Active Learning and Cooperative Learning

(Soldotna, AK): There has been increasing interest among college faculty members in the teaching methods grouped under the terms ‘active learning’ and ‘cooperative learning.’

“Active Learning” is anything that students do in a classroom other than merely passively listening to an instructor’s lecture. This includes everything from listening practices which help the students to absorb what they hear, to short writing exercises in which students react to lecture material, to complex group exercises in which students apply course material to “real life” situations and/or to new problems.

The term “cooperative learning” covers the subset of active learning activities which students do as groups of three or more, rather than alone or in pairs; generally, cooperative learning techniques employ more formally structured groups of students assigned complex tasks, such as multiple-step exercises, research projects, or presentations. Cooperative learning is to be distinguished from another now well-defined term of art, “collaborative learning,” which refers to those classroom strategies which have the instructor and the students placed on an equal footing working together in, for example, designing assignments, choosing texts, and presenting material to the class. Clearly, collaborative learning is a more radical departure from tradition than merely utilizing techniques aimed at enhancing student retention of material presented by the instructor. “Techniques of active learning”, then, are those activities which an instructor incorporates into the classroom to foster active learning