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Mycue, Sheri – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2001
Using the Professional Circle model, teachers can move from isolation to collaboration while pursuing goals with others who share similar interests. A Professional Circle offers teachers continued motivation, acknowledgment, and support of self- development efforts. Presents guidelines for developing a Professional Circle, describing the…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Development, Group Activities, Teacher Collaboration
Barbatt, Natalie M. – American Biology Teacher, 2004
A group exercise, suggested to be most effective when used near the semester-end, enables entry-level students to appreciate the application of plant biology and makes botany labs experimental. It is believed that this series of labs helps students to appreciate their own learning when they teach and explain things to others.
Descriptors: Botany, Biology, Experiential Learning, Science Experiments
Lane, Rebecca; Coker, Jessica; McNamara, Suzanne – Primary Science Review, 2005
It is easy to take for granted that children often work together in groups unproblematically on practical science tasks. However, after a recent exercise in a small rural church school the authors realised that they had not considered fully the limitations they would encounter with group work. They had spent four one-hour sessions working with a…
Descriptors: Investigations, Scientific Methodology, Children, Science Education
Gerrard, Juliet A.; Sparrow, Ashley D. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2002
This article describes a new approach to teaching metabolic pathways, designed to engage students with the material, and its complexities. Based on a novel way of presenting metabolic pathways, in which the focus is placed on proteins rather than metabolites, simple tutorial-based exercises and mini-projects are described, bringing metabolism to…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Metabolism, Biochemistry, Science Instruction
Carpinelli, Tish – Library Media Connection, 2006
The key to improving students' attitudes about reading is to expose them to more contemporary literature--books to which they can relate in settings and themes--books that they are more likely to enjoy. This article describes a collaborative literature circles project between an English teacher and a media specialist that was extremely successful…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Literature Appreciation, Discussion Groups, Librarian Teacher Cooperation
Daniels, Harvey – Voices from the Middle, 2006
Long an advocate of literature circles, Daniels recaps the history of literature circles and cautions against the "terminology drift" that labels practices as literature circles when, in fact, they are not. He offers resources that anchor best practice in this area, and discusses how the concept is evolving and expanding. He also introduces us to…
Descriptors: Literature Appreciation, Reading Instruction, Class Activities, Group Activities
Stamovlasis, Dimitrios; Dimos, Andreas; Tsaparlis, Georgios – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2006
This study explores the effectiveness of a cooperative learning (CL) approach, where students work together and elaborate concepts of physics. The group problem-solving tasks were conceptual questions from physics, where the students had to discuss and provide explanations of some phenomena. The effectiveness of the learning-in-groups approach was…
Descriptors: Instructional Effectiveness, Teaching Methods, Physics, Group Activities
Love, Angela; Burns, M. Susan – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 2006
Sustaining attention and successfully engaging with others in collaborative play are important accomplishments focused on in preschool classrooms and childcarecenters. In addition, music is frequently used in early childhood classrooms, and even recommended as an environmental feature to motivate and regulate children's behavior. Although pretend…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Child Care Centers, Classroom Environment, Music
Tingstrom, Daniel H.; Sterling-Turner, Heather E.; Wilczynski, Susan M. – Behavior Modification, 2006
The Good Behavior Game (GBG), a type of interdependent group-oriented contingency management procedure, was first introduced in 1969 and has been used with overwhelming success in classrooms and other settings. Since its inception, the "game" has utilized team competition and peer influence combined with reinforcement procedures. It has been found…
Descriptors: Contingency Management, Peer Influence, Reinforcement, Behavior Change
Phillippo, Kate; Stone, Susan – Children & Schools, 2006
This study reports findings from a content analysis of the activities and tasks of a school-based problem-solving team. Analyses of observational data collected over the course of five months found that team tasks and activities fell into the following five clusters: (1) needs identification, program development, and planning; (2) intrateam…
Descriptors: Program Development, Content Analysis, Teamwork, Group Activities
Veach, Laura J.; Gladding, Samuel T. – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2007
Groups in high schools that use creative techniques help adolescents express their emotions appropriately, behave differently, and gain insight into themselves and others. This article looks at seven different creative arts media--music, movement, visual art, literature, drama, play, and humor--and offers examples of how they can be used in groups…
Descriptors: High Schools, High School Students, Group Counseling, Counseling Techniques
Kreijns, Karel; Kirschner, Paul A.; Jochems, Wim; van Buuren, Hans – Computers & Education, 2007
Most asynchronous computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL) environments can be characterized as "functional" environments because they focus on functional, task-specific support, often disregarding explicit support for the social (emotional) aspects of learning in groups which are acknowledged by many educational researchers to…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Interpersonal Competence, Cooperation, Social Support Groups
Bowering, Margaret; Leggett, Bridget M.; Harvey, Michael; Hui, Leng – International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 2007
As the number of off-shore content-based courses presented by Western universities increases, the issue as to the suitability of elements of constructivist pedagogy arises. This paper reports on mainland Chinese student views of two different types of collaborative work conducted bilingually within a Master of Education program specializing in…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Student Evaluation, Group Activities, Foreign Countries
Frasier, James R. – Principal Leadership, 2007
The involvement of high school students with disabilities in after-school and cocurricular activities declined nationwide between 2001 and 2006 (Institute of Education Sciences, n.d.). The Partners Club at East Anchorage High School in Alaska, however, is an example of how such activities can support relationships between nondisabled students and…
Descriptors: Extracurricular Activities, Group Activities, Attitudes toward Disabilities, Clubs
Powell, Mark – Montessori Life: A Publication of the American Montessori Society, 2007
Recess beckons well before it actually arrives. Its allure can be heard in children's lunchtime conversations as they discuss imaginary roles, plans, alliances and teams, with an obvious appetite for play and its unbounded possibility. For some children, recess provides the most important reasons to come to school. In team sports, games of chase…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Relationship, Social Justice, Moral Values, Montessori Schools