The process of active learning is illustrated by a Chinese proverb


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By Svitlana Babak



School of Moryntsi

Korsun-Shevchenkivskiy district

Cherkasy region

2014


 

 

The process of active 



learning 

is illustrated

 by a Chinese proverb: 

Tell me, and I’ll forget.

Show me, and I’ll remember.

Involve me, and I’ll learn. 


 

 

There are lots of characteristics of 



learner-centred instruction:

  students  are  active  participants  in  their 



learning



  they  themselves  make  decisions  about  what 



they will learn and how



 they construct new knowledge and skills 



 students work in collaboration 



 students monitor their own learning. 




 

 

Why are learner-centered 



activities necessary? 


 

 

Learner-centered learning works best 



through pair and group work. 

“Students have equal responsibility for performing a 

task and find it difficult to “hide” in a small group” 

H. D. Brown


 

 

Five basic principles of group work 



Five basic principles of group work 

Equal

participation

Group

processing

Face-to-face 

interaction

Positive

interdependence

Individual 

accountability

Face-to-face 

interaction

Individual 

accountability

Positive

interdependence

Face-to-face 

interaction

Individual 

accountability

Equal

participation

Positive

interdependence

Face-to-face 

interaction

Individual 

accountability

Group


processing

Equal


participation

Positive


interdependence

Face-to-face 

interaction

Individual 

accountability



 

 

Some ways to create the feeling are to:



 

 establish mutual goals

 give joined rewards

 provide a task structure that involves a division 

of labor

 provide shared materials and information 

 assign roles

Positive interdependence



 

 

Can be achieved through:

 use of structures for achievement (mini-

topics numbered expert roles)

 participations (summery, reflection)

 listening (sharing ideas)

 a structure that allows for individual 

evaluations. 



Individual accountability 


 

 

Can be accomplished by allocating



 turns or timed contributions, 

or division of labor. 



Equal participation


 

 

When students interact 



with other students

it maximizes student involvement and aids

in concept development. 

For interaction to be productive,

students must learn 

communication skills and 

key vocabulary.   

Face-to-face interaction 



 

 

Students need time and procedures 



to analyze how well their group is 

functioning. 



Group processing 


 

 

Series of activities



Jigsaw activities

1.Divide  a  text  into  three  or  four  parts.  Also  divide 

your class into 3 or 4 groups according to the parts 

of the text. Assign each group a section of a text. 

2.Students  in  their  groups  read  their  section  and 

discus  what  they  understood.  In  every  group  they 

know only 1 part of the text.

3.Then students write out 2 questions to their part of 

the text.



 

 

4.Form new groups of students so that in new groups 



there is one representative from all previous 

groups. Now everyone in every group can learn 

the whole contents of the text from each other. 

5.They answer each other questions.

6.At the end of the activity give a quiz to check my 

students’ knowledge of the text. In this way I 

motivate my students to work hard in the groups. 



 

 

Personalized name tags/interview

   

Each student receives a blank name tag to be 



completed as directed by the teacher.

1.Students have 5 minutes to fill in their name tags 

with the information listed below. 

          NAME TAG

a)First name, last name.

b)Three hobbies, interests; career goals.

c)Three favorite foods; two favorite classes. 



 

 

3. Student 1 uses the completed name tag to 



introduce himself or herself to Student 2 while 

Student 3 does the same with Student 4. Reverse 

the procedure, 2 to 1 and 4 to 3. Allow one minute 

for each introduction. Time it carefully.

4. Student 1 introduces Student 2 to the whole team 

using his or her name tag. Student 2 introduces 

Student 1 to the whole team.  Student 3 introduces 

Student 4 and Student 4 introduces Student 3. 

Again, provide one minute for each introduction. 



 

 

1.The teacher assigns roles to each team member 



(e.g. writer, reporter, time keeper, facilitator).  

2.Team members have 5 minutes to discuss things 

that they all have in common such as family 

members, pets, interests, travel, and so on. 

3.Teams discuss their commonalities and choose 

the 5 most interesting ones. The writer lists the 

team’s 5 commonalities on a shit of paper. 

4.Teams share the things they have in common 

with other teams or with the whole class. 

5. The teacher posts commonalities on the board 

with each teams name so that others may read 

them later. 



Commonalities


 

 

1.Students brainstorms activities they could do on a 



Saturday night. This might be done as a webbing 

activity. In a webbing activity, the central idea 

takes the form of a verb with lines representing 

related ideas emanating  from it and from each 

other.

2.Each team compares its list of activities with other 



teams or with the entire class.

Problem Solving Activity 


 

 

3.The teacher announces that each team has 



$100.00 to spend on Saturday night. Team 

members must decide what they will do together to 

spend the money. Team members discuss their 

ideas and the writer lists planed activities and cost 

of each.

4.The reporter on each team shares the decisions of 

its team with the rest of the class. This may be 

done simultaneously by having the reporters list 

projected budgets on the blackboard. 

5.Team activities can be posted on notice boards. 




 

 

K stands for What you/we know about 



something.

W – What you/we want to know about something. 

L – What have you/we learned about something. 

In this activity, students are given a topic. They make 

a table consisting of three columns  KWL. They list 

what they already know about a given topic and write 

these facts in column K(know). In the second column 

W they write what they would like to learn or learn 

more about. A learning resource or activity is then 

performed. It can be a text to read, or a film to watch, 

acts. Following this learning, the students list what 

they have learned in the third column L. 



KWL Activity 


 

 

After completing a KWL activity, 



students will:

pre-assess their knowledge of a given topic



explore new knowledge of this topic

articulate new knowledge of the topic




 

 

Summary

All  these  activities  help  students  build 



their knowledge of the language. 

They naturally stimulate and develop the 



students’  cognitive,  linguistic  and  social 

abilities. 

Team  work  encourages  students  to 



engage  in  such  high-level  thinking  skills  as 

analyzing,  explaining,  synthesizing,  and 

elaborating. 



 

 

1. Brown H.D. Teaching by Principles: An Interactive Approach to 



Language Pedagogy. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 

1994.


2. Cohen, Elizabeth G. Designing Groupwork: Strategies for the 

Heterogeneus Classroom. New York: Teachers College Press, 

1994.

3. Johnson D.W., Johnson R., and Holubec E. Circles of Learning. 



Cooperation in the Classroom. Third Edition. Edina, Minn: 

Interaction Book Company, 1990.

4.  Johnson, David W. and Roger T. Johnson. Learning Together 

and Alone. Cooperative, Competitive, and Individualistic 

Learning, Fourth Edition. Edina, Minn: Interaction Book 

Company, 1994.

5. Sharan, S., Sharan Y. Small-Group Teaching. Englewood 

Cliffts, NJ: Technology Publications, 1976. 

6. Slavin, R. E. Cooperative Learning: Theory, Research, practice. 

Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1990. 



References

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