cooperative projects & presentations september 2009

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Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

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Page 1: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Cooperative Projects & Presentations

September 2009

Page 2: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

• Far too much of education is aimed at pouring basic facts and skills into students. High-stakes tests dictate what is taught and measure whether educators are successfully “teaching” students.

• In the constructivist model, students are active participants in constructing their own learning.

• According to Kagan, cooperative projects are “perhaps the purest form of constructivist education. As students construct their projects, they are simultaneously constructing meaning and understanding.”

Page 3: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

• In the real world, people work on real projects, and people frequently work in teams.

• There is an important place in education for the transmission of content knowledge. But there is also a place for students to be creative, solve real problems, and construct their own understanding of the world.

Page 4: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Project Principles• Structuring facilitates the construction of

knowledge for all students.• Students without good teamwork skills need a

step-by-step teacher-led project.• As they become more skilled, less direction

and structuring from the teacher is required.

Page 5: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

PIES

• When PIES are applied to projects, conditions are created that promote active engagement and inclusion for all students thus ensuring the project is cooperative learning and not group work.

Page 6: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Team Project Steps1. The teacher announces the team project.2. The teacher assigns roles and resource

access.3. Students work in teams to create the project.

Step 2 is what distinguishes Team Projects from group work.

Page 7: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Role Assignment

Each student will have his/her own unique project specific role.

Roles can be switched and rotated based on task completion or time.

Roles should be displayed prominently.

Page 8: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Resource Access

Decide who on each team can use which resource.

Access to the resources may be dependent on a student’s role.

Page 9: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Introducing a Project

Roles and resources should be reviewed prior to starting the project.

Suggestion: Use T-ChartsAssigning Roles T-Chart

What to Do What to Say

Allocating Resources T-Chart

Materials Who Uses It

Page 10: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Structures for Sharing and Presenting Projects

During the planning or in the process of creating a team project, students should have the opportunity to hear other teams’ ideas or see how others have solved a problem.

If the only opportunity to view other’s projects is after they are completed, it’s too late to implement improvements.

Page 11: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Sharing Project Plans

Teams Post – Each team has a designated spot on the whiteboard to plan.

Team Whip – Teams prepare a short statement of project plans. One person from each team stands and shares the plans.

Team Stand-N-Share – Teams share one item at a time from their planning lists. Recorders from other teams can add the idea to their lists if it is new.

Page 12: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Sharing Project Process

One Stray – One person “strays” to another team and view the project and reports back to his/her own team.

Three Stray – Three teammates group “stray” to another team. One person stays behind to answer questions about his/her team’s project.

Roam-the-Room – Everyone stops working and go from project to project together in teams.

Page 13: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Sharing Products and Presentations

Number Group Presentation – Students number off from 1-4. All 1’s go to Team 1, 2’s to Team 2, etc. In each new group, there is one student whose team created the project and presents it to the group. Groups then rotate to the next project. When finished, students return to their original teams to discuss.

Page 14: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Sharing Project and Presentations (After)

Team Presentation – Each team makes a timed presentation to the class in which all teammates present equally. For example, if a team has 4 minutes for their presentation, each student is responsible for sharing one minute.

Page 15: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Management TipsUse a Timer: allot time in advance, break

project into timed segments, display time, give a 5 minute warning, stick to the allotted time.

Prepare Sponge Activities: have an activity ready for teams that finish early.

Teacher Consultation: visit with teams as they work, check progress, ask questions, offer suggestions

Page 16: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Team Project/Presentation Feedback

What I liked best about your project…One idea for improvement is…

One think I liked about your presentation is…One thing I learned from your presentation…A question I have is…One idea for improvement is…

Page 17: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Project Ideas - Math

Measure the area of the classroomGraph the number of buttons the classmates are

wearingDesign a flowchart for long divisionWrite a story about a math problemDesign a poster illustrating a concept

Page 18: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Project Ideas - Science

Perform a science experimentDesign a brochure describing a planetMap the causes and effects of a natural disasterDraw the stages of…Design an experiment

Page 19: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Project Ideas – Language Arts

Create a book reportWrite a brief story with comprehension

questionsCreate a persuasive presentation or commercialWrite an argument why adjectives are more

important than adverbs and vice versa

Page 20: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

Project Ideas – Social Studies

Create a time line for an eventWrite a biography for a historical characterDebate a social issueRecord an interview with a historical figure

Page 21: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

SummaryCooperative projects are the epitome of

constructivist education. Doing projects and receiving direct instruction is

the difference between learning about something and really learning something.

In the process of a cooperative project, students discover facts and concepts for themselves.

Learning is lighting the fire for discovering truth and constructing meaning.

Page 22: Cooperative Projects & Presentations September 2009

CreditsContent: Kagan Cooperative LearningClipart: Phillip Martinhttp://www.phillipmartin.info/clipart/homepage.htm