the pretest, students were divided into different
levels. Each group had one high-level, two
intermediate-level and one low-level student to
ensure the mixture of it. Group members chose one
leader they trust most. As a leader, he/she had a
responsibility of helping the group members
participate in and fulfill their learning activities.
2.3 Teaching Procedures
The most popular researched and used cooperative
learning methods are Jigsaw, Student Team
Achievement Divisions (STAD), Cooperative
Integrated Reading and Composition, Group
Investigation and Learning Together.
In reading classes, the author employed Jigsaw II.
The typical learning procedures in Jigsaw II are
often as follows: students first work in
heterogeneous teams; they are assigned to experts
topics; they read the whole learning materials with
emphasis on their expert topic; they meet in expert
groups to discuss and master their topics; the experts
return to their teams and take turns teaching their
teammates about their topic; finally, they receive
individual and team recognition. Here is a detailed
example about how the author adopted cooperative
learning in her teaching practice. This is a text in
New College English (Second Edition) published by
Shanghai Foreign Language Education Press.
Book 2 Unit 1 Learning, Chinese-style
A. Pre-reading Activities
For the pre-reading tasks, students were assigned to
find out some background information about
“westerners’ education on children” and “some
major differences about education on children
between China and the west”. Also, some keywords
were divided into 4 groups and each member studied
one group of them. They needed to teach others
about these new word and expressions next class.
For other unfamiliar words, they should try to guess
the meaning in the context rather than consulting a
dictionary.
B. While-reading Activities
First, some students were asked to introduce the
background information, next all the members in
turns taught others the assigned new words. Then,
each group member was responsible for analyzing
one different part. Everyone had to study the
assigned materials carefully. Then, they went to the
“expert group” in which all the experts had the same
paragraphs. After discussing with “experts” and
understanding fully about the materials, students
came back to their own group and interpreted their
materials in turns according to the organization of
the passage. After the discussion, some students
were randomly asked to answer these questions:
What’s the author’s feeling when seeing the typical
Chinese learning style (teaching by hold the hands)?
How did your parents teach you to learn things when
you were young?
C. Post-reading Activities
For post-reading activities, students first needed to
analyze the text organization. They needed to divide
the whole text into several parts and summarize the
main idea for each part. Then they had to write down
a short passage to answer the following questions:
What enlightenment have you got from this text?
How would you teach your students after
graduation? These passages would, also, be
corrected by group members first, and then they
handed in another revised one to the teacher.
Evaluations from one and from others are important
for students. The following table was handed out to
students after each reading class to help them reflect
on their in-class behaviors.
3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
3.1 A Survey on Students’ Attitudes
towards Reading and English
Learning
Before this study, a survey was carried out among
100 non-English majors chosen randomly from two
universities. Ninety-six completed copies from 100
distributed questionnaires were obtained, with a
response rate of 96%. As for the questionnaire, there
were 10 statements about English learning and
reading. This section of the questionnaire was
designed to measure students’ attitudes by offering
scales for positive attitudes (strongly agree, agree,
neutral, disagree, and strongly disagree).
Table 1 shows that 28 of the students are not
enthusiastic about reading classes. Reading is crucial
for improving language proficiency while 30
students do not regard reading as an interesting
experience. About 54 students consider reading to be
the most difficult part for them; however 44 students
spend little time reading various books. Only 29
students often pay special attention to the beginning
as well as the end of the reading materials where
some key information may be presented. Most
students have not formed a good habit of noting
down the beautiful words and sentences they read in
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