Please note that the content of this page was taken from the Spark Creativity blog written by Betsy Potash. Any first person pronouns refer to the author.

Do you teach collaboration in your classroom? Or do you just assume that students will figure it out? Or that someone taught them long ago?

The foundations for good group dynamics are not an integral part of most curriculums. The process of learning how to learn together is rarely if ever discussed in faculty meetings, professional development seminars, or department meetings.

And yet, in a world where collaboration is increasingly valued as a vital 21st century skill, our students need to succeed with this. When we say “get into groups…”, we are assuming that they understand how to share a space, value everyone’s voice, and build a conversation or group process that will actually work for everyone. And they probably don’t.

Very few people really know how to do those things. 

Think about your faculty. Is there a discussion dominator in your department? Someone who tends to be silent? Freeloaders and hyper-organized do-it-all-ers at every meeting? Does everyone sigh when so-and-so asks yet another question, and everyone wonder if that one teacher is even paying attention or just checking Facebook on her phone?

Source

Potash, Betsy, "Let's Teach Students How to Collaborate." Spark Creativity, 30 September 2019, http://www.nowsparkcreativity.com/2019/ 09/lets-teach-students-how-to-collaborate.html.

Over the years I’ve learned to talk to my students about what it means to be a good group member and discussion participant. I’ve learned to ask them how group work is going and how they feel we could improve as members of the discussion. I’ve also learned to sometimes offer them choice between group and individual work, so they don’t always have to face a frustrating situation when they find group work really challenging.

Before launching into literature circles, fishbowl discussions, Harkness, the socratic method, or any other discussion or small group pedagogy, let’s teach students HOW to work together. It won’t look the same in every classroom, or even every group. But you can help students discover what works for them, and what some of the universal guiding principals are. Here are five ways to take the guesswork out of group work (scroll down for a free curriculum set to help you make this easy!).

#1: Interview Each Other About Group Work Past

Take a little time to have students talk to each other about their past experiences. How have their groups shared the work? Has everyone participated? Was everyone’s voice heard? What didn’t work? What did? Let them interview a few partners to hear about their past experiences.

#2: Brainstorm Best Practices

It’s anchor chart time. Put up one of those fabulous giant sheets of paper and let your students tell you what makes group work work. What does each participant need to do? What do they need to avoid? What makes it fair? What can the teacher do to help? Make a list, and post it in your classroom. Draw their attention back to it before group activities and projects.

#3: Reflect Following Group Work

Give students a chance to reflect in writing after group projects, and set a goal for the next project. How did they positively contribute to the group? What went well and what didn’t? What could they work on for next time?

#4: Talk About Discussion Dynamics

Whole class discussions also rely heavily on positive group dynamics. I always like to spend one of the first days of class talking about what goes into good discussions. Students are great about brainstorming ideas, and I ask one student to write all the ideas down. There’s always one thing I bring up, with every class. First I turn toward just one student, and stare into his or her eyes. Then I talk for a while, intensely, just toward him. “How does this feel right now? Is this a good way for me to focus during discussion? Does everyone in the room feel like they’re part of things?” 

Usually the student I’m staring at admits to feeling totally weird and uncomfortable, and everyone else says it’s weird and they feel left out. Then I talk about how EVERYONE is an equally important part of our round table discussions, and that students need to try hard to make eye contact around the room and not just focus on me as the teacher, as if I’m the only one who matters.

#5: Imagine Real Life Applications

Putting group work in context is really helpful. Have an honest conversation about the group contexts that are waiting for your students. Someday they will need to share their ideas with groups at work. Someday they will sit down around the dinner table, or the PTA table, or the boardroom table. Someday they may be working on a collaborative start-up team, or working virtually through videoconferencing with a team around the world. Someday they will very likely find a life partner who they will need to share ideas and brainstorm solutions to everyday problems with. Rarely does group work get put into this type of context.

Could you use a little help with all this? I made you something! Grab the free curriculum packet that will help you guide your students through the complex waters of group work.