Introduction
What is Collaborative learning?
Collaborative learning is a situation in which two or more people learn or attempt to learn something together. Unlike individual learning, people engaged in collaborative learning capitalize on one another’s resources and skills (asking one another for information, evaluating one another’s ideas, monitoring one another’s work, etc.).More specifically, collaborative learning is based on the model that knowledge can be created within a population where members actively interact by sharing experiences and take on asymmetry roles. Put differently, collaborative learning refers to methodologies and environments in which learners engage in a common task where each individual depends on and is accountable to each other. These include both face-to-face conversations and computer discussions (online forums, chat rooms, etc.).Methods for examining collaborative learning processes include conversation analysis and statistical discourse analysis.
Example
- Collaborative learning in a composition classroom can unite students when assigned open-tasks. Kenneth Bruffee introduced the learning method, Classroom Consensus Group, in which the instructor allocates groups of three to five (three being ideal) students and assigns a problem to be solved or question to be answered. There are two directions the nonfoundational task can be presented: as an indistinct, no right answer that generates discussion or propose an answer and request questions and a process of how the answer came to be. Once the task is assigned, the instructor backs off in order to resist the urge to intervene in students' conversation. The goal is to remove focus of the instructor's authority. The instructor must keep time to ensure the students are centered on analogizing, generalizing, and bridging their comprehension with others. Following group discussion, the instructor is to evaluate, not judge, the students' work. Ideas should be presented to the entire class thus allowing the small groups to come together as a whole. It is then that the answers can be compared, gaps can be filled, and authority is not on one individual.[19]
Collaborative Learning in Project Work
When students complete collaborative projects, they might create individual outcomes, collective
outcomes, or both. Students could collaborate to learn new content or gain diverse perspectives,
then describe their learning in a paper, project, or presentation. This can be described as an
individual outcome of a collaborative process. Alternatively, students might collaborate and work
together to produce one project, paper, or presentation that represents everyone’s work. This can
be described as a collective outcome of a collaborative process.
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Well done. You have collected more information about the Collaborative Learning. The collaborative learning can practice the students leadership skills.When you practice collaborative learning it creates a community environment within the classroom. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteyou have done a good description about collaborative learning .there are many.benefits of CL.collabarative learning is ideal for project work.
ReplyDelete