Cooperative Learning in Swedish Classrooms: Engagement and Relationships as a Focus for Culturally Diverse Students
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Some Definitions of the Terms
In Sweden, the educational authorities (Skolinspektionen, 2009, 2014; Skolverket, 2008; Utbildningsdepartementet, Ds:2013:6) define a newly arrived student as a student who has migrated for any reason (for example, as a refugee, for family reunion, or labour migration), who does not possess basic knowledge of the Swedish language, and who starts school just prior to or during the regular academic year.(see Bunar, 2010)
Migrant children are heterogeneous in regard to pre-migration factors, such as social and educational background, family relations, and upbringing in a rural or urban area, as well as trans-migration factors, including the reason for migration (voluntarily or forced), experiences of war, persecution and trauma, background from a country with a long-lasting war or warlike situation (for example, Afghanistan and Somalia), or a country where sudden crises caused a large-scale flight.(such as Iraq after 2003 or Syria after 2011)
A cross-party refugee agreement in 2015 outlined policies for ensuring that all schools be prepared to receive newly arrived students (Proposition 2015/16:184, 12), that municipalities should place students in a range of schools to avoid segregation and that support for students in their mother tongue should be provided.[15]
2. Twenty-First Century Pedagogies to Support a Globalized World
2.1. Culturally Responsive Education for Equity: Developing 21st Century Skills Like Collaboration through Cooperative Learning
Caring is not just to be read about, discussed or subtly mandated as part of a hidden curriculum (Giroux and Penna, 1979), it is practised as collaborative, not competitive learning. It is a daily, ongoing commitment to explicit, strategic pedagogical approaches for engaging students with each other in positive and mutually supportive interactions.
2.2. Culturally Responsive Education for Equity: Engagement and Relationships through Cooperative Learning
2.3. Stembridge’s Themes of Culturally Responsive Education
- Cultural identity: is both a fluid and large concept and the practices of Culturally Responsive education should ’affirm students’ sense of selves by bridging their cultural and academic identities’ (p. 86). Stembridge further argues that it is about feeling about belonging to a group, including a social group which can be seen as important in the classroom when students become part of a cooperative learning group.
- Vulnerability is defined in relation to an understanding of students’ exposure to risk factors and these include ‘circumstances and conditions that we think of as having a mitigating effect on the likelihood for school success’ (p. 93) with protective factors being things that help to mitigate the risk These include teachers who have compassion and insights to empower any of our students who might have these risk factor. Stembridge draws on social science literature to outline what these risk factors include: ‘(1) family background—especially low education and income level of parents; (2) limited access to social networks that hold economic, relational, and experiential resources and (3) inconsistent access to high-quality schools and educational services (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, n.d)’ (p. 93). Stembridge argues that with this concept of vulnerability goes our own vulnerability as teachers who are willing and able to be vulnerable and find and facilitate connections for and with our students. As teachers new need to not only seek methods to support students from all backgrounds but also consider what protective factors might be in place to mitigate risks as well as consider our instructional design to encourage our students to make connections and take risks in an environment that is safe.
- Assets is explained as how students’ strengths (in terms of process and content knowledge as well as interests and dispositions) are used in instruction as well as how students are encouraged to understand their own strengths and tendencies (p. 96). Stembridge further argues that ‘brilliant teachers calibrate their pedagogy to maximise their engagement without lowering their expectations for students’ learning’ (p. 97). He also argues that we need to be aware that our perceptions of our students’ assets ‘are centred around our own experiences, indoctrinations, and fluencies.’ (p. 102).
- The final of Stembridge’s’ four themes that will be described briefly here is that of rigor. Stembridge describes rigor as being ‘whatever we do in instruction with students, whatever ways in which we frame and deliver their opportunities to learn-what we offer in the content of the experience-must be substantive and meaningful” (p. 103). He further argues that cognitive engagement and rigor help to reinforce each other.
2.4. Engagement and Relationships
2.5. Cooperative Learning and Engagement and Relationships
3. Methodology
3.1. The Schools and Teacher Participants
3.1.1. School 1
3.1.2. School 2
3.1.3. School 3
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Narratives from the Classrooms
4.1.1. School 1: Sofia
- How did I cooperate in the group?
- Did I do my thing?
- Did everyone get a turn to talk and did my friends listen to me?
- Can the group now better talk and describe the definitions they have been working with about Geography?
4.1.2. School 2: Elsa and Klara (Class Share)
4.1.3. School 3: Jocelyn
4.1.4. School 3: Peta
“whole class level climate, climate … that’s very, very important”.(Sofia, Interview)
“That’s The first thing … when someone speaks, you listen, and you look at that person, look at them, and respect”.(Sofia, Interview)
“what kind of class do we want? So we can learn best? What should we do because we always have a relationship? Would you say…everyone here has a responsibility?”(Sofia, Interview)
“the big thing is to talk about how to work in groups that you need to have. And also, it’s important to thank each other, I think, this positivity in the group that feel that you need to belong with someone, and that you’re not alone. The social skills [are important].”(Jocelyn, Interview)
“We model our behaviour. We reflect on what’s happened and ask how do we carry on? And we say ‘stop’ if it’s just bad behaviour…if they have had bad behaviour to each other, we have done a lot of talking with them, they talk to each other and tell how they feel and [how they should] act towards each other. And now we try to let them solve problems. ‘Okay, go in there and talk about it”.(Elsa and Klara, Interview)
“And then it’s important also to have a structure like ‘Do we belong together’, that we have a structure that you know how to use. And then that they always need something like, if they work together, they always need to, to, they always need each other. No-one can just say, Oh, you can do it all… I also have to participate. Also, that something that makes them meet each other [work together rather than alone]”.(Jocelyn, Interview)
I notice the girl who has been shy earlier in the day working alongside a boy. At one point she says, “This isn’t good,” about what she has done—and the boy she is working with replies—“Yes it is–let’s keep going!”.(Jocelyn, observation field notes)
On another table a boy is resting his head on the table looking sleepy—his partner looks at the timer Jocelyn has put on the board and says “quick—you need to fill in your sheet”. There are a number of missing values on the sheet and they need to make them all have something in them before they are finished.(Jocelyn, observation field notes)
“I would say it’s about cooperation in our relationships, and about how we learn together. That’s what I think, what if you don’t learn alone… This is so much better. And I think that especially…, you learn in a group where you learn from each other”.(Sofia, Interview)
“The first thing I would say, you need to do when working with the group is to be tight and be I mean, to be safe and … to be, you know, accepted to [be able to ] say [the] wrong things, instead of being … laughing at each other, you need to feel very safe in the group”.(Sofia, Interview)
“So you can also see so many different sides of one student, you know, you can see [child’s name], she’s very shy in that way [in the whole class situation] but when she comes into this group, she’s just so safe. I can take a step back. And I can see new sides of my students. And I think that’s very, very important. because I also think you have a…when you’re so many years with your students, you have you have, you know, sometimes you can have a specific idea about the students, you can, you know, is always something new to, to look for”.(Sofia, Interview)
“Student (from Syria) has been here for four weeks, you know. Her mum texted me two days ago, she said, this is the dialogue she told me. ‘It’s gonna be so fun’. She replied, ‘Now, why is the school fun?’ She replied ‘Because Sofia is giving me so much encouragement, feedback, and tells us that we’re going… we’re doing a good job’. And she [the parent] tells me, so I … I didn’t know that!”(Sofia, Interview)
“I think that you want to see a child and have a relationship with them, know a little bit behind their name know a little bit about the parents, I’m very involved with the parents. They know me very much. Yes, I call them we have SMS text messages. I really work with my parents, and the kids know that, Okay. And I also work of course, with the kids. But this is what you call it. It’s, it’s a back and forth”.(Sofia, Interview)
“Now we try to let them solve problems. Okay, go in there and talk about it. Because it can [be necessary] you [the teacher] can’t solve this…”.(Elsa and Klara, Interview)
“If I show them that they are accepted. You know, I’m interested, okay. ‘Can you tell me about your culture?’ ‘What did you do when you were somewhere else?’ You know, [give them the chance to talk] …And, you know, [some people] don’t worry about what we have opinions about, you know, eg [they say] “I don’t believe in other people coming to Sweden”, because we have many, many, many immigrants coming. So right now it’s, it’s a very rough world [for some students]”.(Sofia, Interview)
“That’s what I think is the big change for me that I don’t need to be the focus. Yeah…I can still please just go ahead and I can watch them. Yes, like, so that’s a new thing for me. I never used this before. Before this thing [using CL] and I was always listening [now]. I was always standing in the front and talking to them, talking and never giving them the opportunity. I never tried that [before]”.(Sofia, Interview)
5. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Behavioral Engagement can be thought of as the physical investments that students make in their learning. In the simplest terms, behavioral engagement entails the students’ willingness to follow the rules and accept the behavioural guidelines in instructional spaces. |
In classrooms, affective engagement looks like interest (versus boredom), active (versus passive) learning, and the students feeling of belonging to the school community (versus a sense of isolation). |
Cognitive engagement can be thought of as the intellectual investments that students make in their learning. It speaks to the extent and intensity of self-regulation in attending to one’s own learning, and also the willingness and ability to be strategic in the building of understandings and completion of tasks. |
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Ferguson-Patrick, K. Cooperative Learning in Swedish Classrooms: Engagement and Relationships as a Focus for Culturally Diverse Students. Educ. Sci. 2020, 10, 312. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci10110312
Ferguson-Patrick K. Cooperative Learning in Swedish Classrooms: Engagement and Relationships as a Focus for Culturally Diverse Students. Education Sciences. 2020; 10(11):312. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci10110312
Chicago/Turabian StyleFerguson-Patrick, Kate. 2020. "Cooperative Learning in Swedish Classrooms: Engagement and Relationships as a Focus for Culturally Diverse Students" Education Sciences 10, no. 11: 312. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci10110312
APA StyleFerguson-Patrick, K. (2020). Cooperative Learning in Swedish Classrooms: Engagement and Relationships as a Focus for Culturally Diverse Students. Education Sciences, 10(11), 312. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci10110312