Schools are organized so children are most often taught in groups. The rationale for grouping children can be based on psychological principles. Broad paradigms, such as the mechanistic, organismic, and the dialectical/contextual, provide reasons for grouping children. Specific psychological approaches including behavioral, maturational, constructivist, cultural-historical, and social cognitive indicate varying reasons why children collaborate. This article lists psychological reasons children are grouped for instruction.
References
1.
AldridgeJ.KubyP.StrevyD. (1992) Developing a metatheory of education. Psychological Reports, 70, 683–687.
2.
BanduraA. (1977) Social learning theory. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
3.
BanduraA. (1989) Social cognitive theory. Annals of Child Development, 6, 1–60.
4.
CowlesM.AldridgeJ. (1992) Activity oriented classrooms. Washington, DC: National Education Association.
DeVriesR.KohlbergL. (1987) Constructivist early education. Washington, DC: NAEYC.
7.
DixonR. A.LernerR. M. (1988) History and systems in developmental psychology. In BornsteinM. H.LambM. E. (Eds.), Developmental psychology: An advanced textbook. (2nd ed.) Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. Pp. 3–50.
8.
FordD. H.LernerR. M. (1992) Developmental systems theory. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
9.
HarrisJ.AldridgeJ. (1983) 3 for me is better than 2 for you. Academic Therapy, 18, 361–365.
10.
KamiiC. (1985) Young children reinvent arithmetic. New York: Teachers College, Columbia Univer.
11.
LabboL. D.TealeW. H. (1990) Cross-age reading: A strategy for helping poor readers. The Reading Teacher, 43, 362–369.
12.
LernerR. M. (1986) Concepts and theories of human development. (2nd ed.) New York: Random House.
13.
MillerP. (1989) Theories of developmental psychology. (2nd ed.) New York: Freeman.