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Appendix A : Teacher Training in Cooperative Learning
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Thesis Liang Tsailing
Appendix A
: Teacher Training in Cooperative Learning The 40-hour of teacher training in cooperative learning consisted of 20 sessions, scheduled every other week from September 1999 to June 2000. The participants learned cooperative learning via cooperative learning, which included (1) the presentation of theory and philosophy of cooperative learning; (2) demonstration of cooperative methods; and (3) peer teaching. 1. Presentation of theory: The teachers in the training program learned the theories of cooperative learning through reading the book by Kessler (1992), the articles by Kagan (1995), Mickan (1997), and McGroarty (1993). The theoretical background of cooperative learning was learned through actual cooperative learning methods like Jigsaw I (Slavin, 1990), Jigsaw II, Inside-Outside Circle, and TGT. The teachers learned about cooperative learning via actual cooperative learning methods in the first seven sessions of the workshop. 2. Demonstration of cooperative learning methods: After the teachers were familiarized with cooperative learning, the researcher started to model cooperative learning by showing the videotapes of her own teaching in college. In addition to showing the videotapes, the researcher also taught some lessons from the book of Idioms Through Culture Skills (Bennet, 1999), focusing on the four aspects of communicative competence, i.e. the linguistic, sociolinguistic, discourse, and strategic competences. The methods of TGT, Inside-Outside Circle, and Mountain Climbing Chart were utilized in the researcher’s demonstration. There were four sessions of demonstration. 3. Peer teaching: The peer teaching started on the 12 th sessions of the 180 workshop. The participants were grouped to peer teach. Each group was scheduled to teach one lesson of their own choice from the book Idioms Through Cultural Skills (Bennet, 1999). Through the peer teaching, the participants were encouraged to adopt or adapt the methods that they had learned from the workshop. Peer evaluation was carried out after the presentation. The researcher also provided feedback and suggestions for their future presentation. Followed by the one-year workshop, there was a one-semester classroom observation, through which peer coach and expert coach were available to make the teachers’ learning solid. As the teachers had opportunities to observe and coach each other, they could provide essential support to ensure that they continued to acquire the methods and developed new strategies tailored to their own situations. During the stage of classroom observation, an atmosphere of collegial trust and candor was developed through (1) clear observation criteria, (2) reciprocal, focused, non-evaluative classroom observation, and (3) prompt constructive feedback on those observations (Brown, 2001). |
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