You receive a circular in your school mailbox about a new resource for using cooperative learning. It says that if you purchase the resource, you'll be able to use cooperative groups as the entire instructional basis for your classroom. "Never use teacher-led content development activities or individual seatwork activities again," it says. "Teach social skills and increase student motivation at

the same time!" As you read the ad, you think to yourself,

a. "I would love never to have to teach content directly or create seatwork activities! I'm buying it!"
b. "Even teachers who use cooperative learning extremely well still engage students in teacher-led content development and seatwork – this resource likely has some good ideas, but it's not going to change the world.".
c. "Cooperative learning hasn't been shown to do any of these things; even if this ‘miracle resource' worked at increasing motivation and social skills, the time wasted in groups isn't worth the investment.".
d. "Cooperative learning groups have earned a lot of accolades that they don't really deserve; it's time we stopped supporting people who tout its benefits.".


b

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The same social behavior can be both appropriate and inappropriate depending upon the:

a. student’s intelligence quotient (IQ). b. particular context or situation. c. number of children in a student’s family. d. amount of preservatives in a student’s food.

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Mr. Remick asks 9-year-old Anne to divide a pitcher of lemonade equally between two glasses, one each for her and her friend Kate. The two glasses are different shapes, with Anne's being tall and thin and Kate's being short and wide. After Anne pours the lemonade, Mr. Remick says to her, "Look, the lemonade in your glass is higher than the lemonade in Kate's glass. Did you give yourself more than

you gave Kate?" "No," Anne replies, "my glass is skinnier." Mr. Remick continues to ask Anne questions to determine how well she understands that height compensates for width in this situation. Mr. Remick's strategy can best be described as illustrating: a. Equilibration b. Class inclusion c. Reciprocal teaching d. The clinical method

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There is just one type of line graph.

a. True b. False

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Which of these is an example of a citation management system?

a. Google Scholar b. Dropbox c. NVivo d. Mendeley

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