A great piece on special needs kids--thanks Kathryn.
I have a question about special needs kids that I think I've seen discussed on ktm (but I can't seem to find right now), which is what are the issues with collaborative learning (group work that is fairly low stakes, not Group Work that is big projects). I'm trying to get the pre-service teachers in my class to think about collaborative work more deeply than "just tell them to work in groups", and I'd love some data to back me up in saying that there are hidden problems in group work that you need to think about. If there are resources anyone can suggest, I'd appreciate it.
I think Katherine Beals has quite a few examples in her book (Raising Left Brained Kids in a Right Brained World), and we've talked about the issue on and off over at Over in Left Field. You might start there, but I don't know that there is "data" per se.
See for example: http://oilf.blogspot.com/2012/06/modern-bullies.html
Katie's piece is fabulous!
ReplyDeleteA great piece on special needs kids--thanks Kathryn.
ReplyDeleteI have a question about special needs kids that I think I've seen discussed on ktm (but I can't seem to find right now), which is what are the issues with collaborative learning (group work that is fairly low stakes, not Group Work that is big projects). I'm trying to get the pre-service teachers in my class to think about collaborative work more deeply than "just tell them to work in groups", and I'd love some data to back me up in saying that there are hidden problems in group work that you need to think about. If there are resources anyone can suggest, I'd appreciate it.
Laurel
I think Katherine Beals has quite a few examples in her book (Raising Left Brained Kids in a Right Brained World), and we've talked about the issue on and off over at Over in Left Field. You might start there, but I don't know that there is "data" per se.
ReplyDeleteSee for example:
http://oilf.blogspot.com/2012/06/modern-bullies.html
Thanks!
ReplyDelete