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Cooperative Learning Structures in Physical Education

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Cooperative Learning Structures in Physical Education Ben Dyson The University Memphis C mon Jen, you re cool you re doing great. Jen hesitates, she ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cooperative Learning Structures in Physical Education


1
Cooperative Learning Structures in Physical
Education
  • Ben Dyson
  • The University Memphis

2
  • Cmon Jen, youre cool youre doing great.
  • Jen hesitates, she has just scored her second
    goal in the mini-soccer game. This is the first
    time she has scored a goal in physical education
    class and she is surprised that it was that
    easy.
  • Jen is in a group of 4 students in a cooperative
    team playing another team. She has been
    practicing skills with her other team-mates and
    now they are really been challenged by playing
    another team. Its a bit daunting for this low
    skilled fourth grade girl. Or should I say
    previously low skilled student.

3
  • As physical educators search for ways to present
    meaningful experiences to their students, many
    turn to different instructional models. These
    activities provide a number of learning
    experiences valued by educators but not always
    readily available within busy scheduled PE
    schedule.
  • Why?

4
Domains of Learning
  • Psychomotor
  • Cognitive
  • Affective

5
National Standards
  • Psychomotor
  • Proficiency, competency, strategizing
  • Cognitive
  • Understanding, applying, creating..
  • Affective
  • Responsibility, interaction, challenge, fun

6
Cooperative Learning Structures
  • Cooperative Learning has hundreds of structures
    that emphasize different goals depending of the
    focus of the teacher. They can be more
    motor-skill oriented or more social-skill
    process oriented -- depending on the
    participants and the activity.

7
Cooperative Learning Perspectives
  • Active learners
  • students are not passive recipients of knowledge
    but are involved in tasks that stimulate
    decision-making, critical thinking, and problem
    solving.
  • Social learners
  • students construct knowledge through social
    interaction with their peers, facilitated by
    their teachers.
  • Creative learners
  • students are guided to discover knowledge
    themselves and to create their own understanding
    of the subject matter. Individuals draw on prior
    knowledge and experiences to construct
    knowledge. Perkins (1999)

8
Elements of Cooperative Learning
  • Face to face interaction
  • Positive interdependence
  • Individual accountability
  • Interpersonal skills
  • Group processing

9
What do CL structures mean in physical education?

10
CL structures in physical education
  • Think-Share-Perform
  • Based on Think-Pair-Share (Kagan,1992). This is
    a strategy for encouraging participation through
    critical thinking, sharing, negotiating, and
    performing. It is particularly useful for
    creating games, dances, and obstacles courses, as
    well as practicing game and sport strategies
    through problem solving.

11
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12
CL structures in physical education
  • 2. Pairs-Check-Perform
  • Based on Kagans (1992) structure Pairs Check.
    This structure requires individuals to stay
    on-task and help others learn, and is useful when
    learning locomotor, manipulative, sport,
    gymnastic or aquatic skills. This is similar to
    Mosston (1981) reciprocal style of teaching.
    Students work in pairs. Once they have agreed
    that they have completed the task they work with
    another pair to check their task/performance.

13
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14
CL structures in physical education
  • 3. Jigsaw Perform
  • Based on Jigsaw as originally developed by
    Aronson (1978). In this division of work and
    sharing structure, each student is responsible
    for learning and performing a portion of the
    content, and then teaching his or her portion to
    other group members. During Jigsaw Perform there
    is strong positive interdependence as each
    student is dependent upon others for information.
    This structure can be used in physical education
    for developing routines, creating stations,
    teaching dance, and teaching and reviewing motor
    skills and tactics.

15
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16
CL structures in physical education
  • 4. Co-op Play
  • Based on Learning Together (Orlick, 1978, 1982
    Johnson et. al., 1984). Co-op Play stresses
    working together to achieve challenging group
    goals through inclusive activities in which all
    students are involved and their efforts accepted.
    Co-op Play is an appropriate structure for
    practicing skills, modifying or creating games,
    dances, and obstacle courses.

17
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18
CL structures in physical education
  • 5. Learning Teams
  • Based on Student Teams-Achievement Divisions
    (Slavin, 1980) and Learning Together (Johnson et.
    al., 1984). Learning Teams provide students with
    the opportunity to share leadership and
    responsibility roles and use collaborative skills
    to achieve group goals. Learning Teams are useful
    for teaching any physical education content,
    although sports skills and tactics can be readily
    applied. Student roles (such as recorder,
    encourager, coach, equipment manager) are used to
    facilitate group/team activity.

19
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20
Teaching CL structures
  • Teachers role
  • - facilitator
  • Students role
  • active contributor
  • students are positively interdependent on each
    other
  • We sink or swim together

21
Reflection time
  • How confident do you feel in
  • your ability to design a sequence of lessons that
    would comprise a purposeful, meaningful, and
    exciting cooperative learning experience for
    students?
  • your ability to find local expertise implementing
    a new instructional model like CL? What PD is
    available?
  • your ability to convince fellow physical
    educators that the inclusion of cooperative
    learning within their physical education
    curriculum holds promise?
  • your ability to convince a school administrator
    that funding your attendance at a cooperative
    learning training workshop would be a good
    investment for the school?
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