We had fun learning about the "Columbus Day" holiday in library and class. As a follow-up activity in class we worked in groups creating a poster highlighting our learning.
According to Susan Munro, Mary Utne O'Brien, John W. Payton in their article on Edutopia:
Common Ground: Teaching Kids the Benefits Of Working Together - October 19, 2006
Cooperative learning helps create the essential skill of working and compromising within a group.
During the course of the assignment, the children work together for a
shared benefit, realizing that all members share that goal and the
rewards of achieving it. Cooperative learning goes hand in hand with
social and emotional learning (SEL). Briefly, the two approaches help
develop a number of skills, including
- self-awareness: recognizing feelings and identifying interests, strengths, and weaknesses.
- self-management: managing feelings and behavior to control impulses
and persevere in achieving important personal and academic goals.
- social awareness: understanding the needs and feelings of others,
while appreciating similarities and differences among individuals and
groups.
- relationship skills: maintaining positive relationships with others.
- responsible decision making: making good choices and contributing to one's school, one's community, and the world.
Studies of cooperative-learning strategies regularly report an
increase in engagement and active participation in the learning process,
which in turn increase student motivation, time on task, and retention
times and improve cognitive reasoning and the ability to see from
others' perspectives.
Available at: http://www.edutopia.org/common-ground