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What Is the Collaborative Classroom?
M.B. Tinzmann, B.F. Jones, T.F. Fennimore, J. Bakker, C. Fine, and J. Pierce
NCREL, Oak Brook, 1990
New Learning and Thinking Curricula Require Collaboration
In Guidebook 1, we explored a "new" vision of learning and suggested
four characteristics of successful learners: They are knowledgeable, self-determined
strategic, and empathetic thinkers. Research indicates successful learning also involves
an interaction of the learner, the materials, the teacher, and the context. Applying this
research, new guidelines in the major content areas stress thinking. Guidebook 2
describes these new guidelines and provides four characteristics of "a thinking
curriculum" that cut across content areas. The chief characteristic of a thinking
curriculum is the dual agenda of content and process for all students. Characteristics
that derive from this agenda include in-depth learning; involving students in real-world,
relevant tasks; engaging students in holistic tasks from kindergarten through high school;
and utilizing students' prior knowledge.
Effective communication and collaboration are essential to becoming a successful
learner. It is primarily through dialogue and examining different perspectives that
students become knowledgeable, strategic, self-determined, and empathetic. Moreover,
involving students in real-world tasks and linking new information to prior knowledge
requires effective communication and collaboration among teachers, students, and others.
Indeed, it is through dialogue and interaction that curriculum objectives come alive.
Collaborative learning affords students enormous advantages not available from more
traditional instruction because a group--whether it be the whole class or a learning group
within the class--can accomplish meaningful learning and solve problems better than any
individual can alone.
This focus on the collective knowledge and thinking of the group changes the roles of
students and teachers and the way they interact in the classroom. Significantly, a
groundswell of interest exists among practitioners to involve students in collaboration in
classrooms at all grade levels.
The purpose of this GuideBook is to elaborate what classroom collaboration means
so that this grass-roots movement can continue to grow and flourish. We will describe
characteristics of these classrooms and student and teacher roles, summarize relevant
research, address some issues related to changing instruction, and give examples of a
variety of teaching methods and practices that embody these characteristics.
Characteristics of a Collaborative Classroom
Collaborative classrooms seem to have four general characteristics. The first two
capture changing relationships between teachers and students. The third characterizes
teachers' new approaches to instruction. The fourth addresses the composition of a
collaborative classroom.
1. Shared knowledge among teachers and students
In traditional classrooms, the dominant metaphor for teaching is the teacher as
information giver; knowledge flows only one way from teacher to student. In contrast, the
metaphor for collaborative classrooms is shared knowledge. The teacher has vital knowledge
about content, skills, and instruction, and still provides that information to students.
However, collaborative teachers also value and build upon the knowledge, personal
experiences, language, strategies, and culture that students bring to the learning
situation.
Consider a lesson on insect-eating plants, for example. Few students, and perhaps few
teachers, are likely to have direct knowledge about such plants. Thus, when those students
who do have relevant experiences are given an opportunity to share them, the whole class
is enriched. Moreover, when students see that their experiences and knowledge are valued,
they are motivated to listen and learn in new ways, and they are more likely to make
important connections between their own learning and "school" learning. They
become empowered. This same phenomenon occurs when the knowledge parents and other
community members have is valued and used within the school.
Additionally, complex thinking about difficult problems, such as world hunger, begs for
multiple ideas about causes, implications, and potential solutions. In fact, nearly all of
the new curricular goals are of this nature--for example, mathematical problem-solving--as
are new requirements to teach topics such as AIDS. They require multiple ways to represent
and solve problems and many perspectives on issues.
2. Shared authority among teachers and students
In collaborative classrooms, teachers share authority with students in very specific
ways. In most traditional classrooms, the teacher is largely, if not exclusively,
responsible for setting goals, designing learning tasks, and assessing what is learned.
Collaborative teachers differ in that they invite students to set specific goals within
the framework of what is being taught, provide options for activities and assignments that
capture different student interests and goals, and encourage students to assess what they
learn. Collaborative teachers encourage students' use of their own knowledge, ensure that
students share their knowledge and their learning strategies, treat each other
respectfully, and focus on high levels of understanding. They help students listen to
diverse opinions, support knowledge claims with evidence, engage in critical and creative
thinking, and participate in open and meaningful dialogue.
Suppose, for example, the students have just read a chapter on colonial America and are
required to prepare a product on the topic. While a more traditional teacher might ask all
students to write a ten-page essay, the collaborative teacher might ask students to define
the product themselves. Some could plan a videotape; some could dramatize events in
colonial America; others could investigate original sources that support or do not support
the textbook chapter and draw comparisons among them; and some could write a ten-page
paper. The point here is twofold: (1) students have opportunities to ask and investigate
questions of personal interest, and (2) they have a voice in the decision-making process.
These opportunities are essential for both self-regulated learning and motivation.
3. Teachers as mediators
As knowledge and authority are shared among teachers and students, the role of the
teacher increasingly emphasizes mediated learning. Successful mediation helps students
connect new information to their experiences and to learning in other areas, helps
students figure out what to do when they are stumped, and helps them learn how to learn.
Above all, the teacher as mediator adjusts the level of information and support so as to
maximize the ability to take responsibility for learning. This characteristic of
collaborative classrooms is so important, we devote a whole section to it below.
4. Heterogeneous groupings of students
The perspectives, experiences, and backgrounds of all students are important for
enriching learning in the classroom. As learning beyond the classroom increasingly
requires understanding diverse perspectives, it is essential to provide students
opportunities to do this in multiple contexts in schools. In collaborative classrooms
where students are engaged in a thinking curriculum, everyone learns from everyone else,
and no student is deprived of this opportunity for making contributions and appreciating
the contributions of others.
Thus, a critical characteristic of collaborative classrooms is that students are not
segregated according to supposed ability, achievement, interests, or any other
characteristic. Segregation seriously weakens collaboration and impoverishes the classroom
by depriving all students of opportunities to learn from and with each other. Students we
might label unsuccessful in a traditional classroom learn from "brighter"
students, but, more importantly, the so-called brighter students have just as much to
learn from their more average peers. Teachers beginning to teach collaboratively often
express delight when they observe the insights revealed by their supposedly weaker
students.
Thus, shared knowledge and authority, mediated learning, and heterogeneous groups of
students are essential characteristics of collaborative classrooms. These characteristics,
which are elaborated below, necessitate new roles for teachers and students that lead to
interactions different from those in more traditional classrooms.
Teacher Roles in a Collaborative Classroom
Across this nation, teachers are defining their roles in terms of mediating learning
through dialogue and collaboration. While mediation has been defined in different ways by
Reuven Feuerstein, Lev Vygotsky and others, we define mediation here as facilitating,
modeling, and coaching. Most teachers engage in these practices from time to time. What is
important here is that these behaviors (1) drive instruction in collaborative classrooms,
and (2) have specific purposes in collaborative contexts.
Facilitator Facilitating involves creating rich environments and activities for
linking new information to prior knowledge, providing opportunities for collaborative work
and problem solving, and offering students a multiplicity of authentic learning tasks.
This may first involve attention to the physical environment. For example, teachers move
desks so that all students can see each other, thus establishing a setting that promotes
true discussion. Teacher may also wish to move their desks from the front of the room to a
less prominent space.
Additionally, teachers may structure the resources in the classroom to provide a
diversity of genres and perspectives, to use and build upon cultural artifacts from the
students' homes and communities, and to organize various learning activities. Thus, a
collaborative classroom often has a multiplicity of projects or activity centers using
everyday objects for representing numerical information in meaningful ways and for
conducting experiments that solve real problems. These classrooms also boast a rich
variety of magazines, journals, newspapers, audiotapes, and videos which allow students to
experience and use diverse media for communicating ideas. In Video Conference 1, for
example, students were shown investigating science concepts using everyday materials, such
as paper and straw, found in their neighborhoods.
Facilitating in collaborative classrooms also involves people. Inside the classroom,
students are organized into heterogeneous groups with roles such as Team Leader,
Encourager, Reteller, Recorder, and Spokesperson. (See Elizabeth Cohen's work for further
elaboration.) Additionally, collaborative teachers work to involve parents and community
members. Examples are: A workshop center in New York invites parents to come and
experience the thinking processes involved in conducting experiments using everyday
objects so that they can provide such learning experiences at home (Video Conference 1);
teachers in Tucson involve parents and the community in academic tasks their students
engage in (Video Conference 3), and rural students in Colorado perform community services
such as producing a local newspaper (Video Conference 5).
Another way that teachers facilitate collaborative learning is to establish classrooms
with diverse and flexible social structures that promote the sort of classroom behavior
they deem appropriate for communication and collaboration among students. These structures
are rules and standards of behaviors, fulfilling several functions in group interaction,
and influencing group attitudes. Particular rules depend, of course, on the classroom
context. Thus, teachers often develop them collaboratively with students and review or
change them as needed. Examples of rules are giving all members a chance to participate,
valuing others' comments, and arguing against (or for) ideas rather than people. Examples
of group functions are: asking for information, clarifying, summarizing, encouraging, and
relieving tension. To facilitate high quality group interaction, teachers may need to
teach, and students may need to practice, rules and functions for group interaction.
Finally, teachers facilitate collaborative learning by creating learning tasks that
encourage diversity, but which aim at high standards of performance for all students.
These tasks involve students in high-level thought processes such as decision making and
problem solving that are best accomplished in collaboration. These tasks enable students
to make connections to real-world objects, events, and situations in their own and an
expanded world, and tap their diverse perspectives and experiences. Learning tasks foster
students' confidence and at the same time, are appropriately challenging.
Model Modeling has been emphasized by many local and state
guidelines as sharing one's thinking and demonstrating or explaining something. However,
in collaborative classrooms, modeling serves to share with students not only what one is
thinking about the content to be learned, but also the process of communication and
collaborative learning. Modeling may involve thinking aloud (sharing thoughts about
something) or demonstrating (showing students how to do something in a step-by-step
fashion).
In terms of content, teachers might verbalize the thinking processes they use to make a
prediction about a scientific experiment, to summarize ideas in a passage, to figure out
the meaning of an unfamiliar word, to represent and solve a problem, to organize
complicated information, and so on. Just as important, they would also think aloud about
their doubts and uncertainties. This type of metacognitive thinking and thinking aloud
when things do not go smoothly is invaluable in helping students understand that learning
requires effort and is often difficult for people.
With respect to group process, teachers may share their thinking about the various
roles, rules, and relationships in collaborative classrooms. Consider leadership, for
example. A teacher might model what he or she thinks about such questions as how to manage
the group's time or how to achieve consensus. Similarly, showing students how to think
through tough group situations and problems of communication is as invaluable as modeling
how to plan an approach to an academic problem, monitoring its progress, and assessing
what was learned.
A major challenge in mediating learning is to determine when it is appropriate to model
by thinking aloud and when it is useful to model by demonstrating. If a teacher is certain
that students have little experience with, say, a mathematical procedure, then it may be
appropriate to demonstrate it before students engage in a learning task. (This is not to
say that the teacher assumes or states that there is only one way to perform the
procedure. It is also important to allow for individual variations in application.) If, on
the other hand, the teacher believes students can come up with the procedure themselves,
then he or she might elect to ask the students to model how they solved the problem;
alternatively the teacher could give students hints or cues. (See below.)
Coach Coaching involves giving hints or cues, providing feedback, redirecting students'
efforts, and helping them use a strategy. A major principle of coaching is to provide the
right amount of help when students need it--neither too much nor too little so that
students retain as much responsibility as possible for their own learning.
For example, a collaborative group of junior high students worked on the economic
development of several nations. They accumulated a lot of information about the countries
and decided that the best way to present it was to compare the countries. But they were
stymied as to how to organize the information so they could write about it in a paper, the
product they chose to produce. Their teacher hinted that they use a matrix--a graphic
organizer they had learned--to organize their information. When the group finished the
matrix, the teacher gave them feedback. In so doing, he did not tell them it was right or
wrong, but asked questions that helped them verbalize their reasons for completing the
matrix as they did. The principle the teacher followed was to coach enough so that
students could continue to learn by drawing on the ideas of other group members.
Student Roles in a Collaborative Classroom
Students also assume new roles in the collaborative classroom. Their major roles are
collaborator and active participator. It is useful to think how these new roles influence
the processes and activities students conduct before, during, and after learning. For
example, before learning, students set goals and plan learning tasks; during learning,
they work together to accomplish tasks and monitor their progress; and after learning,
they assess their performance and plan for future learning. As mediator, the teacher helps
students fulfill their new roles.
Goal setting Students prepare for learning in many ways. Especially important is
goal setting, a critical process that helps guide many other before-, during-, and and
after-learning activities. Although teachers still set goals for students, they often
provide students with choices. When students collaborate, they should talk about their
goals. For example, one teacher asked students to set goals for a unit on garbage. In one
group, a student wanted to find out if garbage is a problem, another wanted to know what
happens to garbage, a third wanted to know what is being done to solve the problem of
garbage. The fourth member could not think of a goal, but agreed that the first three were
important and adopted them. These students became more actively involved in the unit after
their discussion about goals, and at the end of the unit, could better evaluate whether
they had attained them.
Designing Learning Tasks and Monitoring While teachers plan general learning
tasks, for example, to produce a product to illustrate a concept, historical sequence,
personal experience, and so on, students assume much more responsibility in a
collaborative classroom for planning their own learning activities. Ideally, these plans
derive in part from goals students set for themselves. Thoughtful planning by the teacher
ensures that students can work together to attain their own goals and capitalize on their
own abilities, knowledge, and strategies within the parameters set by the teacher.
Students are more likely to engage in these tasks with more purpose and interest than in
traditional classrooms.
Self-regulated learning is important in collaborative classrooms. Students learn to
take responsibility for monitoring, adjusting, self-questioning, and questioning each
other. Such self-regulating activities are critical for students to learn today, and they
are much better learned within a group that shares responsibility for learning. Monitoring
is checking one's progress toward goals. Adjusting refers to changes students make, based
on monitoring, in what they are doing to reach their goals. For example, a group of
students decided that the sources of information on the Civil War they selected initially
were not as useful as they had hoped, so they selected new materials. Another group judged
that the paper they had planned to write would not accomplish what they thought it would
the way they had organized it, so they planned a new paper.
Students can further develop their self-regulating abilities when each group shares its
ideas with other groups and gets feedback from them. For example, in the first video
conference, elementary students were shown collaborating in small groups to define and
represent math problems. Working in small groups, the children determined what was being
asked in story problems and thought of ways to solve the problems. Then each group shared
its ideas with the whole class. Members of the class commented on the ideas. As students
developed problem-solving skills with feedback from other groups, they learned more about
regulating their own learning which they could use in the future.
Assessment While teachers have assumed the primary responsibility for assessing
students' performance in the past, collaborative classrooms view assessment much more
broadly. That is, a major goal is to guide students from the earliest school years to
evaluate their own learning. Thus, a new responsibility is self-assessment, a capability
that is fostered as students assess group work.
Self-assessment is intimately related to ongoing monitoring of one's progress toward
achievement of learning goals. In a collaborative classroom, assessment means more than
just assigning a grade. It means evaluating whether one has learned what one intended to
learn, the effectiveness of learning strategies, the quality of products and decisions
about which products reflect one's best work, the usefulness of the materials used in a
task, and whether future learning is needed and how that learning might be realized.
Collaborative classrooms are natural places in which to learn self-assessment. And
because decisions about materials and group performance are shared, students feel more
free to express doubts, feelings of success, remaining questions, and uncertainties than
when they are evaluated only by a teacher. Furthermore, the sense of cooperation (as
opposed to competition) that is fostered in collaborative work makes assessment less
threatening than in a more traditional assessment situation. Ideally, students learn to
evaluate their own learning from their experiences with group evaluation.
Interactions in a Collaborative Classroom
The critical role of dialogue in collaborative classrooms has been stressed throughout
this Guidebook The collaborative classroom is alive with two-way communication. A
major mode of communication is dialogue, which in a collaborative classroom is thinking
made public. A major goal for teachers is to maintain this dialogue among students.
Consider examples of interactions in collaborative groups. Members discuss their
approaches to solving a math problem, explain their reasoning, and defend their work.
Hearing one student's logic prompts the other students to consider an alternative
interpretation. Students are thus challenged to re-examine their own reasoning. When three
students in a group ask a fourth student to explain and support her ideas, that is, to
make her thinking public, she frequently examines and develops her concepts for herself as
she talks. When one student has an insight about how to solve a difficult problem, the
others in the group learn how to use a new thinking strategy sooner than if they had
worked on their own. Thus, students engaged in interaction often exceed what they can
accomplish by working independently.
Collaborative teachers maintain the same sort of high-level talk and interaction when a
whole class engages in discussion. They avoid recitation, which consists primarily of
reviewing, drilling, and quizzing; i.e., asking questions to which the answer is known by
the teacher and there is only one right answer. In true discussion, students talk to each
other as well as to the teacher, entertain a variety of points of view, and grapple with
questions that have no right or wrong answers. Sometimes both students and the teacher
change their minds about an idea. In sum, interactions in whole group discussion mirror
what goes on in small groups.
Still a third way interactions differ in collaborative classrooms has been suggested
above. Teachers, in their new roles as mediators, spend more time in true interactions
with students. They guide students' search for information and help them share their own
knowledge. They move from group to group, modeling a learning strategy for one group,
engaging in discussion with another, giving feedback to still another.
Challenges and Conflicts
When teachers and schools move from traditional to collaborative instruction, several
important issues are likely to arise. They are important concerns for teachers,
administrators, and parents.
Classroom Control Collaborative classrooms tend to be noisier than traditional
classrooms. This is a legitimate issue for a number of people. Some teachers believe that
noisy classrooms indicate lack of discipline or teacher control. In such situations, they
argue, students cannot learn.
Earlier in this essay we stressed that collaborative classrooms do not lack structure.
Indeed, structure becomes critical. Students need opportunities to move about, talk, ask
questions, and so on. Thus, we argue that the noise in a smoothly running collaborative
classroom indicates that active learning is going on. However, students must be taught the
parameters within which they make their choices. Rules and standards must be stressed from
the beginning, probably before any collaboration is initiated, and reviewed throughout a
school year.
Preparation Time for Collaborative Learning Teachers and administrators may
believe that new lesson plans must be formed for these classrooms. To a certain extent,
they are correct. But many teachers already have created engaging units and activities
that are easily implemented in a collaborative classroom. Furthermore, teachers can begin
slowly, making changes in one subject area or
unit within a subject area, probably one they are already very comfortable teaching,
and then add other subjects and units. Teachers can also share their plans with each
other. Indeed, if we expect students to collaborate, we should encourage teachers to do
the same! Principals and curriculum specialists can also collaborate with teachers to plan
effective segments of instruction. Moreover, there is a tradeoff between the extra
planning time needed and benefits such as less time correcting lessons, increased student
motivation, and fewer attendance and discipline problems.
Individual Differences Among Students We have touched on this concern in the
section on heterogeneous grouping. Nevertheless, many people will still doubt that
individual differences can be better addressed in collaborative classrooms than in
traditional classrooms with homogeneous grouping.
A major question people have concerns the advantage collaboration affords gifted or
high-achieving students. There are two tough issues here. First, many teachers do not
believe that low-achieving students have much to contribute to the learning situation; in
effect, that they have no prior experiences or knowledge of value. Second, teachers worry
that high-achieving students will be held back.
In response to the first issue, many collaborative teachers have expressed surprise
when seemingly less-able students had insights and ideas that went way beyond what
teachers expected. Further, if each student contributes something, the pool of collective
knowledge will indeed be rich. In answer to the second concern, data suggest that
high-achieving students gain much from their exposure to diverse experiences and also from
peer tutoring (e.g., Johnson and Johnson, 1989). Also, students who may be high achieving
in one area may need help in other areas.
Teachers and others also wonder whether shy students can fully participate in a
classroom that depends so much on dialogue. We suggest that these students might feel more
comfortable talking in small groups that share responsibility for learning. Furthermore,
interaction between learners can happen in ways other than oral dialogue, for example,
writing and art.
A related concern is that many schools are structured homogeneously so that an
individual teacher cannot form heterogeneous groups without involving changes in the
entire school. A whole class of "low" readers are taught by one teacher,
"average" by another. High school tracks are even more systematically
entrenched. Clearly, these practices are not conducive to collaborative learning and
require system-wide restructuring. Individual teachers or groups of teachers can initiate
dialogue on the problem, however.
Individual Responsibility for Learning This concern is a difficult one to solve
unless major changes in other areas of schooling are also undertaken. Students are used to
being graded for individual work; parents expect to know how their students fare in
school. School staff and state departments depend on traditional assessments. In
collaborative classrooms, it is often difficult to assign individual grades. Some teachers
give group grades, but many students and parents are uncomfortable with these.
Ideally, assessment practices should be changed so that they are consistent with
collaboration, with a new view of learning and with a thinking curriculum. Video
Conference 4 addresses recent research and practice on assessment. In the meantime,
effective ways have been developed whereby individual students can be evaluated in
collaborative classrooms. For example, David Johnson and Roger Johnson, as well as Robert
Slavin, advise making individuals responsible for subtasks in group work and then
determining both group and individual grades.
Conflict of Values Susan Florio-Ruane has observed that many teachers do not
feel comfortable allowing students to initiate dialogue, determine topics, or explore
perspectives other than the teacher's. This reluctance conflicts with the way effective
caregivers teach their children in the home. Florio-Ruane and others, such as Annemarie
Palincsar, have found that teachers often have difficulty helping students construct
meaning, especially linking the new information to the prior knowledge and culture of the
students. In part this is because many teachers believe that their role is to transmit
knowledge; in part it is because they are held accountable for teaching discrete skills.
In one poignant example, a student teacher's concern for grammar and punctuation prevented
her from seeing the sophistication and meaning in what the child was actually
communicating in a book report.
The reluctance people feel when asked to make major changes in the way they do things
is clearly the most serious issue of those discussed here. Hardly a person exists who
eagerly gives up familiar ways of behaving to attempt something that is unknown and is
likely to have many challenges of implementation.
This problem requires leadership, support, and time to address. Staff development needs
to address teachers' concerns. We urge that educators first examine their assumptions
about learning and then consider new curriculum guidelines. There is an intimate
relationship among one's definition of learning, one's view of the content and scope of
curricula, and instructional practices. Examining one's assumptions honestly and
forthrightly, in a supportive group, often spurs educators to change. The
already-convinced must allow time for the less-convinced to reflect and grapple with
implications for the views expressed in this Guidebook They must also accept the
possibility that some educators may not change. We are urging that students be treated
with such respect; we must urge the same respect for adults.
What Is the Research Base for Collaborative Learning?
Vygotskian Theory
Vygotsky, a developmental theorist and researcher who worked in the 1920s and early
'30s, has influenced some of the current research of collaboration among students and
teachers and on the role of cultural learning and schooling. His principal premise is that
human beings are products not only of biology, but also of their human cultures.
Intellectual functioning is the product of our social history, and language is the key
mode by which we learn our cultures and through which we organize our verbal thinking and
regulate our actions. Children learn such higher functioning from interacting with the
adults and other children around them.
Inner Speech Children learn when they engage in activities and dialogue with
others, usually adults or more capable peers. Children gradually internalize this dialogue
so that it becomes inner speech, the means by which they direct their own behavior and
thinking. For example, as adults use language such as, "That piece does not fit
there; let's try it someplace else," children may initially just imitate this
strategy. However, they gradually use it to regulate their own behavior in a variety of
contexts. Eventually, this dialogue becomes internalized as inner speech.
There seems to be a general sequence in the development of speech for oneself. When
alone, very young children tend to talk about what they have done after they complete an
activity. Later, they talk as they work. Finally, they talk to themselves before they
engage in an activity. Speech now has assumed a planning function. Later they internalize
this speech. Inner speech--conversations we carry on with ourselves begins as a social
dialogue with other people and is a major mode of learning, planning, and self-regulation.
Various experiments demonstrate this self-regulating function of inner speech. Vygotsky
reasoned that when people are asked to solve difficult problems or to perform difficult
tasks, inner speech will go external, that is, take its more primitive form. In other
words, people frequently talk to themselves when they face a problem. This externalization
of inner speech is often observed in children. When they engage in familiar, simple
activities, they usually do so without talk, but faced with difficult tasks, they may
whisper or talk out loud to themselves. Adults do this, too. When they are faced with
perplexing or unfamiliar tasks such as figuring out how to work a VCR--they often talk
themselves through such tasks.
Vygotsky noted that children interacting toward a common goal tend to regulate each
other's actions. Other researchers (e.g., Forman & Cazden, 1986) have observed that
when students work together on complex tasks, they assist each other in much the same way
adults assist children. In such tasks, dialogue consists of mutual regulation. Together,
they can solve difficult problems they cannot solve working independently.
Scaffolding and Development Effective caregivers engage in regulating dialogue
with children almost naturally. A key phenomenon of such interactions is that caregivers
maintain the dialogue just above the level where children can perform activities
independently. As children learn, adults change the nature of their dialogue so that they
continue to support the child but also give the child increasing responsibility for the
task (for example, the adult might say, "Now see if you can find the next piece of
the puzzle yourself."). Jerome Bruner and his colleagues called this scaffolding.
It takes place within a child's zone of proximal development, a level or range in
which a child can perform a task with help. (Piaget refers to this as "teachable
moments" when adults stretch a child's capacity, but stay within what they are
capable of understanding.)
The zone of proximal development, scaffolding, and dialogue are especially useful
concepts or frameworks for school learning. Vygotsky observed that effective teachers plan
and carry out learning activities within children's zones of proximal development, through
dialogue and scaffolding. Florio-Ruane drew five maxims from studies of caregiver-child
interactions that illustrate these points and should characterize school instruction.
1. Assume the child (learner) is competent
2. Know the child (learner)
3. Share an interest in the task at hand with the child (learner)
4. Follow the child's (learner's) lead
5. Capitalize on uncertainty
Very few teachers have the luxury of teaching children on a one-to-one basis.
Fortunately, we now know that tutoring is not, in fact, the only--or even the best--way
for students to learn in most situations. Dialogue, scaffolding, and working in one's zone
of proximal development can be accomplished in collaborative classrooms, and are being
accomplished in many classrooms today.
Connecting school learning to everyday life Vygotsky also provides us with a
framework for thinking about an important function of teaching and the multicultural
perspective. His research suggests that school learning enables students to connect their
"everyday concepts" to "scientific concepts." In other words, schools
help students draw generalizations and construct meaning from their own experiences,
knowledge, and strategies. Knowledge learned in the community and knowledge gained from
school are both valuable. Neither can be ignored if students are to engage in meaningful
learning.
Effective teachers help students make these connections by scaffolding and dialogue. In
fact, these are the essence of mediating. Teachers plan learning activities at points
where students are challenged. Teachers plan activities and experiments that build on the
language of students' everyday lives through familiar examples and behaviors, analogies
and metaphors, and the use of commonly found materials. Teachers demonstrate, do parts of
the task students cannot do, work collaboratively with students where they need help, and
release responsibility to students when they can perform the task independently.
Other Research
A number of researchers in recent years have demonstrated the high degree of learning
possible when students can collaborate in learning tasks and when they use their own
knowledge as a foundation for school learning. While there are many that we could cite, we
have chosen three different perspectives here: Luis Moll's work on teachers' use of
successful cultural patterns in Mexican-American families; Annemarie Palincsar's and Anne
Brown's work on scaffolding, dialogue, and reciprocal teaching; and research on
cooperative learning. Later we provide additional research in content area examples.
Luis Moll Moll, an educator, and his colleagues in anthropology, Carlos
Velez-lbanez and James Greenberg, have studied Mexican-American families who have survived
successfully in spite of debilitating circumstances such as poverty and discrimination.
Particular constellations of cultural patterns--strategies if you will-- that value
learning and the transmission of knowledge to children distinguish these families. Moll et
al. argue that schools can draw on the social and cognitive contributions that parents can
make to their children's academic learning.
Moll and his colleagues discovered that Mexican-American households are clustered
according to kinship ties and exchange relationships. These clusters of households develop
rich funds of knowledge that provide information about practices and resources
useful in ensuring the well-being of the households. Each household in the cluster is a
place where expertise in a particular domain can be accessed and used; examples of domains
include repair of vehicles and appliances, plumbing, knowledge of education, herbal
medicine, and first aid. Together, the households form a cluster for the exchange of
information and resources. Often, everyone seems to congregate at one core household.
Families create settings in which children carry out the tasks and chores in the
multiple domains of clustered households. The children's activities have important
intellectual consequences. They observe, question, and assist adults as various tasks are
done. For example, the son may indicate interest in fixing a car by asking questions. The
father takes his cue from the child and then decides whether or not the child is capable
of doing a task; if not, he may suggest a task that the child can accomplish. Even though
the son's help may be minimal, such as helping to put in screws or checking the oil, his
participation in the whole task is encouraged as an essential part of learning. He is
allowed to attempt tasks and to experiment without fear of punishment if he fails. In such
families, learning and questioning are in the hands of the child.
With time children develop expertise as well. They have many opportunities in the
cluster of households to apply what they have learned to tasks of their own design. For
example, the son may have a workplace where there are many "junk" engines that
he can manipulate and with which he can experiment. He may use what he has learned in
observing and assisting his father to rebuild a small engine for a "go-cart" he
is constructing.
Moll and his colleagues are exploring ways of using the community to enrich children's
academic development. To accomplish this, teachers have developed an after-school
laboratory. One teacher created a module on constructing houses which is a theme of great
interest to the students in this teacher's classroom and also one of the most prominent
funds of knowledge found in the students' households. The students started by locating
information on building or construction in the library. As a result of their research,
they built a model house or other structure as homework and wrote reports describing their
research and explaining their construction. To extend this activity, the teacher invited
parents and other community members who were experts to share information on specific
aspects of construction. For example, one parent described his use of construction tools
and how he measured the area and perimeter of his work site. Thus, the teacher was
mobilizing the funds of knowledge in the community to achieve the instructional goals that
she and her students had negotiated together.
The students then took the module one step further. They wanted to consider how they
could combine these individual structures to form a community. This task required both
application of their earlier learnings and considerable research. Students went out to do
research, wrote summaries of their findings, and shared the results orally with others in
the class. Thus, students fulfilled their own interests and designed the learning task,
while the teacher facilitated and mediated the learning process and fulfilled her
curricular goal of teaching language arts.
Palincsar and Brown Palincsar and Brown have applied
Vygotsky's theories about dialogue and scaffolding to classroom instruction. They reasoned
that if the natural dialogue that occurs outside of school between a child and adult is so
powerful for promoting learning, it ought to promote learning in school as well. In
particular, they were interested in the planning and self-regulation such dialogue might
foster in learners as well as the insights teachers might gain about their students'
thinking processes as they engage in learning tasks. In addition, dialogue among students
might be especially effective for encouraging collaborative problem solving.
Palincsar and Brown noted that, in contrast to effective adult-child interactions
outside of school, classroom talk does not always encourage students to develop
self-regulation. Thus, a goal of their research was to find ways to make dialogue a major
mode of interaction between teachers and students to encourage self-regulated learning.
Their classroom research revealed increased self-regulation in classrooms where,
subsequent to training, dialogue became a natural activity. Within a joint dialogue,
teachers modeled thinking strategies effectively, apparently in part because students felt
free to express uncertainty, ask questions, and share their knowledge without fear of
criticism. The students gave the teachers clues, so to speak, as to the kind of learning
they were ready for. For example, one student interrupted her teacher when she did not
understand something the teacher was reading. The teacher took this opportunity to model a
clarifying strategy. (It also would have been appropriate to have asked other students to
model the process.) In a number of classrooms, students freely discussed what they knew
about topics, thus revealing persistent misconceptions. Such revelations do not always
happen in more traditional classrooms. Furthermore, teachers helped students change their
misconceptions through continued dialogue.
One particular application was in reading comprehension for students identified as poor
readers. The researchers proposed that poor readers have had impoverished experiences with
reading for meaning in school and concluded that they might learn comprehension strategies
through dialogue. To encourage joint responsibility for dialogue, they asked students to
take increasing responsibility for leading discussion, i.e., to act as the teacher. This
turn-taking is called reciprocal teaching.
The four comprehension strategies that are stressed are: predicting, question
generating, summarizing, and clarifying. The "teacher" leads dialogue about the
text. Predicting activates students' prior knowledge about the text and helps them make
connections between new information and what they already know, and gives them a purpose
for reading. Students also learn to generate questions themselves rather than responding
only to teacher questions. Students collaborate to accomplish summarizing, which
encourages them to integrate what they have learned. Clarifying promotes comprehension
monitoring. Students share their uncertainties about unfamiliar vocabulary, confusing text
passages, and difficult concepts.
Reciprocal teaching has been successful, but only when teachers believe the underlying
assumption that collaboration among teachers and students to construct meaning, solve
problems, and so forth, leads to higher quality learning. Believing this is only a
beginning. Engaging in true dialogue requires practice for both teachers and students.
However, the principles of collaborative dialogue and scaffolding for purposes of
self-regulated learning ought to be effective across many content areas. What may differ,
of course, are the critical specific strategies for different subject areas. For example,
defining problems seems critical in mathematics; judging the reliability of resources
appears important in social studies; and seeking empirical evidence is essential in
science. In fact, Palincsar is currently investigating problem solving in science.
Cooperative Learning Cooperation, a form of collaboration, is "working
together to accomplish shared goals" (Johnson & Johnson, 1989, p. 2). Whereas
collaboration happens in both small and large groups, cooperation refers primarily to
small groups of students working together. Many teachers and whole schools are adopting
cooperation as the primary structure for classroom learning.
Research strongly supports the advantages of cooperative learning over competition and
individualized learning in a wide array of learning tasks. Compared to competitive or
individual work, cooperation leads to higher group and individual achievement,
higher-quality reasoning strategies, more frequent transfer of these from the group to
individual members, more metacognition, and more new ideas and solutions to problems. In
addition, students working in cooperative groups tend to be more intrinsically motivated,
intellectually curious, caring of others, and psychologically healthy. That is not to say
that competition and individual work should not be valued and encouraged, however. For
example, competition is appropriate when there can be only one winner, as in a sports
event, and individualistic effort is appropriate when the goal is personally beneficial
and has no influence on the goals of others.
Unfortunately, simply putting students in groups and letting them go is not enough to
attain the outcomes listed above. Indeed, many teachers and schools have failed to
implement cooperation because they have not understood that cooperative skills must be
learned and practiced, especially since students are used to working on their own in
competition for grades. At least three conditions must prevail, according to Johnson and
Johnson, if cooperation is to work. First, students must see themselves as positively
interdependent so that they take a personal responsibility for working to achieve group
goals. Second, students must engage in considerable face-to-face interaction in which they
help each other, share resources, give constructive feedback to each other, challenge
other members' reasoning and ideas, keep an open mind, act in a trustworthy manner, and
promote a feeling of safety to reduce anxiety of all members. Heterogeneous groups of
students usually accomplish this second condition better than do homogeneous groups.
The third condition, effective group process skills, is necessary for the first two to
prevail. In fact, group skills are never "mastered." Students continually need
to reflect on their interactions and evaluate their cooperative work. For example,
students need to learn skills both for accomplishing tasks, such as summarizing and
consensus taking, and for maintaining group cohesiveness, such as ensuring that everyone
has a chance to speak and compromising.
Some people, such as Slavin, have developed specific cooperative learning methods that
emphasize individual responsibility for group members. While groups still work to achieve
common goals, each member fulfills a particular role or accomplishes an individual task.
Teachers can then assess both group and individual work.
Difficult as it may be to implement cooperative learning, those who have are
enthusiastic. (See the example from Joliet West High School in the next section.) They see
improved learning, more effective social skills, and higher self-esteem for most of their
students. In addition, they recognize that our changing world demands more and more
cooperation among individuals, communities, and nations, and that they are indeed
preparing students for this world.
What Are Other Examples of Collaborative Instruction?
The Kamehameha Early Education Program
Some teachers in Hawaiian classrooms, in cooperation with researchers such as Katherine
Au, have developed a way to teach elementary reading, Experience-Text-Relationship (ETR),
that focuses on comprehension and draws on the strengths of the Hawaiian culture. The
basic element of the ETR method is discussion of a text and topics related to the text,
especially students' own experiences.
Teachers conduct discussion of stories in three phases. First, they guide students to
activate what they know that will help them understand what they read, make predictions,
and set purposes. This is the Experience phase. Next, they read the story with the
students, stopping at appropriate points to discuss the story, determine whether their
predictions were confirmed, and so on. This is the Text phase. After they have finished
the story, teachers guide students to relate ideas from a text to their own experiences.
This is the Relationship phase. Teachers facilitate comprehension, model processes, and
may coach students as they engage in reading and comprehension activities.
Hawaiians engage in "talk story" as a favored way to narrate stories. While
some cultures expect only one person to relate a story, Hawaiians cooperate by taking
turns relating small parts of a story. Encouraging such strategies in reading lessons
promotes collaboration among students and the teacher and involves, indirectly, the
community as well. (Cooperation among family and group members is also important in other
aspects of the culture.) As a result, the ETR method not only attends to students'
experiences related to the content of a text, but also honors communication strategies
students have learned in their own cultures.
Content Area Reading Harold Herber developed a set of teaching strategies for
content area reading for older students, particularly high school students, in which
teachers show students how to comprehend text through simulation (modeling and
facilitating) rather than asking recitation questions that merely assess whether students
have understood a text.
In addition, use of small, heterogeneous, collaborative groups in content area reading
increases students' involvement in learning. They are more willing to take risks and to
learn new strategies and ideas from their peers. Teachers who use Herber's strategies
report that all students seem to benefit from collaborative work. They find that it is
critical, however, to teach students how to work in groups.
Process Writing The process writing approach we describe here was developed in a
rural school in New Hampshire under the direction of Donald Graves. It has been
incorporated in many elementary school classrooms but is just as appropriate for older
children.
Process writing teachers who use Graves' approach make certain assumptions about
students and the writing process. One is that students have worthwhile ideas to
communicate in writing. Another is that when students select their own topics they will
learn more about writing than if teachers always assign topics. A third is that writing
should be read by real audiences, that is, that writing is constructing meaning by a
community of writers and readers.
Both teachers and students engage in writing as a craft. Teachers' main functions are
to facilitate, model, and coach. Students dialogue with other students in conferences and
as part of an audience. The mode of interaction is collaboration among students and the
teacher.
Teachers fulfill their mediating roles in many ways. They facilitate by providing time
to write every day and by setting standards with the students for conferencing, sharing,
and being an audience. They model by writing along with the students and thinking aloud
about how to solve problems writers encounter such as selecting topics and making
revisions. Coaching often takes place in teacher-student conferences, and student-student
conferences mirror the teacher-student conference. Conferences are conceptualized as
dialogues between an editor and an author. The "editor" might point out places
where the author's writing works especially well, or might point out a confusing passage
that the author could revise. Graves provides many practical guidelines for, and examples
of, successful conferencing.
Many important interactions are promoted in process writing. Students work on their
own, but also share their writing with other students and the teacher. When a student
decides to share his or her work with the whole class, he or she is treated as a real
author. Questions that other students ask the student author would be the same ones they
might ask a "real" author; for example, "Where did you get your idea for
that story?" When students feel a piece is finished, they publish it and place it on
the classroom shelves alongside books by their peers and "real" authors.
Finding Mathematical Patterns Mathematics is full of opportunities for students
to collaborate on tasks that require complex thinking. Well-designed problems require
interpretation, allow for multiple solution strategies, and have solutions that can be
debated, extended, and generalized to other contexts. Thomas Good and his colleagues at
the University of Missouri-Columbia have identified exemplary practices in small-group
mathematics instruction.
As an illustration, they summarize a lesson developed by a third-grade teacher. She
began the lesson by asking the whole class all the different ways of writing 3 as a sum
(for example, 1 + 1 + 1, 2 + 1, 3 + 0). She wrote the responses on the board and noted the
number of possibilities. She then asked students to work in pairs to identify all the ways
to make sums of 4. The teacher encouraged the students to confer and pool solutions to
determine whether they had found all possible solutions. Next she asked small groups of
students to consider the number 5. Before the groups started, she asked them to predict
how many solutions there would be. With enthusiasm and excitement, the groups competed to
find the greatest number of solutions, and much task-related conversation ensued. The
teacher then led a follow-up discussion, asking each group to describe the system it had
used to generate possible solutions. The class then decided which system they thought was
best.
The teacher then helped students look for patterns in the numbers of solutions for 3,
4, and 5. Next, she asked them to use their "best" system to generate all
possible patterns for the number 6. Again, she asked if a pattern was apparent and if they
could use it to predict solutions for the number 7. Several suggestions were made, but no
conclusions agreed on. She ended by encouraging students to think more about this problem.
Application in Mathematics. As part of the University of Chicago School
Mathematics Project, a complete mathematics curriculum has been developed for average
students in grades 7-12. Development of this curriculum, which began in 1983, is under the
direction of Zalman Usiskin and Sharon Senk, and has involved school personnel at every
stage of planning, writing, and testing. The curriculum aims to prepare students for an
age in which mathematics has an integral role in contemporary issues, communication, and
commerce, as well as its traditional role in science, engineering, and technology.
Curricular content focuses on using mathematics to solve real-world problems.
For example, instead of being asked to find a solution to an abstract
"problem" such as 400 divided by 11.3, students might be asked, "Suppose a
car goes 400 miles between gas fill-ups and it takes 11.3 gallons to fill up the tank.
What has been the mileage per gallon?" In classes where this question is asked and
the answer (about 35.4 miles per gallon) is found, there are natural questions such as:
"Why is this number important?" "Is this possible - do cars get this much
mileage? If so, what cars do?" "What is a good gas mileage these days?"
"How much less gas would be used on a 10,000-mile trip by a car averaging 35 miles
per gallon than a car averaging 25 miles per gallon? How much less would it cost?"
This emphasis on using mathematics to solve real-world problems forces the curriculum
to make use of technology. The use of technology--in this case, a calculator - enables the
teacher and students to be more efficient in using math to solve problems, freeing up the
time formerly spent in calculation for solving additional problems relevant to students'
lives. In the School Mathematics Project, scientific calculators are required in all
courses because they are available to almost anyone who uses mathematics in the world
outside of school. Computer work is recommended in all courses and is required in one
advanced course because the content--functions and statistics is not covered adequately
today unless one has automatic graphic and data handling capabilities.
In these ways, instruction is changed not because of an a priori decision to use
collaborative groups or cooperative learning but because the content and technology lend
themselves to discussion and teamwork. Students are usually not satisfied merely with a
right/wrong answer to an interesting problem; they wish to discuss it, they want to share
their methods of solution, and they want to know whether others thought the same way. One
of the salient findings from the testing of this curriculum is that students no longer
ask, "How does this topic apply to the real world?" or "Why am I studying
this?"
In the algebra curriculum, Usiskin and Senk have included only those "word
problems" that show the importance of mathematics in today's world. The curriculum
developers point out the pitfalls of problems such as the following, often found in
algebra texts: "Reversing the two digits in the cost of an item, a salesperson
overcharges a customer by 27 cents. If the sum of the digits was 15, what was the original
cost of the item?" Such problems violate two principles of application of
mathematics. First, they are reverse given-find, in that one has to know the answer before
one can make up the question. In the real world, one would never solve a problem for which
one already as solution. Second, such problems are easier to solve with arithmetic than
algebra. Usiskin, Senk, and the teachers they work with believe it is because of these two
weaknesses that such "word problems" are viewed with such antipathy that many
students ask why they are studying the subject. Mathematics, Usiskin, points out, has been
invented to do things more easily, not to make things more difficult.
The School Mathematics Project teaches algebraic concepts using real-world problems.
For example, linear equations are taught with a wide variety of constant increase or
constant decrease problems, such as, "The population of the province of Quebec in
Canada was 6,398,000 in 1980. If the population is increasing by 40,000 people per year,
find an equation relating the population to the year." An example of a linear
combination problem is: "If you eat a quarter-pounder which has 80 calories per
ounce, how many 111-calorie French fries can you eat if you don't want your lunch to
exceed 500 calories?" An example involving data that needs a line graph is:
"Given the latitudes and mean April temperatures of some cities in the northern
hemisphere, find an equation approximately relating latitude and temperature. Graph this
equation. Explain why the point for Mexico City falls far from the line." Similar
problems are used to teach other concepts in algebra and other courses. The goal of the
curriculum developers is to show that it is important not only to have skills, to see the
relationships among mathematical ideas, and to represent these ideas concretely or
pictorially, but also to see why mathematics is so important in so many ways in today's
world.
Joliet West High School, Joliet, IL Joliet is a community
of approximately 100,000 people diverse in terms of racial background and income level.
Whites, blacks, and Hispanics reside in Joliet. It is home to families living in poverty
as well as families living in affluence. In the mid-'80s, Joliet West High school had a
high failure rate (37 percent of the freshmen class failed one or more classes) and a high
rate of referrals for discipline problems. Determined to equip students with knowledge and
skills to succeed both in school and out, the high school instituted a cooperative
learning program exemplifying collaborative instruction.
Basic to Joliet West High School's program are the TEAM (Together Each Accomplishes
More) Seminars in which all freshmen participate daily. Seminars provide students with
opportunities to experience small-group, cooperative learning. While learning
problem-solving and decision-making skills, students, grouped heterogeneously with regard
to race, economic level, and ability, begin to appreciate diverse cultures, attitudes, and
abilities. TEAM also involves the community: Local hospital staff talk with freshmen about
stress management and drug abuse prevention; other community members introduce students to
career possibilities.
Aware that collaboration promotes learning in many settings, Joliet West High School
trains many of its content-area teachers to make their classrooms communities of
collaboration. In English, history, foreign language, and industrial technology, for
example, students collaborate in small groups or as an entire classroom; they share prior
knowledge, set learning goals, monitor their progress, and share responsibility for
results. Heterogeneous grouping may team students from various socioeconomic groups and
students with varying experiential backgrounds. Gifted students and former Special
Education students may collaborate. Classrooms are open communities where all ideas are
welcome; students challenge each other and share positive criticism. Teachers offer
positive reinforcement and communicate successes to parents.
Collaborative techniques extend to discipline. Student groups, trained in mediation and
arbitration, counsel students who are habitually tardy or disruptive.
Joliet's success is evident not only in academic performance, but also in student
attitudes, motivation, and self-esteem. Since the program's inception three years ago, the
number of students earning grades in the A to C level has increased by 20 percent, and
there has been a significant reduction in the number of failures among the academically
at-risk group. Teacher comments illustrate other types of gains: "I use it in auto
technology. Students change oil in triads: one picks up the tools, one puts them away,
while one actually does the job. All watch and are responsible that the job is done
properly." "I find that there seem to be fewer disciplinary referrals on the
freshman level." "In freshman seminar my students are forming their own groups
to study before major tests. They quiz each other. They enjoy working together so much,
they have even made up their own games and asked me to be part of their group."
Student comments may be the most insightful: "I really like sharing answers. I
never shared answers before." "I really like working in groups because you can
bring your grade up." "While working in groups there are no arguments. If you
disagree with someone you find a way to solve the problem." "I learned not to
argue and always help out and share ideas that you think of and do not start fights."
"Working with groups is fun because you get to share your facts with someone
else."
Beaupre Elementary School, Aurora, IL This school's student population is
approximately 44 percent Hispanic, 46 percent black, 9 percent white, and 1 percent Asian.
Most students are members of low-income families. Just a few years ago, many Aurora
citizens had few expectations of Beaupre students. The community regarded many students as
little more than troublemakers. School personnel were frustrated with their students' lack
of learning success, particularly in reading.
All that has changed. The program that made all the difference is called Reading,
Reading, Everywhere. Far more than a reading program, it demonstrates how
collaboration within the classroom, the school, and the community can produce successful
learners.
Rather than continuing to rely on homogeneous grouping and entirely on basal readers,
Beaupre adopted a whole-language approach and collaborative learning. The curriculum
provides students with opportunities to read many types of literature by authors from
various cultural backgrounds, opportunities to visit the public library, and diverse
writing experiences. An instructional technique known as K-W-L was introduced in
classrooms.
Teachers activate students' prior knowledge by asking them what they already KNOW; then
students (collaborating as a classroom unit or within small groups) set goals specifying
what they WANT to learn; and, after reading, students discuss what they have LEARNED.
Students apply higher-order thinking strategies which help them construct meaning from
what they read and help them monitor progress toward their goals.
At Beaupre, students often work in cooperative group~ in which each student has a
specific responsibility--to complete a product such as a story map. Fifth- and sixth-grade
teachers have seen how effectively peer influence regulates behavior when group members
must cooperate to complete a science experiment or other type of assignment.
Beaupre has gained respect in the community by utilizing the talents of community
members to further stimulate learning. Among the numerous collaborative efforts are:
visits to senior centers where youngsters and senior citizens read to each other; visits
to early education centers where Beaupre students share their knowledge with the toddlers;
a homework lab operated by teenagers and seniors from a local church; and an Urban League
tutoring program operated by parents and high school students. A program exemplifying
collaboration as well as a whole-language approach is the school's Read Aloud program.
Students in each classroom write to community members inviting them to be the
"community reader" for the day. Community members of various ethnic groups and
occupations have accepted invitations and serve as role models for the students.
In addition to heightened involvement and respect from parents and the community at
large, Beaupre has observed improvement in students' reading habits and abilities:
after-school reading was up 20 percent; the number of students holding library cards
increased by 28 percent; newspaper readership by students increased significantly. On
state reading comprehension and vocabulary assessments, the school rose from last in the
school district to first in the county; the percent of students in the bottom quartile on
standardized tests for grade 1-6 decreased from 80 percent to 22 percent; and overall
reading scores of at-risk students tutored through the Urban League Project increased 34
percent. In fact, 5 of 15 students moved out of the at-risk category.
Redwood Falls High School, Redwood Falls, MN Redwood Falls, a community of 5,000
people, is rapidly changing. What was once a very stable community is now characterized by
instability: Many farmers found it necessary to leave the area, others remained and took
low income jobs, and a number of new people are moving into the area. The range of income
levels is wider now than when agriculture was the main enterprise.
These changes have created a lack of cohesiveness and feelings of insecurity in the
community. High school students, especially, fear for their future and wonder if they will
find jobs. The town's limited manufacturing enterprises, retail stores, and remaining
farms cannot provide employment for all the town's youth. Most will probably seek jobs in
small cities nearby.
To address these problems, in the late 1980s the school system applied to the American
Forum in the late 1980s and was awarded a five-year Education 2000 grant. Education 2000
funds enable communities to restructure schools so that students are prepared for a
changing society. To accomplish this aim, the entire Redwood Falls community collaborated
to set goals and develop a restructuring plan.
These efforts have led to many positive changes. People began regarding the schools as
the center of intellectual life for the community at large. Early childhood, family
education, and university level adult education courses are among those programs available
to everyone in the community.
Curriculum and instruction have also changed. Instruction is much more collaborative,
and curriculum focuses more on higher order thinking skills needed for success in school
and in life. Teachers tap students' prior knowledge and help students "learn how to
learn," through collaborative problem solving and decision making. When students need
information, they ask an "expert" classmate or contact a community expert.
Students develop their own tools to "test" how well they have learned. The
curriculum has also become more interdisciplinary and builds on the multicultural
resources in the community (Native Americans, Swedes, and Norwegians).
In Larry Gavin's high school English class, for example, students work in small groups
to critique each other's writing. When students write narrative, they consult Dakota
Indian students who are skillful in writing narrative because in their culture, nothing is
an "event" until someone tells a story about it. When studying about
conflicts on the Great Plains in the 1800s between Native American and white groups,
students heard representatives of both groups present their point of view. Gavin, the
drama teacher, and the music teacher collaborated to assist students in writing and
producing an original one-act play.
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Video Sources
Learning Mediated Through Dialogue. This videotape was developed and copyrighted by
NCREL (1990).
Incorporating Community Knowledge in Schools. This videotape was developed and
copyrighted by NCREL (1990).
Applications in Mathematics. This videotape was developed and copyrighted by NCREL
(1990).
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