Abstract:
In the context of South African Outcomes Based Education, specific teaching methods, materials and techniques are required, a major candidate being Cooperative Learning. Change is the key issue in bringing about the learning, implementation and use of Cooperative Learning. In an Elementary School, a Grade 4 teacher was tracked for
two years as she implemented Cooperative Learning. In the first year of the study, the teacher’s practice was examined in relation to whether or not her learning about and implementing Cooperative Learning brought about change in her practice. In the second year, the observations focused on whether the teacher could sustain change and develop further. The vehicle selected to bring about change was Action Research. However, the way in which reflection is formulated in Action Research is limited and it needs further articulation. An
examination of Reflective Practice as it operates on different levels and in different ways in this study leads to a more elaborated explanation of reflection. The outside researcher, subject to specific
criteria, plays an important part in the teacher’s reflection. This view of Reflective Practice as formulated in this study also reveals the nature of Cooperative Learning more deeply.