Posts Tagged Jigsaw

Internship Reflection – Week 5

Reflection: Week 5
Devote a paragraph relating your use of student-based evidence to each of the following three elements. S1: Content driven so students develop understanding and problem-solving expertise in the content area(s), using reading, written, and oral communication and technology. (Answer how you develop student understanding through your teaching.) S2. Aligned with curriculum standards and outcomes so students know the learning targets and their progress toward meeting them. (Tell how you share the learning targets with your students.) S3. Integrated across content areas so students learn subject matter that integrates mathematical, scientific and aesthetic reasoning. (Answer how students demonstrate their learning using reading, written and oral communication, and technology.)

Tahoma Senior High School (THS) is dedicated to student learning. Staff development days are dedicated to improving staff skills to better student learning. The school district has adopted Arthur L. Costa’s “Habits of Mind” as part of the requirements for students to develop during their classroom experience. THS wants its students to be capable of using a variety of technologies and started a Digital Backpack Project for students to be able to bring their own laptops and netbooks to school. These practices coincide with the state’s standards and help to integrate student learning across curriculums. Students in the classrooms where I am interning are developing knowledge of social studies that are in line with the curriculum standards and also incorporate subject matter from other content areas.

S1: Content Driven
Student understanding is a vital part of the learning process. In my social studies classes, student understanding is accomplished through multiple methods. The administration at THS encourages teachers to use best practices in their teaching to ensure student learning. For example, direct instruction is an effective best practice if used appropriately. Instead of using direct instruction every day in class, jigsaws, cooperative learning, and other best practice instructional methods are used. In psychology, students spent time learning about the brain by working in groups to learn about one specific part of the brain and then teaching the rest of the class about that section. After all of the lessons, the entire class knew about each part of the brain. The student’s did not simply do a PowerPoint presentation; they created a mini lesson that included a student involvement activity to immerse their peers in the content being presented. Students used the social studies department’s netbooks to do their research; every student was working on a netbook or laptop during this project. Students helped share their information with the class using the projector and document camera, some even used video. In American Politics and Global Issues, students read articles from The New York Times Upfront magazine for students and listen to podcasts from NPR and other news broadcasts to learn about current events around the world. Another way to develop understanding is through the use of “Checking for Understanding Strategies.” Teachers at THS have been equipped with a chart of these different strategies and are encouraged to use them on a daily basis in their classroom as a way to evaluate how much students understand throughout a lesson. These strategies allow teachers to evaluate if the class is prepared to move on to the next lesson or if more time must be spent on the content. Students are developing skills in the classroom that will be benefit them throughout their lives; these skills are a result of studying and learning social studies content in a variety of ways.

S2: Aligned With Curriculum Standards and Outcomes
It is a common trend for high school students to think that the work they are doing in class is busy work; students need to know what the objectives are during class so they see a purpose to the work they are doing. While teachers give assignments point-values, those points do not answer the reason why the work must be done. In American Politics and Global Issues there are specified locations for students to look to see the key concepts that they will be learning that day in addition to the Habit of Mind they will be exercising and the thinking skills required to complete the work. All of these pieces give purpose to the work the students do. For example, currently the students are learning about the Middle East. The thinking skill required for the students on Friday, April 01, 2011, was “finding facts and sequencing.” The Habit of Mind the students were developing was “remains open to continuous learning,” and the key content/concept was to become educated on how women of Islam are treated throughout the world. The students do not only have to look at a whiteboard to learn about the learning targets for each day. At the beginning of each class I take the time to tell them the agenda for the day, what they will be doing and why they will be doing it. While studying the brain in psychology, students spent multiple class periods examining how neurons function. When I introduced an assignment to the students on neurons on a day after I had already used direct instruction to teach them about the topic I explained to them that our brains need to hear information more than once to store it in our long term memory. They already knew that knowing about neurons was important; they needed to know that more time was being spent on the topic to help them retain the information.

S3: Integrated Across Content Areas
The social studies field allows many opportunities for subject matter from different content areas to be incorporated into student learning. Psychology is one example that clearly incorporates both the social studies field and science. Students must understand how the brain works in order to understand why people behave in certain manners. While studying the brain, students were expected to learn about its different parts and how information travels throughout the brain. Students looked at pictures of the brain and diagrams of the endocrine and nervous system to discover how our bodies function. Students in American Politics and Global Issues use reading skills to gain a thorough understanding of the articles that they read about current events in the Middle East. They use pre-reading techniques like looking at the subtitles, captions, and pictures to make educated guesses about the content of the articles. In addition, they use primary documents like a cable sent to President Carter in Washington DC from U.S. Ambassador William Sullivan. Students studied this document to better understand how the United States makes its decisions about its foreign policy. Students also study economics in American Politics and Global Issues and are required to use their math reasoning skills to understand how the economy works, which influences the country’s international relations. Technology is a helpful tool with all of this because the students have access to current information like the cost of oil and up to date information on current events. Students are also able to share the information that they gain with the public by setting up blogs about environmental issues, like the students in American Studies did for a CBA earlier during my internship. Social studies is a content area that cannot truly be understood without also using science, math, reading, and writing.

In sum, students at THS are pushed to learn because of the approach the school takes to learning. The faculty and staff are aware that students learn better when best practice techniques are used in the classroom and when the students know what they are seeking to learn. Technology is incorporated into all of this because the world demands those skills. In the social studies classroom students use skills from so many other content areas that they are used to using math and science in the social studies class. They understand that they need to use reading skills in social studies in order to comprehend the information being taught. When teachers use effective techniques, the use of technology and incorporating other subject areas can be done in a way that is seamless for their students.

Leave a Comment

Internship Reflection – Week 2

Week 2 Reflection:
By now, you have had the opportunity to observer many different lessons, either with the same, or different, groups of students. What characteristics of these lessons have been memorable, intriguing, or surprising to you? Why has this been the case? What characteristics do you deem worthy of emulating as you develop your own teaching style?

Psychology, leadership, American studies, and American politics and global issues. These four social studies courses are so different from one another and it is beneficial for my internship to experience so many different social studies courses. My mentor teachers have both taught the whole gamut of social studies courses offered at Tahoma High School, some by choice and some because there was not anyone else to teach them. This has taught me to be mentally prepared to teach the whole spectrum of social studies courses. Fortunately, interning with two teachers and having four different subjects to prepare for gives me the opportunity to see a wide range of lessons.

Jigsaws are a teaching tool that Mr. Peters enjoys using in his classes. The social studies department at Tahoma has multiple netbook carts to share and Mr. Peters has a set of laptops in his classroom. When a jigsaw assignment is given, students will use the laptops and netbooks to research their topics to prepare for the jigsaw. Mr. Peters has found that instead of having the students teach their lessons in small groups and rotating, the students do better presenting their lessons in front of the class. This way he can also help correct or add information so the rest of the class understands everything and gets the information they need. In psychology, the students are preparing a jigsaw lesson to teach to the class on different parts of the brain. They have been researching in groups and will present their lessons beginning on March 17. What makes these jigsaws different from regular class presentations is that the students have to make it like a mini lesson that a teacher would do. The class has learned that students retain more information when they participate in their own learning, so that is what will be happening during this jigsaw. The students have been working hard on their research and are getting creative in their lessons which will make this an exciting learning experience. I think that this method of cooperative learning is beneficial for the entire class. It also builds research skills as the students use the Internet to find credible sources for their information. While I am student teaching I will have access to the netbooks and laptops, but I know that I may have to modify this lesson if I get a teaching position at a school that does not have the same resources.

The American Studies students have just finished up a CBA (Classroom Based Assessment) that I think was done very well. Once again, the netbooks and laptops were utilized for the students to build blogs through Puget SoundOff. This CBA reflected sustainability in different industries that the students picked themselves. The students researched their industries and built their blogs which they shared with the rest of the class. I was impressed with the students’ skills in designing their blogs; a couple of groups incorporated video, some of which were made by the students themselves! While the blogs were group grades, students were also responsible to make comments on their classmates’ blogs for individual grades. However, the information they shared is now open to viewers of the Puget SoundOff (2007) site which “provides youth with a forum for discussion, artistic expression and action as a way to empower and encourage you to have a strong voice.” This project is worthy of emulating because the students are taking a stand on an industry that is important to them. Each blog contains an Action Plan that the students design in order to help make our world more sustainable. The students not only research information but they also provide a solution. After listening to their presentations on their industries I find myself thinking more carefully about things. This assignment shows students that they can impact their communities.

Not every day is filled with exciting new lessons in every class. Students still work from the textbook occasionally, study maps, watch videos, and take notes while the teacher lectures. These are not bad lessons though; I believe that there is a balance to be found in the use of each type of lesson. Since students have different learning styles, teachers need to use a variety of lesson types to meet the needs of all the students. This is a skill that I hope to develop as I continue on this journey. I already know how I learn best, but that is not the same as many of the students in my classes. The lessons that I have observed have incorporated a lot of technology and have provided students to model their knowledge in ways that are as creative or as straight forward as they choose. When the students get to make their own decisions with their learning, they show ownership of it, which is exciting to watch.

Leave a Comment

Unit by Design Lesson — Our Foundations Unit

As a part of EDU 6135 General Teaching Methods, we designed a two week (or longer) lesson plan. The Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction website (http://standards.ospi.k12.wa.us/) includes the required EALRs and GLEs for each grade level and content area. Wiggins and McTighe’s (2005) book Understanding by Design includes a unit planning guide. The below unit plan is a social studies lesson for eleventh grade students according to this design template. In addition, there are four lesson plans that I selected from this unit to practice teaching in class. Further, all of the extra documents such as handouts, directions, rubrics, and parent involvement emails are included. Two of the lessons also contain Seattle Pacific University Lesson Plan Rationales, which is a source of accountability when planning lessons. Creating this unit plan was not an easy task and has been a great experience as I continue on my journey of becoming a teacher. I am gaining a deeper understanding of how to design units and lessons in accordance with the Washington State Standards, which is not an easy task.

Unit Lesson Plan: Our Foundations
UbD_Template

Lesson One: The Failure of the Articles of Confederation
Articles of Confederation Lesson Template
Advance Organizer
PowerPoint for Articles of Confederation
Persuasive Letter Directions

Lesson Two: Reenacting the Ratification of the Bill of Rights
Bill of Rights Lesson Template
Directions for Group Activity and skits

Lesson Three: A Breakdown of the Preamble
Preamble Lesson Plan Template
Preamble Handout
Concept Pattern Organizer

Lesson Four: Boldt Decision Debate
Boldt Decision Lesson Template
Lesson Plan Rationale
Parent Email
The Boldt Decision Handout
Debate Rubric

Leave a Comment

A Lesson on the Preamble

“The student understands and applies knowledge of government, law, politics, and the nation’s fundamental documents to make decisions about local, national, and international issues and to demonstrate thoughtful, participatory citizenship” (Online Grade Level Standards & Resources, 2010). This is the Washington State Essential Academic Learning Requirement (EALR) for eleventh grade civics students that I chose to focus on for my first twenty minute lesson. That is EALR 1 and its first component is that the student “understands key ideals and principles of the United States, including those of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and other fundamental documents (Online Grade Level Standards & Resources, 2010). Finally, the first Grade Level Expectation, or GLE, for that EALR is that the student “analyzes and evaluates the ways in which the U.S. Constitution and other fundamental documents promote key ideals and principles” (Online Grade Level Standards & Resources, 2010). I decided to make the focus of this lesson to be the Preamble to the Constitution, based on a suggestion from the OSPI website. Deciding what I wanted to teach the lesson on was probably the easiest part of this teaching experience. I faced many challenges in creating this learning experience.
After teaching a lesson last week about the importance of using cues, questions, and advance organizers, I decided that I should implement one of these learning opportunities. I opened the lesson with a question on principles that the United States of America is founded upon and allowed the students (five of my peers) to shout out answers as I made a list of them all on the board. Following the questioning, I introduced the idea of the Preamble and told the class we would be returning to the list we made shortly. I showed a film of Schoolhouse Rock’s Preamble cartoon, which was a fun way of refreshing the class and giving them a brief explanation of the Preamble (Schoolhouse Rock, 2007). As a group, we then read the Preamble together; each student had a copy of the Preamble in a packet I gave them. The class broke up into groups for a small Jigsaw activity, where the students broke down the meaning of the Preamble by looking at small commentaries that provided explanations of a few sets of words at a time. This was where my lesson faltered: due to the small group that I was teaching, the Jigsaw did not take as much time as I expected it to. I adjusted the lesson as necessary; however, by simply allowing the students to begin what I would have simply labeled homework. This homework assignment was a concept pattern organizer, a form of nonlinguistic representation, as suggested by Marzano, Pickering, and Pollock (2001). This organizer was intended to demonstrate how the Preamble directs principles of the Constitution. I presented the homework as if the students were already familiar with this style of organizer. After giving the students a chance to start on the organizers, I closed the lesson by explaining how older primary documents, like the Constitution and the Preamble do not need to be intimidating, we simply need to take the time to break down what the authors said. While the lesson was finished for the twenty minute lesson, it was also assumed that the lesson would be continued for a little longer at the next class.
Since this was my first time planning and teaching my own lesson plan, I was intimidated and unsure of how smoothly the lesson would actually go. However, I was encouraged by the feedback that my peers gave me about my first attempt at a social studies lesson. All five of my peers agreed that my lesson flowed very well; that I was able to connect the different parts of the lesson well. I appreciated this comment because I thought the lesson might become detached when I jumped between discussing principles of the US and showing the Preamble video. Another part that they all seemed to appreciate was the showing of the Schoolhouse Rock clip. Schoolhouse Rock is an older cartoon, so I thought I was taking a risk by showing that cartoon; however, I think it was well-received. It was also interesting to hear how my group thought I did a great job using Medina’s “repeat to remember” principle of memory when I had not intentionally done so (2009). I was given some constructive feedback, although, not as much as I would have liked. One of my peers said that the instructions that I gave were not very clear for the concept pattern organizer. It had been assumed that the students were already familiar with these organizers, so that question may not have existed if my peer had actually understood how to fill out the organizer. Second, I was given some suggestions on how to make the Jigsaw run more smoothly, a task that I had found difficult since I was working with only five students. My peers really gave me great feedback, I appreciate what they wrote down on their response forms and I will definitely take both their positive responses and their suggestions for how I can improve into consideration when I make my next lesson plan.
Since it is highly likely that I will be teaching on the Preamble in the future when I am a teacher, I really think that I can apply this experience in the future. Even if I don’t use this exact lesson plan, the variety that I included in the lesson can be applied to lessons that I make in the future. This lesson included an opening activity that engaged the students and allowed for anyone to contribute an answer. The video provided for an entertaining but educational video aid as a visual learning opportunity. The Jigsaw got the class working in groups, giving them another opportunity to talk and work through the content together. Also, the concept principle organizer provided a chance to assemble the information that we had covered, an opportunity for assessment and a chance for the student to reflect on the information presented that day. I feel a little more confident in my abilities to create lessons since tackling this first one; I will work hard to continue to keep variety in my lesson-planning so learners of all types will be able to engage in the lessons.

References

Cruickshank, D.R., Jenkins, D.B., & Metcalf, K.K. (2009). The act of teaching (5th ed.). Boston, MA: McGraw-Hill Higher Education

Dell’Olio, J.M. & Donk, T. (2007). Models of teaching: Connecting student learning with standards. Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications.

Marzano, R.J., Pickering, D.J., & Pollock, J.E. (2001). Classroom instruction that works: Research-based strategies for increasing student achievement. Alexandria, VA: ASCD.

Medina, J. (2009). Brain rules: 12 principles for surviving and thriving at work, home, and school. Seattle, WA: Pear Press.

Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (2010). Social studies standards – Essential academic learning requirements: A recommended grade-by-grade sequence for grade level expectations – Grades k-12. Olympia, WA.

Leave a Comment

Instructional Strategies Final Paper

Role Playing and Jigsaw:
Bringing Life Back to the Social Studies Classroom

            Dates and dead people. These are the two traits that are most commonly attributed to a high school history class. Two of my goals in becoming a high school social studies teacher are to increase the interest and participation levels in social studies courses. Teachers have the ability to make a social studies classroom come alive, which is what I hope to do. If a teacher wants to make this happen, he/she needs to be intentional about the instructional models used in the classroom. These models not only have the ability to bring life to a previously stale classroom, but more importantly, they address and support the different learning styles of students. It will be my job as a teacher to make sure that the students in my classroom understand the content I am sharing with them. Using different instructional strategies will allow for students with different learning styles to better understand the content. As a social studies teacher, I fully intend on using the cooperative learning models of Role Playing and Jigsaw because they encourage students to interact both with one another and the content while also supporting academic achievement for all students.
Role Playing
          Role Playing is a method that transforms the dead people of a boring history textbook into living, breathing, people—students. Dell’Olio and Donk (2007, p. 282) explain the purpose of Role Playing as “a model of teaching that facilitates social problem solving” that can also be used academically in the social studies. Role Playing uses multiple opportunities for students to act out a scenario and discussions to decide on the best way for people to handle a situation (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). These scenarios can be made up by the teacher or based upon current or historical events. An opportunity that allows everyone to get involved, Role Playing allows for a few student actors and the rest of the class to be an active audience who share their comments in between takes. Students who are too nervous to be actors in the front of the class still have important roles as observers in the audience.
          The steps to Role Playing are rather simple, but all of them are vital for the success of the lesson. First, the teacher must warm up the class using verbal and physical exercises so the students will be ready to participate (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). Student volunteers are then chosen to be the first set of actors; specifically, students “who will most likely get the role play session off to a good start” (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007, p. 297). The next step is the teacher’s most important job: to review the purpose for the Role Playing and asks students to describe the context and scenery, in addition to preparing the audience members, who may undervalue their role because they are not in the front of the room (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). The actors then take charge and begin Role Playing the situation for the first time, while the audience watches attentively (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). After the first role play, students discuss and evaluate what they just saw; the teacher does not need to say a lot during this time, just prompt the students as the dialogue dwindles (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). The second scene can be acted out with the same set of actors or with new volunteers; it begins after the first discussion is finished, but is altered from the first scene in some way (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). The second scene is followed by another evaluative discussion; after which, new volunteers are selected for another reenactment of the again-slightly-altered scene (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). These two steps can be repeated as many times as the teacher believes to be necessary. The final discussion compares and contrasts the scenes and comes to a conclusion about them all, such as choosing the best solution, how each person is impacted by the solution, or which is most realistic from history (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). Even though high school class periods are often rushed at the end, this final discussion is important because it connects the entire lesson and allows students to come to some sort of conclusion about what they just participated in.
          The social studies classroom allows for many different opportunities to take advantage of Role Playing. First, in terms of how Dell’Olio and Donk (2007) described its use for social problem solving. Many social studies classes discuss controversial issues such as abortion, immigration, and war. The Role Playing model allows for students to present different approaches to these topics in a neutral manner because students are acting on behalf of characters and cannot be attacked for their own beliefs (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). Second, many history classes read historical novels. Dell’Olio and Donk (2007, p. 298) suggest that students act out “scenes that do not exist in the actual work.” For example, conversations that may take place between two characters that an author does not write or how a situation in the book may turn out differently based on alternative decision making (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). Role Playing in this situation encourages students to think critically about the book and forces them to analyze literature outside of the English classroom.
          One wonderful benefit to Role Playing is that it allows the teacher to step back from the front of the class and for the students to have more of a lead in the lesson. Teachers are facilitators during role playing. The teacher still needs to spend time setting up the scenario and preparing prompting questions for the students to begin discussions from; however, the students gain ownership over their learning by being the actors and carrying on the discussion. Additionally, according to Alvarez (2008, p. 188), who conducted a study on using Role Playing simulations in the classroom, students found the most difficult of the three Role Playing exercises (averaging a 3.06 out of 5) the role play that brought the most enjoyment “(3.14 versus 2.96 and 2.92)” and the most amount of learning (3.55 versus 3.52 and 3.51).” Alvarez (2008) further tested the success of these simulation activities with an end of the year survey which found that the top ranked Role Playing activity was also the class’ third overall favorite activity; two field trips were rated in the first and second positions. This means that not only are students learning necessary information from these activities, but that they truly are enjoying the class more than if they were spending the period doing an alternative activity. Therefore, opportunities to use Role Playing need to be embraced by teachers and not avoided, why not encourage enjoyable learning? Furthermore, Role Playing “engage[s] the multiple intelligences” and “clearly challenge[s] the interpersonal skills of all students and their ability to work with each other” (Alvarez, 2008, p. 187). Students are not only learning about human interaction in these social studies classrooms, they are becoming successful at human interactions themselves; this is a skill that schools cannot afford to skip over.
          While Role Playing does have its downsides, the positives outweigh these negative aspects. One complaint of Alvarez (2008) about the instruction model is that it is time-consuming. This is probably a major complaint about this activity by many teachers because Role Playing does normally consume an entire class period. However, the impact that it has on students academically, socially, and interpersonally make it worth the time because of everything that students gain from this one activity. From my experience with working with high school students on a regular basis, I can predict that a potential hazard may be that the same students swill be the actors during the acting portions of Role Playing. While students may enjoy watching their funnier peers participate as the actors, a teacher needs to be able to push for all students to have the opportunity to participate as actors during Role Playing throughout the year. Initially, shy students may want to avoid this at all costs; on the other hand, they may enjoy being given a very small part that just allows them to participate up front more than anything else. While it is great to get everyone involved as an actor, Role Playing is set up for the non-actors to have a valuable impact on the activity through the group discussions. Teacher s can facilitate to make sure that these students especially are given a voice during these times. While Role Playing is not the perfect activity, it is evident that teachers have the ability to work around these possible drawbacks that are not strong enough reasons to dismiss this cooperative learning instruction model.
Jigsaw
         
The Jigsaw model of instruction follows suit with the Role Playing model in that student learning is interdependent. Students need the participation of one another in order to gain the most information from either model. The Jigsaw model of instruction is described by Dell’Olio and Donk (2007, p. 246) as “a type of cooperative learning experience that promotes both academic and social goals for students.” These very words can be used to describe Role Playing; however, Jigsaw revolves around small group work instead of one big group. Jigsaw can be used in the high school social studies classroom as well as in many other disciplines and many other grade levels, making this a very flexible instruction model. The way that the Jigsaw works is “each member of a Jigsaw group has one portion of the total content to be learned, and the members will each teach their portion to all of the group members” (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007, p. 246). Each expert group learns about a different topic, for example, the different regions of the United States of America, and become experts on their area. After the first group discussion with this original group, students then break up into groups with students who were assigned different regions and teach one another what they have learned (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). How the information is displayed or evaluated is up to the teacher each time a Jigsaw is performed (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). Students may post blogs, make slideshows, use posters, small dramas – the possibilities are nearly endless! The students can do a final presentation in front of the class with their expert group and the class can have any final discussions to help make sense of the new information, tying it all together (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). Finally, the teacher can use an individual assessment to check for understanding from each student. The steps in a Jigsaw are very simple and allow room for creativity and adaptations, making it an instruction model that can fit into any social studies classroom from history to economics to psychology.
          Aside from flexibility and simplicity, the Jigsaw model has many benefits. Part of the positives of the Jigsaw comes from the reason it was created. As a part of the multicultural movement, “the original intent of Jigsaw learning was to provide children from diverse backgrounds the opportunity to work effectively and interdependently with one another” (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007, p. 257). Teachers can be very intentional about placing students in groups with students they do not often work with or talk to, creating groups that are both racially and academically diverse (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007). With the work divided among everyone, students have the opportunity to see that their peers can do work equally well. This is another benefit of the Jigsaw model as opposed to other group assignments. Jigsaw is designed for everyone to have to contribute to the work, “no one student can dominate the group” (Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007, p. 246). Students are each assigned a portion of their topic to become experts on and teach to the rest of their group; the group is depending on that student for the group success. Johnson and Johnson (as cited in Dell’Olio & Donk, 2007, p. 246) organized five essential components for cooperative learning; Jigsaw is an academic model that actually encourages all five components: positive interdependence, face-to-face interaction, individual accountability, social skills development, and group processing opportunities. This instruction model is beneficial for the social studies classroom because students gain valuable life-skills that do not form from reading a textbook and answering questions. Sadler and Klosterman (2009) studied the use of Jigsaw in a high school science classroom using the topic of global warming. The researchers used video to observe the groups’ interactions with one another and observed “that most students were actively engaged in analyzing the different perspectives and contributing to small-group discussions” (Sadler & Klosterman, 2009, p. 12). Many teachers know from their own previous experience as students that group projects have the tendency to be dominated by only a couple of students from the group. Research on the Jigsaw method shows that the majority of students actively participate in this small group setting, making it a model worthy of implementation. In addition, Sadler and Klosterman (2009, p. 12) claim “that the activity seemed to help students keep an open mind throughout the unit because they did not feel as though we were forcing them to adopt a predetermined position.” High school students are at a point in life when they want to make decisions for themselves. Jigsaw presents the facts but allows the students to decide on a position for themselves. The Jigsaw model is a method that encourages student interaction, improves cooperative learning skills, and increases student learning.
          Just like Role Playing, Jigsaw has its negative impacts. Like many cooperative learning models, Jigsaw requires a lot of time. Sadler and Klosterman (2009, p. 12) explain that “students had to rush a bit but completed the task in a 55-min class period.” It may even be better to provide one and one half or two class periods for the assignment; that way students will be guaranteed enough time for each group session and to debrief as a class at the end. While Jigsaw teaches students to work with people they would not normally choose to work with, there is still the potential for higher-achieving students to become frustrated or dissatisfied with the work done by other students in their expert group. Dell’Olio and Donk (2007) suggest that teachers leave expert groups together for at least a couple of Jigsaws, which can lead to built up frustrations because the higher-achieving students are continuously disappointed in the work of their peers. However, this in itself is a learning opportunity and the teacher can take advantage of this opportunity to discuss more than just racial differences. In addition, teachers can assess students separately, instead of giving one group grade. This solution will relieve a lot of the stress on students which will allow them to interact more positively with their peers. Time is a drawback of cooperative learning that cannot be remedied, but the benefits of the time spent outweigh that time spent on one activity and the potential for students to become dissatisfied with their groups can be dealt with by the way the teacher handles the situation; thus, the negatives about Jigsaw are not strong enough to not use this activity in a class.
Beneficial teaching for all
         
Role Playing and Jigsaw are intentional cooperative learning strategies that coincide with the multicultural movement. Diversity and multicultural education are two very important components of education in the twenty-first century. I am not even a certified teacher yet and I myself have already taken two diversity courses in preparation to become a teacher. Lisa Delpit is an author who focuses on equal education for every student, regardless of skin-tone or background. In her book Other People’s Children: Cultural Conflict in the Classroom, Delpit (2006, p. 140) cites researcher B. Holliday who found “that motivation in African-American children from low socioeconomic groups is more influenced by the need for affiliation than for achievement.” Teachers who use cooperative learning are surrounding students with their peers, encouraging African-American students to affiliate with their peers through academics. If African-American students are not motivated on their own, working with a group may help them to become more motivated. Researcher Harry Morgan did a study in 1990 that is consistent with the finding s of Holliday (as cited in Delpit, 2006). Morgan found “that a classroom that allows for greater movement and interaction will better facilitate the learning and social styles of African-American boys, while one that disallows such activity will unduly penalize them” (as cited in Delpit, 2006, p. 169). Both Role Playing and Jigsaw encourage student interaction and involve getting up and moving around the classroom, criteria needed to improve academic achievement among African-American students, especially boys. The multicultural movement seeks to remove the Eurocentric focus of the United States’ education system. The content used during Role Playing and Jigsaw do not need to be directly about diversity or multiculturalism in order for them to be sensitive to this movement, their formats are what make them positive contributors to a multicultural education. Teachers who have any level of diversity in their classrooms need to be aware of how their students learn best. For example, if I have a student who I know needs to be able to talk about content with his/her peers, I will do what I can to make that a possibility for him/her. When there is a student who needs to be able to get up and move around during class, I will be inclined to ask him/her to be a volunteer during a Role Playing lesson, just so he/she can get up from the desk. Teachers want students to succeed, that is why they are teachers; therefore, they need to be aware of learning strategies that can help to make their students more successful.
           In conclusion, though I am not yet a teacher, I have a solid grasp on what learning strategies have the ability to have positive influences on a high school social studies classroom in the twenty-first century. Students gain motivation and show more engagement with material when they actively interact with the content. These two components are influential in promoting academic success. Cooperative learning strategies like Role Playing and Jigsaw give students the opportunity to interact with one another and gain social skills for life outside of high school and in the workforce. When students face difficult content matter they embrace it as a group and are given the opportunity to work through the coursework together. Additionally, cooperative learning is a positive response to the multicultural movement because it is responsive to the needs of American students with different learning needs. Role Playing and Jigsaw may be only two cooperative learning strategies out of many; however, they show evidence of success and are responsive to quality student learning.

Works Cited

Alvarez, Patricia (2008). Students play the notables: Testing a simulation exercise. History Teacher, 41(2), 179-97.

Dell’Olio, J. M., & Donk, T. (2007). Models of teaching: Connecting student learning with standards. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Delpit, Lisa. (2006). Other people’s children: Cultural conflict in the classroom. New York, NY: The New Press.

Sadler, T. D., & Klosterman, M. L. (2009). Exploring the sociopolitical dimensions of global warming. Science Activities: Classroom Projects and Curriculum Ideas, 42(4), 9-13.

Leave a Comment

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.