Research has identified cooperative learning as one of the ten High
Impact Practices that improve student learning.
If you've been interested in cooperative learning, but wondered how it
would work in your discipline, this book provides the necessary theory,
and a wide range of concrete examples.
Experienced users of cooperative learning demonstrate how they use it in
settings as varied as a developmental mathematics course at a community
college, and graduate courses in history and the sciences, and how it
works in small and large classes, as well as in hybrid and online
environments. The authors describe the application of cooperative
learning in biology, economics, educational psychology, financial
accounting, general chemistry, and literature at remedial, introductory,
and graduate levels.
The chapters showcase cooperative learning in action, at the same time
introducing the reader to major principles such as individual
accountability, positive interdependence, heterogeneous teams, group
processing, and social or leadership skills.
The authors build upon, and cross-reference, each others' chapters,
describing particular methods and activities in detail. They explain how
and why they may differ about specific practices while exemplifying
reflective approaches to teaching that never fail to address important
assessment issues.