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  2. Tutoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tutoring

    The characteristics of a peer tutoring group/pairing vary across age, socioeconomic class, gender, ethnicity. It has been defined as "a class of practices and strategies that employs peers as one-on-one teachers to provide individualized instruction, practice, repetition, and clarification of concepts". [31]

  3. Classwide Peer Tutoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classwide_Peer_Tutoring

    Classwide Peer Tutoring (CWPT) is a form of peer-mediated instruction where the teacher creates pairs of students that alternately fill the roles of tutor and student. The tutor asks questions, records points, and provides feedback on whether the student's response matches the correct response designated by the teacher.

  4. Peer exchange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_exchange

    Peer exchange cannot be used on its own to introduce a new peer to a swarm. To make initial contact with a swarm, each peer must either connect to a tracker using a ".torrent" file, or else use a router computer called a bootstrap node to find a distributed hash table (DHT) which describes a swarm's list of peers. For most BitTorrent users, DHT ...

  5. Cooperative learning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooperative_learning

    In group-based cooperative learning, these peer groups gather together over the long term (e.g. over the course of a year, or several years such as in high school or post-secondary studies) to develop and contribute to one another's knowledge mastery on a topic by regularly discussing material, encouraging one another, and supporting the ...

  6. Peer-mediated instruction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer-mediated_instruction

    The peer tutors are chosen from the target students' classrooms, trained to mediate and closely observed during mediation. Among the advantages noted to the technique, it takes advantage of the positive potential of peer pressure and may integrate target students more fully in their peer group. Conversely, it is time-consuming to implement and ...

  7. Peer instruction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_instruction

    Peer instruction is an evidence-based, interactive teaching method popularized by Harvard Professor Eric Mazur in the early 1990s. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Originally used in many schools, including introductory undergraduate physics classes at Harvard University , peer instruction is used in various disciplines and institutions around the globe.

  8. Peer support - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peer_support

    Peer support can occur within, outside or around traditional mental health services and programs, between two people or in groups. Peer support is increasingly being offered through digital health like text messaging and smartphone apps. [31] Peer support is a key concept in the recovery approach [32] and in consumer-operated services programs ...

  9. Shane R. Jimerson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shane_R._Jimerson

    In collaboration with other school-psychology researchers and a filmmaker Jimerson created the Promoting Positive Peer Relationships Bullying-Prevention Program, which includes curricula for the classroom, professional development and parent and community outreach.