The Use of a Cooperative-Learning Activity with University Students: A Gender Experience
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Aronson’s Jigsaw as a Cooperative Technique
1.2. Gender and Cooperative Learning
2. Objective and Methods
2.1. Objective
2.2. Population and Sample
2.3. Questionnaire
- A.
- Understanding of group work. The aim of this dimension is to understand the mental representation and the meaning of the CL for students.
- B.
- Usefulness of cooperative work for their training. It analyses the validity of the CL for the students and whether it is perceived as useful for improving social relations, learning, or future professional work.
- C.
- Planning of the work of the groups by the teachers. To learn the opinion of the students regarding the quantity, complexity, coordination, and teaching of the cooperative work.
- D.
- Criteria for organizing the groups. This examines which criteria are taken into account to form the work teams. It is asked whether they should be organized for personal or academic reasons, temporary stability, or their homogeneity. In addition, the number of members and the respect for different roles are evaluated in this dimension.
- E.
- Group rules. The internal regulation of the group is the factor evaluated in this dimension. The aim is to find out the importance of establishing operating rules or whether these should be internal to the group (students), external (teachers), or mixed.
- F.
- Internal functioning of the groups. The objective is to learn the tasks that are carried out by the students before the end of the presentation related to CL.
- G.
- Effectiveness of group work. This dimension aims to evaluate the cooperative conditions in which better levels of performance and production are produced. For this purpose, the items ask about the weighting of group work in the final qualification, and the inclusion of self-evaluation or co-evaluation, among others.
2.4. Data Collection and Analysis Procedure
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Items | Women (n = 108) | Men (n = 69) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
I CONSIDER THAT GROUP WORK IS: (CON) | Median (5–95 percentile) | Median (5–95 percentile) | p-value | ES | Interpretation |
A good method to develop my social skills: Argumentation, dialogue, listening skills, debate, respect for dissenting opinions | 3 (5–5) | 3 (5–5) | 0.365 | 0.071 | Irrelevant |
An opportunity to get to know my peers better | 3 (5–5) | 3 (5–5) | 0.874 | 0.012 | Irrelevant |
A way to better understand knowledge | 2 (4–5) | 2 (4–5) | 0.992 | 0.000 | Irrelevant |
A way to share the total workload | 2 (4–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.378 | −0.073 | Irrelevant |
A way to make test preparation easier | 2 (4–5) | 2 (4–5) | 0.729 | 0.030 | Irrelevant |
Dimension Mean | 0.903 | ||||
PERSONALLY, GROUP WORK HELPS ME TO: (1AYU) | Median (5–95 percentile) | Median (5–95 percentile) | p-value | ES | Interpretation |
Expose and defend my ideas and knowledge to other people | 4 (3–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.880 | 0.011 | Irrelevant |
Feel an active part of my own learning process | 3 (4.5–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.080 | 0.140 | Small |
Understand the knowledge and ideas of peers | 3 (5–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.124 | 0.124 | Small |
Understand the importance of coordinated work in my professional future as a teacher | 3 (5–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.017 * | 0.187 | Small |
Reach agreements in the face of different opinions | 3 (4.50–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.646 | 0.036 | Irrelevant |
Search for information, research and learn autonomously | 3 (4–5) | 2 (4–5) | 0.058 | 0.158 | Small |
Dimension Mean | 0.043 * | ||||
ABOUT THE PLANNING THAT THE TEACHERS DO FOR THE GROUP WORK, I THINK THAT: (PLA) | Median (5–95 percentile) | Median (5–95 percentile) | p-value | ES | Interpretation |
The amount of group work requested is adapted to the course load | 1 (3–5) | 1.40 (4–5) | 0.103 | −0.139 | Small |
The level of difficulty of the group work is appropriate for our training | 2 (4–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.054 | −0.160 | Small |
There is coordination between the group work requested in the different subjects | 1 (3–4.65) | 1 (2–5) | 0.217 | −0.108 | Small |
Attending practical classes solves the doubts that I have when preparing the group work | 2 (4–5) | 2.40 (4–5) | 0.541 | −0.050 | Irrelevant |
Dimension Mean | 0.327 | ||||
THE CONSTITUTION OF THE GROUP MUST: (ORG) | Median (5–95 percentile) | Median (5–95 percentile) | p-value | ES | Interpretation |
Be carried out by the students applying friendship criteria | 1 (4–5) | 1 (3–5) | 0.992 | 0.000 | Irrelevant |
Be carried out by the students applying academic criteria | 1 (4–5) | 1 (3–5) | 0.004 * | 0.244 | Small |
Be carried out by the teaching staff applying academic criteria | 1 (2.5–5) | 1 (3–5) | 0.624 | −0.422 | Medium |
Have a diverse composition of group members (age, sex, education, experience) | 2 (4–5) | 2 (4–5) | 0.453 | 0.063 | Irrelevant |
Be stable throughout the course, term, and year | 2.35 (4–5) | 1.4 (4–5) | 0.023 * | 0.190 | Small |
Be modified to perform different activities in the same subject | 1 (3–5) | 1 (3–5) | 0.033 * | −0.184 | Small |
Incorporate the appointment of a group coordinator | 3 (3–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.413 | 0.069 | Irrelevant |
Dimension Mean | 0.486 | ||||
THE GROUP’S OPERATING RULES: (FUN) | Median (5–95 percentile) | Median (5–95 percentile) | p-value | ES | Interpretation |
There should be no rules | 1 (1–3) | 1 (2–4) | 0.155 | −0.115 | Small |
There must be rules, but established by the students | 2.35 (4–5) | 1.40 (4–5) | 0.065 | 0.159 | Small |
There must be rules, but established by the faculty | 1 (3–4) | 1 (3–5) | 0.128 | −0.128 | Small |
They must be negotiated between teachers and students | 1 (5–5) | 2 (5–5) | 0.590 | −0.043 | Irrelevant |
They must be included in a document where the responsibilities assumed by the group are specified | 1 (4–5) | 1 (4–5) | 0.871 | 0.013 | Irrelevant |
They must define the roles that each of the people who make up the group will play | 1 (4–5) | 1.4 (4–5) | 0.845 | 0.016 | Irrelevant |
They should include consequences for participants for not fulfilling the commitments made | 3 (4–5) | 2 (4–5) | 0.728 | 0.029 | Irrelevant |
They must specify the time and place of the meetings | 1 (4–5) | 1 (3–5) | 0.136 | 0.129 | Small |
Must include mandatory attendance at meetings | 2 (4–5) | 2 (4–5) | 0.9854 | 0.015 | Irrelevant |
Dimension Mean | 0.970 | ||||
USUALLY, WHEN DOING GROUP WORK: (2FUN-I) | Median (5–95 percentile) | Median (5–95 percentile) | p-value | ES | Interpretation |
We meet at the beginning to plan the different steps we have to take | 2 (5–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.921 | 0.007 | Irrelevant |
We consult the basic documentation provided by the teacher | 3 (5–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.001 * | 0.257 | Small |
We search for information in different sources (internet, library) | 3 (5–5) | 2.4 (4–5) | 0.012 * | 0.197 | Small |
We make decisions, in a consensual way, to guarantee the overall coherence of the group work | 3 (5–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.031 * | 0.172 | Small |
When carrying out the work, we have discussions so that the whole group knows what the others are doing and we have a good idea of the progress of the activity | 2.35 (5–5) | 3 (4–5) | 0.543 | 0.049 | Irrelevant |
All members of the group participate equally | 1 (4–5) | 1.4 (4–5) | 0.225 | 0.105 | Small |
We evaluate it and make proposals for improvement | 2 (4–5) | 1.4 (4–5) | 0.176 | 0.114 | Small |
Dimension Mean | 0.035 * | ||||
THE GROUP’S PERFORMANCE IMPROVES IF: (REN) | Median (5–95 percentile) | Median (5–95 percentile) | p-value | ES | Interpretation |
The teachers provide clear guidelines for the group activities to be developed | 3 (5–5) | 2 (4–5) | 0.037 * | 0.163 | Small |
The activities proposed by the teachers require analysis, debate, reflection, and criticism | 2 (4–5) | 2 (4–5) | 0.257 | −0.097 | Irrelevant |
The teaching staff supervises the work of the group | 2 (4–5) | 1.4 (5–5) | 0.083 | −0.146 | Small |
Teachers control regular class attendance | 1 (4–5) | 2 (4–5) | 0.293 | 0.089 | Irrelevant |
The work is adequately valued in the overall grading of the subject | 3 (4–5) | 2.4 (4–5) | 0.464 | −0.060 | Irrelevant |
The teaching staff informs us in advance about the evaluation criteria of the group activity | 2 (5–5) | 2.5 (5–5) | 0.785 | 0.022 | Irrelevant |
Teachers evaluate the different levels of participation of each of the group members | 1 (4–5) | 1 (3–5) | 0.555 | 0.051 | Irrelevant |
Each student’s self-evaluation is incorporated into the group’s overall assessment | 1 (4–5) | 1 (4–5) | 0.655 | −0.038 | Irrelevant |
The members of the group evaluate each other | 1 (3–5) | 1 (4–5) | 0.087 | −0.152 | Small |
The teaching staff gives the group work significant weight in the final grade of the course | 2 (4–5) | 1.4 (4–5) | 0.457 | −0.062 | Irrelevant |
Dimension Mean | 0.619 |
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Baena-Morales, S.; Jerez-Mayorga, D.; Fernández-González, F.T.; López-Morales, J. The Use of a Cooperative-Learning Activity with University Students: A Gender Experience. Sustainability 2020, 12, 9292. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219292
Baena-Morales S, Jerez-Mayorga D, Fernández-González FT, López-Morales J. The Use of a Cooperative-Learning Activity with University Students: A Gender Experience. Sustainability. 2020; 12(21):9292. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219292
Chicago/Turabian StyleBaena-Morales, Salvador, Daniel Jerez-Mayorga, Francisco Tomás Fernández-González, and Juan López-Morales. 2020. "The Use of a Cooperative-Learning Activity with University Students: A Gender Experience" Sustainability 12, no. 21: 9292. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219292
APA StyleBaena-Morales, S., Jerez-Mayorga, D., Fernández-González, F. T., & López-Morales, J. (2020). The Use of a Cooperative-Learning Activity with University Students: A Gender Experience. Sustainability, 12(21), 9292. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219292