ISSN-L: 0798-1015 • eISSN: 2739-0071 (En línea) - Revista Espacios – Vol. 42, Nº 20, Año 2021
DEREVIANCHENKO, Elena A. et al. «Cooperative learning: on the issue of national and international
application experience»
to others. The student applies and explaines the new material to others until he or she masters new knowledge
or skill to perfection. (Zakharov, K, 2017)
The didactic concept of collective learning activity in the Soviet Union and in modern Russia is based on the ideas
of L. Vygotsky, who believed that mental functions: voluntary attention, thinking, logical memory, will, etc., are
formed initially in the collectively distributed joint activity of people, and only then these functions turn into
functions of individual activity. In his opinion, thinking is born only from demand - an external impulse triggers
internal processes. Proceeding from this, L. Vygotsky formulated the concept of the child's mental development
through the social (collective) to the individual, which proves that the formation of such mental functions and
qualities of the child's personality as thinking, attention, will, memory and others is impossible only through his
individual activity , joint collective activity of the child with his peers and with adult teachers is also necessary.
Moreover, joint activities should precede individual ones. Thus, the environment in which the child finds himself
in the process of educational collective work is really favorable for the all-round development of the personality.
(Vygotsky, L, 2005)
Considering the organizational, methodological and technological features of MCML in replaceable pairs, we
note that the implementation of this method of teaching is based on learning technologies in cooperation, which
can be conditionally divided by the way of interaction of participants into horizontal and vertical.
Building interaction in the “horizontal plane” presupposes mutual learning of students with approximately the
same level of formation of educational and communicative competencies. As an example, we will cite the basic
for MCML method of A. Rivin “Paragraph-by-paragraph study of the text” (Dyachenko, V, 1991), which we used
to develop students' communicative reading skills with full and selective understanding, as well as to develop
speaking skills, for example, on the material of the topic “Environmental Protection”. For its implementation, the
class is offered several subtopics within the framework of a general problem (“Water and air pollution”,
“Changing the forest ecosystem”, “Human industrial activity as a factor of environmental pollution”, “Human
agrarian activity as a factor of soil depletion and desertification”, etc. ), which are studied in the classroom at the
same time, as a basis, students are offered the texts of popular science articles, each no more than one page in
length. It is necessary to prepare several (3-5) articles for one subtopic. Students are given the task: “Read the
article on your subtopic, formulate its main idea, highlight the necessary secondary details, prepare a paragraph-
by-paragraph retelling of the material for your friend.” During the lesson, new pairs are constantly formed,
working on different or identical, depending on the task set by the teacher, texts in which the students retell the
material to each other, answer the questions of a friend on each fragment of the text. To avoid disruption in
pairing, students working on the same article are given the same color coding, for example. To work out a large
number of subtopics for each student, a “route sheet” is drawn up with color-coded partners with whom he or
she must work. At the end of the subtopics, students gather in small groups to talk over the ideas they have
typed and formulate the content for one subtopic, which is later presented in the class.
The organization of vertical mutual learning is possible among schoolchildren with different levels of training,
when one student is ahead of the other on a specific, for example, grammatical topic. Then student 1 becomes
a teacher in relation to student 2, and he, in turn, being ahead of student 3, turns into a teacher for him. The
whole class builds a vertical hierarchy - a “ladder”, where everyone simultaneously acts as both a teacher and a
student. “Teachers” introduce “students” to the grammatical rule, check the exercises performed, comment on
mistakes. All together are preparing for the current or intermediate control (exam), which allows you to identify
the effectiveness of the built interaction. Such interaction contributes to the organization of productive
independent work of schoolchildren, aimed primarily at eliminating gaps and errors in the use of language
material.