Explore and discover the power of interdisciplinary cooperative learning centers. Learn to create units through collaboration that foster inclusive classrooms for all students, including your English Language Learners. Enjoy as your students work cooperatively, think critically, use technology, and apply content knowledge through meaningful culminating activities and projects.
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
Cooperative Learning Centers: Meeting the Needs of Diverse Learners
1. Creating Interdisciplinary Units
with Cooperative Learning Centers
Pick a Theme
• What is your big idea?
• What historical era will be your focus?
• What will each learning center connect to?
• A novel? A major current event? A field trip?
Brainstorm topics in different content areas
• What connections can you make between your theme and each content area?
• What content topics fit under the big umbrella of your chosen theme?
Make a team decision about learning center logistics
• Will you and your teammates run all the learning centers simultaneously in
all content area classrooms? In this option, learning centers are staged in
every classroom and students rotate through all the centers in all classrooms.
• Will the learning centers be staged in the content area classroom? For
example, when the student goes to math, they participate in the math centers.
Created by Joni Allison, Pat Davis, Kathy Jones 2011
Rugby Middle School
www.rug.henderson.k12.nc.us
2. Plan the learning centers using the lesson plan structure with which you and
your students are familiar.
• What do want students to learn at each center?
• How will the center activate their prior knowledge and grab their attention?
• What activities will the students participate in to insure you meet different
learning styles and students will learn and retain the information from the
center?
• What summarizer will the students do to demonstrate their learning?
Decide how students will organize their learning
• How will students keep track of what they are learning in each station?
• How will you assess that students met the lesson objective of the station?
Choose a culminating project
• What meaningful product or project will the students create applying the
knowledge they have gained through the learning centers?
• What opportunity will the students have to synthesize, summarize, and
demonstrate their newly acquired knowledge?
• What variety of products or projects will you create so that students will
have a choice about the way they want to demonstrate what they have
learned through the centers?
Created by Joni Allison, Pat Davis, Kathy Jones 2011
Rugby Middle School
www.rug.henderson.k12.nc.us
3. Guiding Questions for Using Cooperative Groups
Interpersonal and Small-Group Skills
• How will I teach my students how to work in a group?
• How can I create and nurture a culture of group participation so that it
becomes a classroom norm?
• What direct instruction will I provide on socially appropriate behaviors in a
group? (i.e. eye contact, how to be a good listener, being supportive and not
judgmental, using group member names when addressing a group member)
• What activities will I use to build a sense of Team, Classroom, and Small
Group Community?
• How long will my students need to stay in the same groups in order to
facilitate the learning of these skills?
Positive Interdependence
• How can I lower my students’ affective filter so that they feel safe enough to
learn in a group setting?
• What roles or jobs will I give to students to ensure that each member
participates and contributes?
• How will students know what their individual role and responsibility to the
group is?
Face-to-Face Interaction
• How will I ensure that group members will exchange ideas?
• What skills will I need to teach students so that they can respectfully
exchange their ideas and opinions?
• What language structures or vocabulary will students need to use to interact
with their group members?
Created by Joni Allison, Pat Davis, Kathy Jones 2011
Rugby Middle School
www.rug.henderson.k12.nc.us
4. Individual and Group Accountability
• How will I know if each person in the group is learning the content?
• How will I give feedback to individual students?
• How will I give feedback to the group?
• How will I grade the individual students and the group?
Group Processing
• How will groups reflect on their group performance?
• How will the groups identify their strengths?
• How will the groups identify their weaknesses and what steps will they take
in the future to improve upon their weaknesses?
Active Engagement
• Will the group task challenge my students?
• Will my students learn and grow after participating in the group activities?
• Will the group tasks engage my students?
Teacher Role
• How will I facilitate group conflict-resolution?
• How will I monitor student learning and participation?
• What groups will need more individual support from me?
Created by Joni Allison, Pat Davis, Kathy Jones 2011
Rugby Middle School
www.rug.henderson.k12.nc.us
5. Benefits of cooperative groups
• Increases achievement at all ability levels.
• Empowers students to take responsibility for their own learning.
• Enhances a sense of community among students.
• Promotes interpersonal communication skills.
Recommended Resources
• Drumming to the Beat of Different Marchers by Debbie Silvers
• Productive Group Work: How to Engage Students, Build Teamwork, and
Promote Understanding by Nancy Frey, Douglas Fisher, Sandi Evelove
• The New Circles of Learning: Cooperation in the Classroom and School by
David Johnson
• Cooperative Learning: Theory, Research, and Practice by Robert Slavin
• Mini-Lessons for Literature Circles by Harvey Daniels &Nancy Steineke
Created by Joni Allison, Pat Davis, Kathy Jones 2011
Rugby Middle School
www.rug.henderson.k12.nc.us