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· Work done in groups is challenging and meaningful.
· The teacher is always actively involved in the students' learning process, serving as a resource person, questioner, guide, evaluator, and coach.
· Learning goals and timelines are clearly understood by the students and monitored by the teacher.
· Groups are heterogeneous, and all students are actively involved.
· Cooperation is valued over competition.
· Students have a sense of being able to accomplish more learning together than they can alone.
· The group process provides a comfort level for discussion and airing questions.
· Student interaction and social skills are required, but the purpose of grouping is not primarily social. Group time is not "free time" for student (or teacher).
· Multiple means of assessment are possible (rubrics, portfolios, quizzes, interviews, presentations, etc.). Evaluation can be of the individual student, of the group, or a combination of these.
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The specific task or problem to solve is limited in scope (a single problem or question or a limited set) and is usually a challenge or practice activity for students to apply recent learning.
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The problem or task is clearly defined by the teacher.
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The task or problem is open-ended and may cover large amounts of course content.
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Multiple approaches to solving the problem are encouraged. There is no single "right" way to solve most problems, and all reasonable solutions or answers to the problem are honored
Individual students have an opportunity to explain and discuss their suggested solutions aw well as their misconceptions
New understandings are developed by the individual, by the team, and, finally, by the whole class.
Group and class discussions (and solutions) provide immediate feedback to the student.
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A team plan of operation and goals is specified, and teams are highly structured. Each student has a clearly defined role in the team such as recorder, questioner, reporter. The teacher takes time to teach each student role.
Team members share leadership within the framework of specific roles.
All team members must contribute or the team cannot progress. (Teams "win or lose together.") The end product represents the entire team.
The team focus is on cooperation as well as on achievement of goals. Awareness of the group process is as important as completing the task.
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Student roles are flexible and may change throughout the project or assignment. Students observe (and help with) other students' work, and critique, evaluate, explain, and suggest ways for improvement.
Open communication and multiple approaches are emphasized. All students are involved in honest discussion about ideas, procedures, experimental results, gathered information, interpretations, resource materials, and their own or other students' work.
Students are constantly aware of the collaborative communication process, as well as the product or goals. They know they can change direction to meet goals.
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