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Teaching Children Science Book Cover
Teaching Children Science: A Project-Based Approach, 2/e
Joe Krajcik, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
Charlene Czerniak, University of Toledo
Carl Berger, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor

How Do I Develop Collaboration in the Science Classroom?

Definitions

anxiety  Uneasiness and apprehension.
base groups  Groups of students who work together on a project.
cognitive load  Amount of work in acquiring or using knowledge.
cognitive roles  Roles that require a specific type of thinking or specialized knowledge.
collaboration  A joint intellectual effort of students, peers, teachers, and community members to investigate a question or problem.
division of labor  A process that occurs when students collaborate, negotiate, compromise, and interface with others to investigate a driving question.
duped  Trick or persuade someone to do something for you.
equality  The quantity or level of knowledge or ability that members bring to a group.
home groups  Groups that are used for critiquing work and supporting each other; may be used the entire school year.
interpersonal roles  Roles that help students work well among themselves.
learning contracts  Written agreements between the students and teacher which establish standards for completion of their work before it is begun by the student.
loafer effect  A phenomena that occurs when one or more group members allow others to do all the work.
managerial roles  Roles that help manage time and completion of a task.
meaning  A sense of purpose or significance.
mutuality  The common goals of the students.
pact  An agreement between two or more groups or individuals to complete a given amount of work with the least effort.
positive interdependence  The linking of all group members so that one cannot succeed unless the other group members succeed.
scaffolding  A process in which a more knowledgeable person uses various techniques, such as modeling or coaching, to direct those aspects of the intellectual task that are initially beyond the capacity of the learner.
sharing groups  Groups where students share information about their respective projects.
socially induced incompetence  A phenomena that occurs when members of a group ostracize or disparage a student to the point that he or she feels unable to contribute to the group's work.
status differential effect  A phenomena that occurs when a high-status member of a group takes control. Higher status can be caused by many things-cliques, socioeconomic status, race, older students working with younger ones, or academic achievement.
trust-building skills  Skills or processes that help make all students feel comfortable working in small groups.
zone of proximal development  The difference in performance between what a learner can accomplish unassisted and what he could accomplish with the assistance of a more knowledgeable or capable other.