves a change
in the role of the lecturer from presenting information to students in a mostly one-directional teacher-student model to
a more collaborative approach where the students themselves feel empowered which facilitates and guides learning.
With the “Flip Teaching” model Flip teaching (or flipped classroom) is a form of “Blended-based Learning” which
encompasses any use of technology to leverage the learning in a classroom, so a teacher can spend more time
interacting with students instead of lecturing. This is most commonly being done using teacher-created video lectures
that students view outside of class time. It is also known as “the backwards classroom,” reverse instruction,” flipping
the classroom,” and “reverse teaching.”
The Friday Institute for Educational Innovation, which part of the North Carolina State University College of
Education, FIZZ project has student video tape their lesson and present them to their peers thus creating the
potential of the group to learn from each other. This creates “ownership” in the presenting student which is the
highest form of cognitive recognition. This also gives students an opportunity to direct and take responsibility for their
own learning (see: Blended-based eLearning).
CASE-BASED LEARNING
Case-based Learning is a teaching platform that is most often used with older students and graduate students that
are working in their field of study. In this platform students reflect on their own experiences and use the experiences
of other students. The goal is to clarify the connection between theory and practical application to encourage problem
solving in the real world.
COMPUTER-BASED LEARNING
Blogs, wikis, and Google Docs are commonly used CSCL mediums within the teaching community. The ability to
share information in an environment that is becoming easier for the lay person
Animations
Graphic Novels (comic books)
Episodics
Dramatic Curriculum Enactments
Music
Lyrics
Poetry
Dance
Entertainment education can be used to reach those students who are disenfranchising from tradition learning
methods. More and more curriculum is being developed with entertainment elements such as Scholastic’s “You
Wouldn’t Want to…” history series which uses humor and graphic (cartoon) drawings and makes the reader one of
the characters in the historical event.
which produce a fun and instructional tool. Games like this satisfy the
Common Core’s call for new types of resources strong in detail and worthy of deep study. Two of the board games
they have developed are “His Freedom: The Underground Railroad” and “1960: The Making of the President.”
Entertainment-based Learning is in its infancy but has a bright future in not only helping disinterested students to
embrace learning but also help successful students relieve the stress caused by everyday student life.
PERFORMANCE-BASED LEARNING
(The following is from an Israeli foreign language school – the exact identity could not be ascertained)
The performance-based approach to education, which is not unlike both Project-based and Problem-based Learning
models (see above), enables pupils to use their knowledge and apply skills in realistic situations. It differs from the
traditional approach to education in that as well as striving for mastery of knowledge and skills, it also measures