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Collaborative Learning

How to Motivate Students to Work in Collaborative Teams

Group work can be challenging for students, but teachers can facilitate relationship building that leads to positive learning outcomes.

August 17, 2023

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There are great benefits to facilitating a classroom with collaborative learning structures where students lead their learning rather than being passive learners.聽In their book , Michael D. Toth and David A. Sousa discuss how to create a classroom where students work in 鈥渁cademic teams.鈥澛

Students engage in rigorous standards-based tasks while having deep discussions, participating in peer coaching, and working to assess themselves individually and as peers. Toth and Sousa say, 鈥淭he brain that does the work is the brain that learns.鈥 Collaborative learning yields more work out of the student because they鈥檙e engaging with the content rather than just receiving it. This article highlights work that my students and I have done and will continue to do to motivate each other. It has taken a lot of shifts in paradigms on my part to really facilitate collaborative learning. 

Student Buy-in Is Key for Group Work

Many of us who are high school teachers have struggled with getting student buy-in for collaboration. In the past, I was worried about my 鈥渃lassroom being too loud鈥 when I released responsibility to students. Now, I have to be creative in getting certain students to engage in group work. Some students simply aren鈥檛 interested in working in a group, or they might feel anxiety about having to speak to someone in person. There are also times in groups when students struggle with focus because of their electronics

Despite these reasons, I had success with collaborative structures in my classroom. I hope to have more this coming year鈥攊t鈥檚 a work in progress. Students鈥 ease with participation in groups was the result of my working with them on understanding the learning structures, being more autonomous in their learning through meaningful roles, and focusing attention on the tasks and others in their teams. 

We need to be intentional about how we set up our classrooms. It鈥檚 not just about students being compliant; it鈥檚 about their being motivated. Putting students in a group and saying, 鈥淗ey, go do this,鈥 isn鈥檛 going to work. Spending time working with students to plan the groups, learn norms and routines, and understand what it means to be part of the classroom culture is key.

Building Relationships Builds Teams

To have success with collaborative teams, it鈥檚 important to understand that relationships hold them together (among the students as well as with me as the teacher). Last year, I did a one-word campaign where I asked students to choose one motivational word to work toward throughout the year. It was a great way for me to learn about my students. This year, . This is a four-word sentence that they鈥檒l use for self-encouragement. Additionally, .

In my experience, I鈥檝e learned that learning about each other鈥檚 working styles is helpful. This year, I鈥檓 initiating a with my students in order for them to learn about each other鈥檚 strengths, and together we鈥檒l form the teams that they鈥檒l be working in together. Taking the survey and discussing it in teams will get students motivated to start having natural conversations. Then, we will create our norms with.

Additionally, students appreciate finding things in common with each other. This summer, I learned about for relationship building and understanding commonalities. Students will use this thinking process to answer questions about themselves and then discuss the similarities and the differences. These discussions can create organic connections.

Spend Time Directly Teaching Collaborative Learning Structures

My colleagues and I discovered that students just needed to get comfortable in the learning structures. Last year, we had student teams participate in short debates on topics in pop culture and others they found interesting. This activity lowered anxiety for most students and taught them how to have discussions in teams. Afterward, we held debrief sessions in a whole class setting to talk about the experience and how to improve discussions.

As we got better with conversations, we needed to improve group routines. Students became responsible for reading learning targets to the class and explaining them to each other, and they learned to get into their teams when necessary and quickly find their roles and tasks. They also had to get comfortable with self- and peer assessment.

Modeling is important when implementing a new learning structure. I sometimes used a quick pop culture reference or thought-provoking question to demonstrate what I expected a conversation to look like. Eventually, I got to a point where I would say 鈥淏ack to Back, Face to Face,鈥 鈥淔ish Bowl,鈥 or 鈥淲orld Cafe,鈥 and students knew what I meant.

When I saw that I needed to do more to support students in teams with understanding the scaffolds provided, I bought color-coded Jenga games. The colors on the Jenga pieces matched up with the colors of the language scaffolds I had in place for a team discussion. I posed a question for debate, and every time a student answered the question, they had to put a colored corresponding piece on the language scaffold I had in place for them. The discussions became more engaged and thought-provoking. 

Provide Impactful Roles

All collaborative learning has to have meaningful roles. Keep the roles and their descriptions simple, straightforward, and aligned to the task. Make sure that roles are student selected. I hand the descriptions to students and invite them to select their roles. If a group is struggling, I coach them by asking them, 鈥淲hat role do you think is best for you? What skills do you have for this role?鈥

Roles need to be adaptable not only for working styles and students鈥 personalities, but also for the product that students are creating. If the activity doesn鈥檛 require research, don鈥檛 include a 鈥渞esearcher鈥 role. If the task doesn鈥檛 require a drawing, don鈥檛 include an 鈥渁rtist鈥 role. For students who chose not to talk as much as others, I created the 鈥渟cribe鈥 role, where they worked as a note taker.

When we set up our classrooms this school year, it鈥檚 critical that we put student needs, standards-based tasks, and classroom community at the forefront when considering collaborative group learning. Understand that it takes a lot of work to make this successful in the classroom, and don鈥檛 give up if things don鈥檛 go well the first time. It鈥檚 a worthwhile journey for you as the teacher, as well as for your students.

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Filed Under

  • Collaborative Learning
  • 9-12 High School

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