Enhancing social skills through cooperative learning
Abstract
The National Curriculum Statement of South Africa envisages qualified and competent
teachers to deal with the diversity of learners and their needs in the classroom. One of
the needs refers to all learners (Gr R-12) who need to acquire the necessary social skills
to enable them to work effectively with others as members of a team, group, organization
and community. These skills refer inter alia to: learning to work with others, listening to
others, giving attention, asking clarifying questions, learning how to evaluate, and to
praise others, handling conflict, reflecting on group work and allowing all group members
to participate.
The most obvious place to deal purposefully with the development of social skills is the
classroom. This implies that alternative ways and methods of teaching must be introduced
to develop the necessary social skills. This article reports on the findings obtained from
a combined quantitative and qualitative study that set out to determine the levels of
social competence achieved by a group of Grade 2 learners, and the possible association
of a cooperative teaching and learning intervention programme for enhancing the social
skills of these learners. The results revealed the latent potential of cooperative learning
to enhance the social skills of Grade 2 learners.
The significance of this research lies in the contribution it makes to establish the social
competence of a group of Grade 2 learners and to determine the possibilities for enhancing
their social skills through cooperative learning.