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"I used to be a very good lecturer," Ted Panitz tells Education World. "I was well organized. I established the day's goals, provided an overview of the concepts under study, and led the class through a series of problems and questions demonstrating the concept or mathematical procedure."
The approach seemed to work well until test time arrived, when Panitz's students did not perform as well as expected. "Looking back, based on the research I have read, I am not surprised," states Panitz. " By writing and explaining the concepts, I was doing all the critical thinking -- strengthening my own brain synapses, not my students'!"
Panitz had used cooperative-learning techniques to help companies build working groups, but it had not occurred to him to adapt the techniques to teaching. Until he experienced the cooperative-learning approach and practiced it, he didn't understand its implications for teaching. "This was quite an eye-opener for me. It started a turnaround in my teaching philosophy; from a teacher-centered lecture approach to one that is student-centered and cooperative," Panitz explains to Education World
Panitz recommends that teachers who are interested in bringing cooperative learning into their own classrooms begin by experimenting with a few group activities -- before making a total shift into the method. Educators can get their feet wet with the cooperative-writing assignments found on Panitz's Web page. There, they'll find such resources as Ted's Cooperative Learning e-Book, articles written by Panitz, texts of listserv discussions about cooperative learning, and links to related Web sites.
Article by Cara Bafile |
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