| A group of students head to
the vacant lot just beyond the play ground with nets, jars, and paper
bags. Their task -- collect beetles for further study.
Returning from the out doors, students distribute themselves at
tables in the classroom. Group members compare specimens and
select the best specimen for their research project.
One group member begins to use appropriate preservation techniques to
ready the beetle for mounting on a display board.
Another group member measures and writes a detailed description
of the beetle.
One group member sits down at a computer station
to complete an Internet search of the beetle's name and critical
attributes.
After collecting information, measurements, and
preparing the beetle for display, the group members negotiate on how to
best communicate their findings to the class.
Students follow a Research Storyboard for shaping their
project. They will either formulate an hypothesis, develop a
thematic statement, or pose a research question to delineate their next
step.
As students begin to format their project, they
deliberate on the best form of communication and presentation for the
final artifact.
All information is discussed and a group member
journals the activities, questions, research resources, facilitator
directions, and decision process as it evolves.
Students use....
Research
Skills:
 | Develop a
thesis, hypothesis, or research question
or problem (Why or what are you researching?)
|
 | Deploy
efficient & effective Research
 | i.e.
Internet keyword searches (using Boolean logic --
"this" + "that", "this" not
"that", "this" or "that") that
appropriately narrows the topic to fit research objective |
|
 | Evaluate
sources
of information for relevance, plausibility, and accuracy
|
 | Categorize
information
(pros, cons, point-of-view, etc.) |
 | Prioritize
information
that will be included into report, project, or artifact
|
 | Synthesize
information
into meaningful and manageable "chunks"
|
 | Extend
the "global" knowledge database
by using current information |
 | Negotiate
& Reflect with team members plan content, presentation format, method (process) and materials for
your report, presentation, or solution. |
 | Build the
artifact,
product, report, or solution |
 | Present,
publish, produce the artifact,
product, report, or solution. (Incorporate appropriate
communication, multimedia, video, etc. skills)
|
 | Defend
the project,
artifact, product or solution. Be able to explain what was
learned, what was chosen & what was left out, what sources were
used and what sources were ignored and why. Be able to explain
what other questions arose while this project was being drafted.
Be able to explore other avenues that should now be addressed. |
Collaborative
Learning increases the effectiveness of classroom efforts in:
 | Developing
Social Skills |
 | Increasing
the effectiveness of learning, recall, and application |
 | Develops
marketable skills |
PIGS
Positive
Interdependence: Students perceive that they can reach their goals only if
the other students in their group reach their goals as well.
Individual
accountability: Students perceive that they will each b held
accountable for some aspect of the learning.
Group
Processing: Members of the group are encouraged to reflect on how
well their group is performing.
Social
Skills: Students must be taught the basic interpersonal skills
necessary to work in groups. These can not simply be assumed!

|
PARENT
& ELEMENTARY SCHOOL INVOLVEMENT

Collaborative
Learning: Issues for Research

Collaborating
in MATH
Computer
Assisted Collaborative Learning
Learning
Through Discussion--Forum on C.L.
A
Graphical Chat Environment to Promote Collaborative Learning and Problem
Solving
Collaborative
Learning with new Paradigms and Conceptual Mapping Tools
Collaborative
Learning basis for Constructivism
Essential
Tools for Starting
 |
One-stay,
three-stray: One student remains behind to discuss the groups
efforts with other "strayers", while three students move
on to learn new information from other groups.
This is also known as Jigsaw:
Learners have a home-base group. Individual members of the
base group go off to |
 |
KeyPals:
Corresponding with other groups through email (http://www.epals.com) |
 |
Cross-Classroom
Projects: Corresponding with other classes on the same campus |
 |
On-line
Experts: Discussing questions with Internet Scientists or Experts (http://quest.arc.nasa.gov)
(http://www.kidlink.org/KIDPROJ/) |
 |
Publishing
work on the WWW and using "global" evaluators to discuss
student work |
 |
Top
10 Collaborative Internet Tools |
|