Developing Collaborative Thinkers: Rethinking how we Define, Teach, and Assess Class Participation

Author:

Hard Bridgette Martin1ORCID,RaoShah Taalin1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA

Abstract

Introduction: Class participation is a common component of many college classes and is typically defined as involving students’ active, oral engagement in class. Statement of the Problem: Class participation is often an under-utilized pedagogical tool for skill-building and development. Literature Review: We present an evidence-based framework that encourages instructors and students to rethink class participation as collaboration. Drawing on a review of over 40 years of research, we argue that this framework for defining class participation will lead to better classroom discussions, academic and social-emotional benefits for students, and prepare students with essential workforce readiness skills. Teaching Implications: We describe how instructors can adopt our framework with evidence-based suggestions for: (1) redefining participation as collaboration with explicit criteria (2) structuring course experience to develop students as active collaborators (3) working to build productive classroom teams, and (4) evaluating participation through a collaborative lens. Conclusions: We offer a novel framework for redefining participation through a collaborative lens, along with a suite of evidence-based suggestions for shifting the thought processes and behaviors of students toward collaboration.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology,Education

Reference22 articles.

1. Benefits, costs, and challenges of collaboration for learning and memory.

2. Nurses' and resident physicians' perceptions of the process of collaboration in an MICU

3. Chew S. L., Beck H. B., Houk E. K., McLung E. M., Wertenberger A. N., Haine E. A., Hardin M. G., Schneider E. C. (October, 2018). Trust in and rapport with the teacher as separate components of a successful student mindset. Paper presented at the Annual Conference on Teaching, Phoenix, AZ.

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