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  2. Peer learning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_learning

    For example, Eric Mazur and colleagues report on "Ten years of experience and results" with a teaching technique they call "Peer Instruction": Peer Instruction engages students during class through activities that require each student to apply the core concepts being presented, and then to explain those concepts to their fellow students. [18]

  3. Peer-mediated instruction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer-mediated_instruction

    The student or students chosen as peers must be properly coached before the peer relationship begins, both to understand the importance of the intervention and the methods which should be used. Instructors may model behaviors to the peer tutors and may role play with the peer tutors, allowing the peer tutors to experience both parts in the PMI ...

  4. Classwide Peer Tutoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classwide_Peer_Tutoring

    Classwide Peer Tutoring (CWPT) is a form of peer-mediated instruction where the teacher creates pairs of students that alternately fill the roles of tutor and student. The tutor asks questions, records points, and provides feedback on whether the student's response matches the correct response designated by the teacher.

  5. Peer instruction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_instruction

    Peer instruction is a teaching method popularized by Harvard Professor Eric Mazur in the early 1990s. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Originally used in introductory undergraduate physics classes at Harvard University , peer instruction is used in various disciplines and institutions around the globe.

  6. Peer-led team learning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer-led_Team_Learning

    Peer-led team learning (PLTL) is a model of teaching undergraduate science, math, and engineering courses that introduces peer-led workshops as an integral part of a course. [1] [2] Students who have done well in a course (for instance, General Chemistry) are recruited to become peer-leaders. The peer-leaders meet with small groups of six to ...

  7. Peer feedback - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_feedback

    Peer feedback is a practice where feedback is given by one student to another. Peer feedback provides students opportunities to learn from each other. After students finish a writing assignment but before the assignment is handed in to the instructor for a grade, the students have to work together to check each other's work and give comments to the peer partner.

  8. Display and referential questions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Display_and_referential...

    This can be improved by allowing students to participate in peer-to-peer interactions as platforms to generate appropriate listener responses. [27] In contrast, typical IRF exchanges could still be useful in classroom situations where teachers assign the kind of interactional status that helps learners be actively involved in the interactions.

  9. Peer-Partner (teaching style) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer-Partner_(teaching_style)

    Peer-Partner is one of the choices available to students in Student-Directed Teaching, a progressive teaching technology. Along with Student-Teacher Contract and Self-Directed, Peer-Partner is a teaching style that requires a different level of independence from Command and Task. It is, to some extent, a self-directed teaching style that allows ...