Cooperative Learning
Cooperative Learning
Alexandre Dumas
Dedicated teachers are always looking for better ideas for meeting the
many challenges they face in school, especially as diversity increases
in the student population. Cooperative learning methods provide
teachers with effective ways to respond to diverse students by
promoting academic achievement and cross-cultural understanding.
(See Diversity for more about the role of culture and language in
education.)
Teachers are not alone in coping with the culture shock they may feel
as they recognize the diversity among their students. Students
themselves may lack confidence in responding to students from
diverse backgrounds. Immigrant students, thrust into U.S. classrooms
for the first time, and native English speakers, unable to communicate
with newcomers in their school and unaware of how to respond to the
differences they see, can become alienated from one another. Students
and teachers need strategies for helping them turn diversity into a
positive force for developing themselves as individuals, as well as
supporting the growth of others.
This document presents cooperative learning as a powerful educational
approach for helping all students attain content standards and develop
the interpersonal skills needed for succeeding in a multicultural world.
What is provided here is a brief overview of cooperative learning. Other
selected resources are presented at the end of this document.
becomes greater than the sum of its parts. For cooperative groups to
be effective, members should engage in teambuilding activities and
other tasks that deal explicitly with the development of social skills
needed for effective teamwork. Members should also engage in group
processing activities in which they discuss the interpersonal skills that
influence their effectiveness in working together.
Back to Top
Interdependence
The essence of the cooperative group is the development and maintenance of positive
interdependence among team members. A sense of interconnectedness can help students
transcend the gender, racial, cultural, linguistic, and other differences they may sense
among themselves. Unfortunately, these differences often are at the root of prejudice and
other interpersonal stress that students experience in school.
Students need access to activities in which they learn to depend on
each other as they ask for and receive help from one another.
Individualistic and competitive teaching methods certainly have their
place in the instructional program, but they should be balanced with
cooperative learning (Johnson and Johnson, 1994).
When students work in cooperative teams in which "all work for one"
and "one works for all," team members receive the emotional and
academic support that helps them persevere against the many
obstacles they face in school. As cooperative norms are established,
students are positively linked to others in the class who will help them
and depend on them for completing shared tasks. By becoming
knowers as well as learners in a supportive atmosphere, English
learners can establish more equal status relationships with their peers.
When the environment becomes more equitable, students are better
able to participate based on their actual, rather than their perceived
knowledge and abilities. Teamwork, fostered by positive
interdependence among the members, helps students learn valuable
interpersonal skills that will benefit them socially and vocationally.
Back to Top
Interaction
Academic and language learning requires that students have opportunities to comprehend
what they hear and read as well as express themselves in meaningful tasks (McGroarty,
1993). Cooperative learning creates natural, interactive contexts in which students have
authentic reasons for listening to one another, asking questions, clarifying issues, and restating points of view.
Cooperative groups increase opportunities for students to produce and
comprehend language and to obtain modeling and feedback from their
peers. Much of the value of cooperative learning lies in the way that
teamwork encourages students to engage in such high-level thinking
skills as analyzing, explaining, synthesizing, and elaborating.
Interactive tasks also naturally stimulate and develop the students'
cognitive, linguistic, and social abilities. Cooperative activities
integrate the acquisition of these skills and create powerful learning
opportunities. Such interactive experiences are particularly valuable
for students who are learning English as a second language, who face
simultaneously the challenges of language acquisition, academic
learning, and social adaptation. By stimulating language input and
output, cooperative strategies provide English learners with natural
settings in which they can derive and express meaning from academic
content (McGroarty, 1993, and Swain, 1985).
Students do not know instinctively how to interact effectively with
others. Social skills, like other skills, should be taught and reinforced.
Teambuilding activities will help students get to know and trust one
another. Other important social skills include accepting and supporting
one another and resolving conflicts constructively. Teachers need to
model positive interpersonal skills, have students practice the skills,
and encourage the students to process how effectively they are
performing the skills. Focusing on social skill development will increase
student achievement and enhance the students' employability,
interpersonal relationships, and general psychological health (Johnson
and Johnson, 1990).
Adapting Cooperative Methods for
Students with Special Needs
Cooperative methods are very flexible and can be adapted for students
with special needs. In diverse language settings, differences in
students' English language proficiencies makes it necessary for
teachers to modify the methods to ensure that English learners can
participate fully with fellow team members. For example, teachers may
ask one member of each team to be a bilingual facilitator who helps
students work together. In addition, activities that focus on social skill
development and teambuilding should be used frequently to facilitate
cross-cultural communication and understanding among team
members.
Achievement
Cooperative learning represents a valuable strategy for helping students attain high
academic standards (Kagan, 1993; Cohen, 1994). After nearly fifty years of research and
scores of studies, there is strong agreement among researchers that cooperative methods
can and usually do have positive effects on student achievement. However, achievement
effects are not seen for all forms of cooperative learning; the effects depend on the
implementation of cooperative learning methods that are characterized by at least two
essential elements: positive interdependence and individual accountability (Slavin, 1990).
Other important elements are described above.
In areas other than achievement, there is even broader consensus
about the effects of cooperative learning. For example, when students
of different racial or ethnic backgrounds work together toward a
common goal, they gain in liking and respect for one another.
Cooperative learning also improves social acceptance of mainstreamed
students with learning disabilities (Slavin, 1990).
Back to Top
Professional Development
Because groupwork dramatically changes the teacher's role, professional development is
vital to the implementation of cooperative learning (Cohen, 1994). To learn and employ
cooperative strategies, teachers need access to extensive professional development that
includes (1) the theory and philosophy of cooperative learning; (2) demonstrations of
cooperative methods; and (3) ongoing coaching and collegial support at the classroom
level. Implementing cooperative approaches is greatly enhanced when teachers' have
opportunities to work together and learn from one other. As teachers observe and coach
each other, they provide essential support to ensure that they continue to acquire the
methods and develop new strategies tailored to their own situations. To facilitate such a
coaching model, the "Coaching Instrument for Cooperative Learning" is available in
Holt, 1993, pp. 183-187.
Conclusion
Cooperative learning methods hold great promise for accelerating students' attainment of
high academic standards and the development of the knowledge and abilities necessary
for thriving in a multicultural world. However, like other innovations, cooperative
learning approaches need to be tailored to the cultural and linguistic context in which
they are used. Designed and implemented by teachers who are loyal to the key elements
of cooperative learning and dedicated to regarding diversity as a resource, cooperative
approaches can create supportive environments for that enable students to succeed
academically, enhance their employability, and improve their interpersonal relationships.
Back to Top
References
Cohen, Elizabeth G. Designing Groupwork: Strategies for the Heterogeneous Classroom.
New York: Teachers College Press, 1994.
Holt, Daniel D. "Cooperative Learning for Students from Diverse
Language Backgrounds: An Introduction," in Cooperative Learning: A
Response to Linguistic and Cultural Diversity. Edited by Daniel D. Holt.
McHenry, Ill. and Washington, D.C.: Delta Systems and Center for
Applied Linguistics, 1993, pp. 1-8. (Note: As this publication was
developed with public funds, authors receive no compensation from
sales.)
Johnson, David W. and Roger T. Johnson. "Social Skills for Successful
Group Work," Educational Leadership, Vol. 47, No. 4, December,
1989/January, 1990, pp. 29-33. (Publication of the Association of
Supervision and Curriculum Development.)
Resources
Beyond Language: Social and Cultural Factors in Schooling Language Minority
Students, Los Angeles, Calif.: Evaluation, Dissemination and Assistance Center, 1986.
An analysis of the role of social and cultural factors in influencing students' educational
experiences. In addition to Spencer Kagan, who wrote the the chapter on cooperative
learning, authors include Carlos Cortes, John Ogbu, Shirley Brice Heath, Mary
McGroarty, Stanley Sue, and others. For ordering information, call (323) 343-4870.
Center for Research on the Education of Students Placed at
Risk. Research on cooperative learning contained in reports published
by this center, a collaborative effort of Johns Hopkins University and
Howard University.