4. • Children learn more, and enjoy learning
more when they are actively involved,
rather than passive listeners.
• Students working with and learning from
one another-and the development of a
strong learning community.
• Divergent thinking
• Learning through real life situations
5. COOPERATIVE
LEARNING
Is an educational approach to
teaching and learning that
involves group of students
working together to solve a
problem, complete a task or
create a product.
6. Types of Cooperative learning
Informal cooperative learning groups
Formal Cooperative learning groups
Cooperative Base Groups
7. Five phases of
Cooperative Learning
• Engagement
• Exploration
• Transformation
• Presentation
• Reflection
8. Five Basic Elements
Positive Interdependence
Individual and group accountability
Interpersonal and small group skills
Face-to-face promotive interaction
Group processing
10. Not all group learning is
cooperative learning
• Groups arguing over divisive conflicts and power
struggles
• A member sits quietly, too shy to participate
• One member does the work, while the other members
talk about something
• No one does the work because the one who normally
works the hardest doesn’t want to be a sucker.
• A more talented member may come up with all the
answers, dictate to the group, or work separately,
ignoring other group members.
11. TELL ME AND I FORGET
SHOW ME AND I MAY
REMEMBER,
INVOLVE ME AND I WILL
UNDERSTAND
19. K TO 12 Law
The Enhanced Basic Education Act
of 2013 allows schools to localize
and indigenize the K to 12
curriculum.
20. The REACT Strategy
Curricula and instruction based on contextual learning
strategies should be structured to encourage five essential
forms of learning:
EXPERIENCING
21. Learning in the context of life
experience, or relating, is the kind of
contextual learning that typically occurs
with very young children. With adult
learners, however, providing this
meaningful context for learning becomes
more difficult. The curriculum that
attempts to place learning in the context
of life experiences must, first, call the
student’s attention to everyday sights,
events, and conditions. It must then
relate those everyday situations to new
information to be absorbed or a problem
to be solved.
.
23. Experiencing—learning in the
context of exploration, discovery, and
invention—is the heart of contextual
learning. However motivated or tuned-in
students may become as a result of
other instructional strategies such as
video, narrative, or text-based activities,
these remain relatively passive forms of
learning. And learning appears to "take"
far more quickly when students are able
to manipulate equipment and materials
and to do other forms of active
research.
25. Applying concepts and
information in a useful context
often projects students into an
imagined future (a possible
career) or into an unfamiliar
location (a workplace). This
happens most commonly through
text, video, labs, and activities,
and these contextual learning
experiences are often followed up
with firsthand experiences such as
plant tours, mentoring
arrangements, and internships.
27. Cooperating—learning in the
context of sharing, responding, and
communicating with other learners—is a
primary instructional strategy in contextual
teaching. The experience of cooperating not
only helps the majority of students learn the
material, it also is consistent with the real-
world focus of contextual teaching.
29. Learning in the context of
existing knowledge, or
transferring, uses and builds
upon what the student has
already learned. Such an
approach is similar to relating,
Students develop confidence in
their problem-solving abilities if
we make a point of building new
learning experiences on what
they already know.