Abstract

This qualitative research was aimed at reviving the principles of cooperative learning in the English class and critically studying the effects of it on the learners’ learning process and language skills. A number of 25 English learners were purposively selected as research participants. Journal writing, observation, and interview were techniques for collecting the data. Miles and Huberman’s model was a way of analysing the data while triangulation (credibility and dependability) was the strategy for qualifying the finding. The findings indicated that the e-political caricatures-assisted cooperative learning requires authentic and global learning themes. It improves the qualities of the learners’ global awareness, intercultural competence, communication skills, collaboration (team building, capitalisation on one another resources, deep learning, mastering language knowledge or competence and skills of English), critical thinking skills, and creativity (4Cs). It then leads the learners to active learning, project and problem-based learning, and develops digital skills and digital literacy skills. When compared to the previous language skills, the levels of the learners’ English language performance were between “intermediate” (22 learners) and “proficient” (three learners). These results signify that cooperative learning strongly enhance the learners’ language competence and skills of English and inspire them to collaboratively work and learn regardless of differences. In conclusion, the cooperative learning treats equally all class members, understand and accept differences in race, level of language skills, intelligence, etc., to achieve the shared learning goals, and further encourage learners to construct the knowledge and skills of English collaboratively.

Highlights

  • The factual underlying principles of putting forward this research are strongly grounded on the following rationales

  • The key effects of the e-political caricatures-assisted cooperative learning on the EFL learners were to motivate them to construct the knowledge, competence, and skills of English collaboratively. It importantly and practically enhanced the learners’ collaborative learning involving project-based learning, higher order thinking skills (HOTs), active learning, and problem-based learning, digital skills, digital literacy skills; intercultural competence; language competences comprising of pragmatic competence grammar, vocabulary knowledge; and critical language skills of English

  • Comparing learners’ socioeconomic status and other practices of discriminatively treating the poor, low, and average achiever learners have no place in the latter approach so that they can learn collaboratively and establish social interaction and reciprocal communication amongst them comfortably

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The factual underlying principles of putting forward this research are strongly grounded on the following rationales. In the cooperative learning approach, the learners, both highachiever learners and low and average-achiever ones, will be capable of interculturally and socially establishing two-way communication to effectively accomplish the expected and shared learning goals This approach strongly encourages all learners to learn and work in peers or small groups to collaboratively construct the knowledge and skills of English. It arouses the learners’ social learning enthusiasm for sharing information and knowledge: discussing, analysing, and evaluating one another’s ideas and works Important, such a cooperative learning method can build learners’ academic and social learning experiences fully involving higher-order thinking skills (creative and critical thinking skills) and bring them a sense of learning to deeply understand the effects of culture on one’s behaviour, belief, and values. The study, under those circumstances, aims at, firstly, establishing the learners’ awareness of the importance of learning cooperatively and, lastly, improving and enhancing the learners’ knowledge and skills of English

History of Cooperative Learning
Theoretical Base of the Cooperative Learning Approach
Types of Cooperative Learning
Why Caricatures?
Research Design
Participants
Data Collection
Data Analysis Procedures
Instructional Procedures
AND DISCUSSION
Intercultural Competence
Collaborative Learning
Language Competence and Skills of English
CONCLUSION
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