Collaborative Learning and EAL learners Newport 17th March 2008.

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Collaborative Learning and EAL learners Newport 17th March 2008

Transcript of Collaborative Learning and EAL learners Newport 17th March 2008.

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Collaborative Learning and EAL learners

Newport 17th March 2008

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The Game of MUD

• Blank• Fog• Mud• Cactus • Forest

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EAL learners’ needs

• Blank This means total ignorance. Never heard of it.

• Fog I have difficulty with this. My mind switches off...was badly

taught... it just bores me...

• Mud A more comfortable natural state. Yes, something stirring there. I

might remember with a little help. But FACTS... I couldn’t actually...don’t

ask me.

• Cactus Well yes, for what it’s worth, I know this...and this...and

this...one, two, three...and that’s my lot.

• Forest At home with this. Plenty of facts. Could write an essay, give a

lecture. Move over and I’ll show you.

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What is Collaborative Learning?

• Interactive activities• Carefully structured • Accessible to all• Promotes speaking, listening and

thinking

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How does collaborative learning help thinking?

• Visual/kinesthetic support for concept development

• Opportunities to value prior knowledge• Supportive environments to formulate new

ideas• Opportunities to rework/reword ideas and

provide time for reflection

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How does collaborative learning help thinking?

• Opportunities to revisit learning in attractive ways

• Templates for pupils to develop their own activities

• Scaffolds talk at all levels simultaneously• Provides tasks that model thinking processes • Transformation of information

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How are activities planned?

• What do we want the children to know?• What kinds of thinking do we hope they will

practice?• What kinds of language do they need?

Necessary language and potential language?• What key visuals best produce the thinking

and the language?

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Here is an example!!

• We want children to consider the different habitats of animals.

• Where do they live?• What is it like there?• Why do they live

there?• How do they survive

and/or thrive?

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What key visual will help their thinking?Initially a sorting grid or chart.

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This can be made into a game.• You need 4 people, one baseboard and two sets of cards (different colours.)

• Work with a partner to make a team of two.

• Shuffle your cards and place them in a pile facing down.

• Take it in turn to turn over your top card and decide where to put it on the board.

• The winning team gets four in row vertically, horizontally or diagonally.

• Decide whether to have challenges or a checking system.

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Your instructions!• Take a sample “Quicklook”• Study it carefully in pairs. What learning needs, language

needs, social needs does it address?• What language and thinking does it practice?• Would it work for your EAL learners?• What changes might be necessary?• Now leave your partner, and each of you find another

colleague with a different “Quicklook”. Explain your activity to your new partner and let your new partner explain theirs to you.

• If there is time, exchange your “Quicklooks”, and find another partner to repeat the process.

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Who benefits from collaborative learning?

• Everyone and in particular

• More able bilingual pupils• Challenging pupils• Independent learners• Children with mismatched skills

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Where can I find collaborative learning activities?

Collaborative Learning Project

www.collaborativelearning.org

Please browse through the Quicklooks on the website and download one full

activity to try out on your EAL learners and/or your colleagues back at school.

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Collaborative Learning Project

• A teacher network since 1983• Developed in challenging and multilingual

classrooms• Cross phase and cross curricular• Online library of sample strategies: templates

to support your own planning. Good enough to use and to tweak.

• Promotes collaborative planning through workshops and training throughout UK.