Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Collaborative Learning

Critical thinking is a skill that young minds will undeniably need and use well beyond their school years.  Educational leaders agree that in keeping up with the ever-changing technological advances, students will need to obtain, understand, and analyze information on a much more efficient scale.
It is our job to equip our students with the strategies and skills they need to think critically in order to cope with these tech problems and obstacles they face elsewhere.
Traditionally, teachers have prepared templates, samples, art models, or step-by-step instructions for student projects art lessons, and other tasks that lend themselves to creative problem solving. 
It has been suggested that not having everything prepped in advance is a good thing. Give students all of the supplies needed to create and let them do it on their own. This will allow students to become critical thinkers because they will have to tinker and use their problem solving skills to create.
As we continue to lead our students and model innovative thinking, I encourage us to consider the following:

Think About How You Help
It’s too easy to always find a solution for a student who needs your help.  Consider asking some thinking questions like, “How would you start to solve the problem?” or “What do you thin the best starting point is?”  Then, you can assist the student in figuring out the best possible solutions.

Brainstorm
Brainstorming is a great way to get students ready for exploring solutions and strategies.  Regardless of subject, have students think about what they’ll be doing, creating, building, learning, or reading, before starting.  This gives students time to activate prior knowledge and reflect on other learning experiences that required critical thinking.  Students will begin to identify successes in their critical thinking history.

Classify and Categorize or Compare and Contrast
As students learn and explore through problem solving, Maker Space, navigation of technology, creating, building, etc.  They begin to see patterns or rules for related problems or concepts.  Students will also be able to compare and contrast learning experiences or new learning over time.  These abilities to categorize, classify, compare and contrast will help students retrieve new understandings and learning in future problem solving situations.

Make Connections
As students problem solve, encourage connections to a real-life situations.  Help students look for these connections, and invite them to look at the world’s problems as issues they hold the solutions for.

Collaborative Learning
Cooperative and collaborative groups are a perfect way to get students thinking.  When classmates are working together, they are exposed to the thought processes of their peers. They learn how to understand how other people think and that there is more than one way to approach and solve a problem.

Critical thinking is a valuable skill that students need to develop during their educational career.  As students become skilled critical thinkers, they will become resilient and persevere when presented with difficult problems.
I am excited about the prospect of helping students obtain critical thinking skills that will support their growth mindset and innovative thinking!
  Let’s team up and create some technology rich, critical thinking experiences for your students soon!

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