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Cooperative Learning Methods
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- Table 2.2 Modern Methods of Cooperative Learning
2.5 Cooperative Learning Methods
According to Johnson, Johnson, and Stanne (2000), cooperative learning was actually a generic term that refers to numerous methods for organizing and conducting classroom instruction. Almost any teacher could find a way to use cooperative learning that was congruent with his or her philosophies and practices. So many teachers use cooperative learning in so many different ways that the list of methods was impossibly exhaustive in this literature review. Out of the many methods that different teachers or researchers have developed, as Johnson, Johnson and Stanne (2000) stated, the following ten had received the most attention, as shown in Table 2.2. Table 2.2 Modern Methods of Cooperative Learning Researcher-Developer Date Method Johnson & Johnson Mid 1970s Learning Together (LT) DeVries & Edwards Early 1970s Teams-Games-Tournaments (TGT) Sharan & Sharan Mid 1970s Group Investigation (GI) Johnson & Johnson Mid 1970s Constructive Controversy Aronson & Associates Late 1970s Jigsaw Procedure Slavin & Associates Late 1970s Student Teams Achievement Divisions (STAD) Cohen Early 1980s Complex Instruction Slavin & Associates Early 1980s Team Assisted Instruction (TAI) Kagan Mid 1980s Cooperative Learning Structures Stevens, Slavin, & Associates Late 1980s Cooperative Integrated Reading & Composition (CIRC) Kagan Early 1990s Three-Step Interview Kagan Late 1980s Inside-Outside Circle (Adapted from Johnson, Johnson, & Stanne, 2000) The methods used in the experimental group in this study included Three-Step Interview (Kagan, 1993), Talk-Pair (adapted from Think-Pair-Share, Kagan, 1993), Inside-Outside Circle (adapted from Kagan, 1989), Learning Together (Johnson & Johnson, 1970s), and Students Teams-Achievement Divisions (Slavin, 1977). Each 36 of these methods employed in this study would be discussed in the following sections. 2.5.1 Three-Step Interview Three-step interviews (Kagan, 1993) could be used as an icebreaker for team members to get to know one another or can be used to get to know concepts in depth, by assigning roles to students. In Three-Step Interview, student A would interview B for the specified number of minutes, listening attentively and asking probing questions (Kagan, 1993). At a signal, students reversed roles and then B interviewed A for the same number of minutes. At another signal, each pair turned to another pair, forming a group of four. Each member of the group introduced his or her Download 453.46 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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