Students who know how to collaborate successfully in the classroom will be better prepared for professional success in a world where we are expected to work well with others. Students learn collaboratively, and acquire the skills needed to organize and complete collaborative work, when they participate in thoughtfully-designed learning activities. Learning to Collaborate, Collaborating to Learn uses the author’s Taxonomy of Online Collaboration to illustrate levels of progressively more complex and integrated collaborative activities. - Part I introduces the Taxonomy of Online Collaboration and offers theoretical and research foundations. - Part II focuses on ways to use Taxonomy of Online Collaboration, including, clarifying roles and developing trust, communicating effectively, organizing project tasks and systems. - Part III offers ways to design collaborative learning activities, assignments or projects, and ways to fairly assess participants’ performance. Learning to Collaborate, Collaborating to Learn is a professional guide intended for faculty, curriculum planners, or instructional designers who want to design, teach, facilitate, and assess collaborative learning. The book covers the use of information and communication technology tools by collaborative partners who may or may not be co-located. As such, the book will be appropriate for all-online, blended learning, or conventional classrooms that infuse technology with “flipped” instructional techniques.
As such, the book will be appropriate for all-online, blended learning, or conventional classrooms that infuse technology with "flipped" instructional techniques.
In Collaborative Learning, Kenneth Bruffee advocates a far-reaching change in the relations we assume between college and university professors and their students, between the learned and the learning. He argues...
Praise for Teacher Collaboration for Professional Learning "This volume covers everything teachers need to know to initiate collaborative research.
This is must-reading for all faculty, instructional designers, and academic administrators interested in improving student retention and success in online courses." —Jack A. CHAMBERS, director, program development for instructional ...
Just ask the tens of thousands of Collaboration and Co-Teaching users and now, a new generation of educators, thanks to this all-new second edition: Collaborating for English Learners. Why this new edition?
This book brings together a diverse range of international scholars to profile new pedagogical developments in collaborative learning and to highlight how these practices have been implemented.
Some students develop ways to compensate for their learning differences, while others have behaviors that interfere with identification, thus causing the symptoms to go unrecognized until the child starts school (Lambros & Leslie, ...
In this new edition, the authors include ideas for using games in technologically-sophisticated curricula, information on effective online implementation for each of the book’s thirty-five techniques, as well as illustrative examples for ...
Distributed leadership matters: Perspectives, practicalities & potential. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. Hart, M. (2015). Research: Collaboration is key for teacher quality. The Journal. ... Leading with teacher emotions in mind.
Origins of the Gordon Model. Retrieved January 17, 2020, from www.gordontraining.com/thomas-gordon/origins-ofthe-gordon-model/ 5 Collaborative Strategies for Effective Learning Even in the most.