Pedagogy in Action > Library > Cooperative Learning > Cooperative Learning Techniques > Jigsawing

Jigsawing

THIS PAGE IS GOING AWAY. THERE IS A NEW MODULE ON JIGSAW THAT IS CURRENTLY IN REVIEW.

Jigsawing is a complex form of group work that involves students switching between different groups.

An Earth Systems Example

A diagram in which students are divided into groups of four each of which contains a specialist in the atmosphere hydrosphere biosphere and geosphere

Every one of the 16 students above belongs to two groups: their base group (A, B, C, or D) and a sphere group (atmosphere, biosphere, lithosphere, or geosphere).

In a typical NASA Earth Systems Science Education Alliance (ESSEA) class, students work on problems like hurricanes, deforestation, or global warming which affect (and are affected by) the atmosphere, water, life and the solid Earth.

What if there were 24 students above instead of 16? How to divide groups up then?

Rotating Spheres: Generally ESSEA courses consist of multiple units (typically four), each focusing on a different problem. Have the sphere groups switch spheres each unit.

Earth System Approach Module

Other Kinds of Expertise

In the example above, students became experts in components of the Earth system. Depending on the nature of the exercise, each expert group could learn to use one particular instrument or interpret one kind of data and the base group would work on the same samples or problem. Alternatively, the experts might come from different fields (similar to the example above).

Why Use Jigsawing?

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Origins

The jigsaw classroom was devised by Elliot Aronson, who now maintains Jigsaw.org (more info) .


« Previous Page      Next Page »