LTA2015
LTA2015
LTA2015
January, 2015
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Abstract
Peers have positive influences on learning only within a cooperative context. There are
three types of cooperative learning: formal, informal, and base groups. These types were
derived from social interdependence theory, which has been validated by over 1200 research
studies.
vehicle for ensuring (a) effective learning, (b) cognitive, moral, and social development, and (c)
socialization into the competencies, attitudes, and values needed to be contributing members of
social behavior. Theorists such as Sigmund Freud, Erik Erickson, and Jean Piaget, however,
have argued that high-quality peer interaction is essential for cognitive, moral, and social
demonstrated that positive relationships with classmates accounted about one-third of the
peer interaction needs to occur within a cooperative context. In order to ensure that positive peer
interaction occurs day after day, therefore, schools need to ensure that most instruction is
structured cooperatively.
practice. In our research reviews, we located over 1200 studies with enough data reported to
calculate effect sizes. The studies were conducted from the 1890s to the present. We organized
the findings within the framework of social interdependence theory. In addition, we personally
have conducted over 100 research studies to validate, modify, and refine social interdependence
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theory. From the validated theory we derived practical procedures for implementing cooperative
learning from preschool through graduate school and adult training programs. These practical
procedures are known as “Learning Together and Alone.” We have helped implement our
cooperative learning procedures into schools, universities, businesses, hospitals, and other
settings throughout North, Central, and South America, Europe, Asia, the Pacific Rim, the
Middle East, and Africa. From our experiences implementing cooperative learning, we
new research, modified the practical procedures, and implemented the revised procedures in
schools and universities. It is this combination of theory, research, and practice that gives
the early 1900s that groups were dynamic wholes in which the interdependence among members
could vary. In the 1930s, Kurt Lewin stated that the essence of a group is the interdependence
among members created by common goals. In the 1940s, Morton Deutsch developed a theory of
cooperation and competition in which he noted that goal interdependence can be positive
1960s, we have extended and refined social interdependence theory. The basic premise of social
interdependence theory is that the way interdependence is structured determines how individuals
interaction, in which individuals encourage and facilitate each other’s efforts to achieve.
and obstruct each other’s efforts to achieve. In the absence of goal interdependence there is no
efforts to achieve, more positive relationships, and greater psychological health than do
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formal cooperative learning, informal cooperative learning, and cooperative base groups. From
these procedures, any lesson, in any curriculum, in any subject area, for any age student, in any
Formal cooperative learning consists of students working together, for one class period to
several weeks, to achieve shared learning goals and jointly complete specific tasks and
4. Assess and evaluate students' learning, and help students process how well their groups
Informal cooperative learning consists of having students work together to achieve a joint
learning goal in temporary, ad-hoc groups that last from a few minutes to one class period. In
informal cooperative learning groups students engage in three-to-five minute focused discussions
before and after a lecture and two-to-three minute turn-to-your-partner discussions interspersed
every ten to fifteen minutes throughout a lecture. The brief dialogues ensure that students
Cooperative base groups are long-term cooperative learning groups with stable membership
in which members provide the support, encouragement, and assistance they need to make
academic progress and hold members accountable for striving to learn. Typically, cooperative
base groups last for the duration of the semester or year. Base groups meet at the beginning and
end of each class session (or week) to complete academic tasks (such as checking each members’
homework), routine tasks (such as taking attendance), and personal support tasks (such as
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A typical class session may begin with a base group meeting, followed by a short lecture
followed by another short lecture involving informal cooperative learning, followed by a closing
These three cooperative learning procedures form the basis for organizing the cooperative
school. At the school level, faculty and staff can meet weekly in teaching teams (base groups),
engage in school-based decision making (formal cooperative learning), and engage in short pair
elements into a lesson that cooperative learning truly exists. Through the use of the five basic
elements, teachers become instructional engineers/designers who can take their unique lessons,
curricula, subject areas, courses, and students and (a) structure any lesson cooperatively and (b)
diagnose problems students have in working together and effectively intervene. The five
1. Positive interdependence, the perception that one is linked with others in a way so that
3. Promotive interaction, students helping, assisting, and supporting, each other's efforts to
learn.
conflict-management skills.
5. Group processing, group members discussing how well they are achieving their goals
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under which competition and individualistic efforts may be constructive. Competition tends to
be more constructive when winning is relatively unimportant, all participants have a reasonable
chance to win, and there are clear, specific, and fair rules, procedures, and criteria for winning.
Individualistic efforts tends to be most appropriate when the goal is perceived to be important,
students expect to be successful, the task is unitary and nondivisible, directions for completing
the task are simple and clear, there is adequate space and resources for each student, and what is
What We Know
1. Peer interaction may promote achievement; healthy cognitive, moral, and social development;
and socialization into the competencies, attitudes, and values needed to be contributing
members of society.
2. Constructive peer interaction requires that students should spend most of the day in
3. Our cooperative learning methods (formal, informal, base groups) were derived from social
promotive interaction, the appropriate use of social skills, and group processing.
6. The interaction among theory, research, and practice makes cooperative learning one of the
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Further Reading
Johnson, D. W, & Johnson R. T. (1981). Student-student interaction: The neglected variable in
and Competition: Theory and Research. Edina, MN: Interaction Book Company.
Johnson, D. W., & Johnson, R. T. (1994). Leading the cooperative school (2nd Ed.). Edina,
Johnson, D. W., & Johnson, R. (2005). New developments in social interdependence theory.
Johnson, D. W., & Johnson, R. T. (2009). An educational psychology success story: Social
Johnson, D. W., Johnson, R., & Holubec, E. (2013). Cooperation in the classroom (9th Ed.).