c:\fakepath\cooperative an collaborative learning
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COOPERATIVE AND COOPERATIVE AND COLLABORATIVE COLLABORATIVE
LEARNINGLEARNING
Cooperative Cooperative learninglearning
• It is a successful teaching strategy in which small teams, each with students of different levels of ability, use a variety of learning activities to improve their understanding of a subject.
• Each member of a team is responsible not only for learning what is taught but also for helping team mates learn, thus creating an atmosphere of achievement.
• Students work through the assignment until all group members successfully understand and complete it.
“We Instead Of Me”
Collaborative Collaborative Learning.Learning.
• It is a method of teaching and learning in which students team together to explore a significant question or create a meaningful project.
• A group of students discussing a lecture or students from different schools working together over the Internet on a shared assignment are both examples of collaborative learning.
Differences Differences Cooperative and Cooperative and
Collaborative LearningCollaborative LearningCOOPERATIVECOOPERATIVE
• Each member of a team is responsible• The instructor is the center of authority not only for learning what is taught.• Students helps each others• Task are usually closed ended• It is more structure defined (cooper and
Robinson, 1997).• Students recieve training in small groups social
skills
CollaborativeCollaborative
• Collaborative will build on their existing skill• Teacher guie but he /she does not monitor• Task here are open ended and complex• It is for adults, hight levels• Few roles asigned
SimilaritiesSimilarities
• Stress the importance of active learning• The teachers acts as facilitator• Teaching and learning are experiences shared by
both the student and the teacher• Greater emphasis is placed on students’s
reponsability for taking cherge on her or his learning
SimilaritiesSimilarities
• Involves situations where students must articulate ideas in small groups
• Help students develop social and teambuilding skills
• Utilize students diversity
USE OF ICT IN USE OF ICT IN COOPERATIVE AND COOPERATIVE AND COLLABORATIVE COLLABORATIVE
LEARNING.LEARNING.• Information Communication
Technology (ICT), the internet has been widely accepted as an important tool in Cooperative and Collaborative learning.
• ICT in education is being promoted and studied in various countries and, in general, these countries’ goals are similar: to provide more effective learning and competitive manpower in the international market.
USE OF ICT IN USE OF ICT IN COOPERATIVE AND COOPERATIVE AND COLLABORATIVE LEARNING.COLLABORATIVE LEARNING.
USE OF ICT IN USE OF ICT IN COOPERATIVE AND COOPERATIVE AND COLLABORATIVE LEARNING.COLLABORATIVE LEARNING.
• The ICT suppose a modification in the strategies and methodologies that harness the continuous learning of the student.
• Collaborative learning uses ICT to arouse students’ motivation to learn, impelling students to participate actively in online discussions and deep research. (Polman & Fishman, 1995)
USE OF ICT IN USE OF ICT IN COOPERATIVE AND COOPERATIVE AND COLLABORATIVE COLLABORATIVE LEARNING.LEARNING.
• ICT afford students’ possibility of stimulating experiments and experimenting with broadly varying situations and comparing them, something that if done “by hand” would in most cases prove very difficult or tedious.
USE OF ICT IN USE OF ICT IN COOPERATIVE AND COOPERATIVE AND COLLABORATIVE COLLABORATIVE LEARNING.LEARNING.
• Informatics media provide a comfortable and fast way to access, represent, and use information.
• Students are willing to comment on each other’s
work, share personal viewpoints, express their own opinions, and learn to accept views different from their own.
USE OF ICT IN USE OF ICT IN COOPERATIVE AND COOPERATIVE AND COLLABORATIVE COLLABORATIVE LEARNING.LEARNING.
Through organized and systematic teaching strategies, teachers are able to group students of different abilities, sexes, and background together to learn jointly, share experiences, and receive recognition from peers. (Johnson & Johnson, 1994).
“All for One and One for all”. Alexandre Dumas
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