Over the last five years, I have gone back and forth (and back and forth) between loving and loathing group projects. When they work, they REALLY work. But, when they don’t…. well, let’s just say it can be something akin to torture.
There are a variety of reasons to build group projects into your curriculum, including:
- students connect with the content in many profound ways
- projects foster skills for future success like cooperation, taking initiative, and problem solving
- critical thinking, communication, and creativity are intertwined
- the grade-motivated student does the majority of work
- they can be a chore for the teacher to manage
- it is very difficult to create a project that isn’t too demanding for the student’s proficiency level
- dividing the students into groups that will work well together is very hit-or-miss
- creating a fair rubric is challenging – do we grade individually? Do we grade the group? How do we determine who did what in order to provide a fair grade?
It is no secret that I think this book is fabulous! Just read here, here, here, and here to see some of the many activities my level 2’s completed with this novel this year. The Teacher’s Guide is amazing from the beginning to the end and is chock-full of ways to expand how you use the novel, including ideas for IPA’s as an assessment at the end of the novel. We were having such a good time with the novel that none of us wanted it to end. So, I decided to give group projects a try.
I won’t go into great detail as to what the IPA’s involve, as they were not my design. But I will share how I implemented them and what I feel made the experience successful for my students.
First of all, these could have easily been individual or paired projects. However, I have 106 level 2 students in just three sections. There is no way everyone could present if they worked in pairs or individually. We only had 6 days in which to complete the projects.
Here are the steps I used to organize our group projects:
I selected three of the six options in the TG: (A.) write the next chapter in a sequel, (B.) create a movie trailer, and (C.) create a scene for your favorite character. I expanded each one in order to provided even more options within each category. I created a document that my students used to choose which project they would pursue. We did this on a Friday, so they had time to think over the weekend about their preferred project.
Also, not wanting students to freak out and not be able to produce adequate output, I limited each presentation to approximately one and one-half minutes. That worked out to about 30 seconds of speaking per student. These are level 2’s – they do fabulous story retells and can generate very interesting stories from a variety of writing prompts. But their output abilities as far as speaking goes are much more limited. I wanted to honor that and tried to set them up for success.
Day 1: They looked at the document and made a quick decision on what they liked the best. Right away they had choices they could make.
I divided them into three large groups (who likes A? B? C?) and further divided each large group into smaller groups of three or four. They spent 10 minutes brainstorming. Students wrote their brainstorming lists in Spanish and we talked about them in English.
Day 2: Monday morning we came back and I offered a chance to change projects now that they had time to think about it. Only a small hand full of students chose to change.
We got to work right away. Students could change groups at this point, but most stayed in the brainstorming groups from the previous Friday.
- Depending on which project they were working on, they then chose which sub-category was going to be their focus.
- Students either filled out a story map or a characterization page. You can download the documents I used here. This document is generic and can be used for any novel.
- They had to take their brainstorming ideas and turn them into complete sentences on the story maps or characterization pages. Requiring complete sentences was essential to working in a timely manner. Later on, they would be able to take their already completed sentences and flesh them out a bit.
Before showing the trailer, each student had something prepared as to why I, the producer, might want to produce this movie.
In not being forced to produce more than they were able, what they produced was extremely high quality. Missing accents? A few grammar errors? I can live with that! These projects communicated ideas and feelings and a TON of creativity!
Based upon this experience, I now have a much more favorable view of group projects. I finally understand that in addition to good project design, successful implementation requires three very clear components:
1. classroom management
2. clear expectations
3. lots and lots of student choice.
I’m not saying that group projects are going to be the main focus of my curriculum, but I certainly will not avoid them in the future.