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Dr. Robyn Gillies

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University of Queensland
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
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    www.ispaweb.org/Colloquia/Utrecht/List_of_presentations - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/1/2008    Last Visited: 1/16/2009  

    Robyn Gillies, The University of Queensland

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    www.paulchapmanpublishing.co.uk/authorDetails.nav?contr - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/16/2007    Last Visited: 10/12/2007  

    Robyn M. Gillies

    Robyn M. Gillies is an associate professor in the School of Education at The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.She has worked extensively in schools to help teachers establish cooperative learning pedagogical practices in their classrooms.The results of this research have been published in many leading international journals including, The Journal of Educational Psychology, The Journal of Special Education, The International Journal of Educational Research, Learning and Instruction, and the British Journal of Educational Psychology.In 2003 she co-edited; Cooperative Learning: The Social and Intellectual Outcomes of Learning in Groups (RoutledgeFalmer).Gillies is a member of the editorial board for the International Journal of Disability, Development and Education and editor of the Australian Journal of Guidance and Counselling.
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    Robyn M. Gillies

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    www.iasce.net/Newsletters/2007_July/2007_july_8.shtml - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/1/2007    Last Visited: 10/25/2007  

    1. Gillies, R. M. (2007).Cooperative learning: Integrating theory and practice.Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
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    Robyn M. Gillies, an Associate Professor from The University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, and Sage Publications offer the education profession a new book, Cooperative Learning: Integrating Theory and Practice.
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    Dr. Gillies's book is a great example of practical applications of a good theory.

    Dr. Gillies is a member of the Executive Board of the International Association for the Study of Cooperation in Education (IASCE).Professional educators throughout the world interested in pre-service and in-service training will be pleased with the focus of this book.Within 273 pages and eight topical chapters, she provides practical information for transforming diverse classrooms into cooperative communities that accomplish the goals of significant learning achievement associated with "No Child Left Behind" legislation (a current interest of education in the United States).I would also emphasize that her book is highly relevant to a variety of international interests in education and cooperative learning.

    Her reference section is quite up-to-date with current research interests in the cooperative learning world.Furthermore, this is one of the few books to include a most helpful glossary of terms associated with cooperative learning.Additionally, the book is indexed so that readers can easily locate specific topics.Here she mostly indexes important content topics much more than specific authors and their research.

    The general structure of Dr. Gillies' book is as follows.
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    Overall, Robyn Gillies has produced an important book that should prove to be valuable to professionals interested in pre- and in-service teacher training throughout the world.I would highly recommend it.

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    www.iasce.net/Newsletters/2007_July/2007_july_15.shtml - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/1/2007    Last Visited: 10/25/2007  

    Robyn GilliesSchool of Education

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    ABCC LTD - Australian Board Of Certified Counsellors - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 12/27/2003    Last Visited: 6/30/2005  

    Dr. Robyn Gillies, The University of Queensland

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    Australian Academic Press — Publications - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/21/2004    Last Visited: 3/1/2006  

    Associate Professor Robyn GilliesDirector of ResearchSchool of EducationThe University of Queensland

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    Cooperative Learning - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 4/25/2006    Last Visited: 7/19/2008  

    To submit a nomination, please complete the IASCE Awards 2008 Nomination Form and send to Professor Robyn Gillies PhD at r.gillies@uq.edu.au.

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    Cooperative Learning in Multicultural Societies - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 6/18/2008    Last Visited: 6/18/2008  

    Facilitator: Robyn Gillies
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    Bio: Robyn Gillies is an associate professor in the School of Education at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.She has worked extensively in elementary, middle, and high schools to help teachers embed cooperative learning into their classroom curricula and, more recently, she has researched teacher and student discourses in the cooperative classroom.This workshop is based on her recent publication: "Cooperative Learning: Integrating theory and practice."

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    Dr Robyn Gillies - Research Site at The University of... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/25/2006    Last Visited: 3/20/2008  

    Home , About Research at UQ , Awards and Honours , Awards and Honours Archive , UQ Foundation Research Excellence Award Winners (Archive) , Research Excellence Award Winners - 2001 , Dr Robyn Gillies

    Dr Robyn Gillies
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    Dr Robyn Gillies' studies of small-group learning in school classrooms could bring new twists to an old technique.

    Her research suggests it has huge potential for teaching academic and interpersonal skills such as problem-solving, communication and conflict resolution.

    Ways to exploit this potential could include grouping students with varying abilities, encouraging good student?teacher communication and setting tasks which can't be completed unless every member of the group participates.

    Dr Gillies, a senior lecturer in the University's School of Education, specialises in school guidance and counselling, co-operative group learning and children's behaviour in school.

    Her $70,000 UQ Foundation Research Excellence Award will fund the next stage of research which has already attracted more than $320,000 in three Australian Research Council (ARC) grants since 1995.

    Dr Gillies worked with more than 1500 children and teachers from more than 50 schools, monitoring and analysing small-group dynamics to show the potential benefits of small-group learning.

    Now she is teaching teachers how to incorporate co-operative learning strategies in their curricula.She has run in-service workshops for more than 40 teachers from four Brisbane secondary schools.

    The next stage will be to see whether or not this training promotes friendly and open teacher?student interactions and the effect this has on students' communication skills, pro-social behaviours and learning.

    Her research has so far been limited to monitoring students as they interact in small groups, she says.Now she wants to capture the wider class context ? particularly the language teachers and students use to communicate with each other.

    Dr Gillies' work suggests a teacher does better as the "guide on the side", not the "sage on the stage".And overall, she hopes, her research will help teachers and students make the most of the classroom experience while encouraging life-long learning.

    "I've found that teachers working in co-operative learning environments tend to use demonstrative, intimate, encouraging and helpful language and their students seem to see them as supportive, friendly, tolerant, competent and motivating," Dr Gillies said.

    "This is in contrast to traditional classrooms where teachers' language is sometimes seen as authoritarian, rigid and critical and the teachers themselves as distant and impersonal."

    Dr Gillies was an Education Queensland guidance officer during the mid 1980s when a "conversion on the road to Damascus" awakened her interest in co-operative learning.

    "I was visiting a primary school which accommodated students with special needs and I saw an absolutely inspiring example of structured positive independence," she said.

    "The teachers were fantastic.They had split the class into small, carefully-structured groups of varying abilities and each group had a task which couldn't be completed unless everyone participated.The kids all helped each other and the result was total interaction and inclusiveness."

    Dr Gillies started a part-time PhD in education in 1989.In 1991 she won an Education Queensland fellowship to study full-time and began tutoring and she has worked with the School of Education's Fred and Eleanor Schonell Special Education Research Centre ever since.

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    Dr Robyn Gillies - Research Site at The University of... - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 9/25/2006    Last Visited: 9/15/2008  

    Home , About Research at UQ , Awards and Honours , Awards and Honours Archive , UQ Foundation Research Excellence Award Winners (Archive) , Research Excellence Award Winners - 2001 , Dr Robyn Gillies

    Dr Robyn Gillies

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