December 2015
Audience: ESL teachers working with low-intermediate-advanced students
Getting students to work together in class on constructing knowledge and solving problems has proven to be beneficial because it stimulates learner autonomy and turns students into active participants in the learning process (Murphey & Jacobs, 2000). Students learn to trust themselves and their peers, and not rely solely on the teacher as the only source of knowledge. Thus, collaboration is an integral component of active learning. The following activities are classroom tested and aimed at improving student collaboration in class.
1. DOs and DON’Ts
Purpose: to elicit what students already know about a topic or do a review.
Have a topic in mind that you want your students to discuss (e.g., “How to write an essay”).
Table 1. Writing an essay example
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Include a clear thesis statement | Add new info in the conclusion |
Relate each topic sentence to the thesis statement | Plagiarize |
2. YES – NO Chart
Purpose: to promote self-assessment and peer teaching.
As in the previous activity, students are asked to complete a chart on a specific topic (see Table 2), but the focus is on individual rather than collective knowledge. Students have a great opportunity to receive extra explanations from peers who are knowledgeable about the topic. This activity works well right before a test or other formal assessment.
Table 2. Note-taking methods example
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How to use symbols and abbreviations | What is the Cornell method? |
How to use an outline for notes | What words I can skip |
3. Jigsaw
Purpose: to stimulate responsibility for independent learning and construct knowledge together.
This activity works great for introducing a new topic that can be broken into several parts. Here are the steps to follow:
Below are some topics where the Jigsaw activity can be used quite effectively:
Table 3. Jigsaw examples
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Text Comprehension The Passive Voice |
• Difference between the active and passive forms • Formation • Use of the by-phrase |
Relative Clauses | • Use in a sentence and pronouns • Restrictive clauses • Nonrestrictive clause |
Text Comprehension | A text divided into several independent parts |
Vocabulary Knowledge | A vocabulary list divided into several parts |
Academic Lecture Comprehension (may require some adjustment) |
A recorded lecture divided into several independent parts (students may listen to it at home or access it from their smartphones if it’s posted online) |
Conclusion
The activities discussed above will help you improve the collaborative environment in your classroom. Their most important advantage is that they provide “frameworks,” and thus are highly versatile and can be adopted for teaching a variety of topics across all skills. These activities can even be used multiple times with the same class and still feel new due to the variety of topics that can be learned and reviewed with their help.
Reference
Murphey, T., & Jacobs, G. M. (2000). Encouraging critical collaborative autonomy. JALT Journal 22(2), 228–244.
Olena Zastezhko is an IEP instructor at the University of Dayton, where she teaches a variety of ESL classes to pre-academic students and coordinates IEP tutoring.
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