Jigsaw Discussion

Jigsaw Discussion

Activity Overview

Students form expert groups to master content, then reform into mixed groups where each student teaches their expertise.

Grade Levels

5th Grade6th Grade7th Grade8th Grade9th Grade10th Grade11th Grade12th Grade

Subject Areas

ScienceMathematicsEnglishHistoryForeign Language

Activity Types

CollaborativeDiscussionAnalytical

Detailed Example

Ancient Civilizations (History - 6th Grade)

Materials Needed

  • Expert texts for each civilization (Egypt, Greece, Rome, China, Maya)
  • Expert group worksheets
  • Home group graphic organizers
  • Visual aids for each civilization
  • Role cards (discussion leader, timekeeper, note-taker, questioner)

Preparation

Prepare expert texts at appropriate reading levels, focusing on key aspects (government, religion, achievements, daily life) for each civilization. Create structured worksheets for both expert and home groups.

Step-by-Step Instructions

1.

Assign each student to both an expert group (civilization) and a home group (mixed civilizations).

2.

Expert Group Phase (15-20 minutes):

Students with the same civilization gather

Read and discuss expert materials on their civilization

Complete expert worksheet focusing on key aspects

Prepare to teach this content to others

Create a visual aid to support teaching

3.

Home Group Phase (20-25 minutes):

Students regroup so each home group has one expert from each civilization

Each expert teaches their civilization (3-4 minutes each)

Group members ask clarifying questions

All students complete graphic organizer with information about all civilizations

4.

Comparison Activity (10-15 minutes):

Home groups identify similarities and differences across civilizations

Create a comparison chart focusing on innovations, governance, and cultural practices

5.

Assessment: Individual response to the question: 'What factors contributed to the success of ancient civilizations?'

Differentiation Strategies

Provide recorded audio of expert texts for struggling readers. For advanced students, add primary sources to expert materials. Adjust group roles based on student strengths.

Assessment Guidelines

Evaluate contributions in expert groups, quality of teaching in home groups, and completeness of graphic organizers. Use final written response to assess synthesis skills.

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