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Saturday, November 17, 2012

"Jigsaw Strategy"


Today's post piggybacks a previous post, "Moving from Small Groups to Pairs."  The Jigsaw srategy is a perfect strategy for engaging learners in collaborative dialogue.  I've tried to capture the purpose and process below.  I invite any of you who have utilized the strategy to share examples of usage with content.

Purpose:
  • To engage students in collaborative dialogue around critical learning based on key standards, concepts and understandings.
  • To facilitate collaborative discussion targeted around higher levels of thinking and text comprehension
  • To promote efficiency in text reading
  • To more expeditiously facilitate in mastery of greater amounts of content

Process:
The Jigsaw process begins with students engaged in small groups (3 to 4 students per group is ideal) where all students within the group are focused on “building expertise” about the same topic, and where different student groups are focused on different pieces of text or topics. Topics can be addressed through a variety of modes:  reading, responding to guiding questions, group discussion, viewing print, video, or images.

Jigsaw Steps:
1.     Assign content/concept/topic for students to explore

2.     Develop a set of focused materials/resources to support research

3.     Divide text assignments equally in to four parts

4.     Assign a different subtopic to each member of the jigsaw group

5.     Prepare questions and/or “keeping track” organizers for students to record significant information

6.     Rearrange students in different ”expert groups” (groups with like text) to read, study, discuss and synthesize relevant information/ideas to share

7.     After a predetermined length of time, have students return to their original jigsaw group to teach their subtopics

8.     Design an activity or organizer which synthesizes all four texts or subtopics within a group  (optional)

9.     Engage in full class discussion around important concepts and ideas

10.  Assess mastery of all material both formally and informally. *

1 comment:

  1. I have observed 47 classroom lessons for a minimum of 20 minutes each in the last 3 months. I saw no lesson that utilized any kind of a jigsaw strategy. This is such an effective and powerful means to facilitate student learning and it is so underutilized. I am hopeful that this post of yours will help teachers attain the understanding and skill necessary to begin implementing jigsaws with their students. This is very clear, structured, and thorough and should be a great starting point for anyone interested in furthering student achievement. Thanks for the post.

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