Did You Know

Kagan is a shared approach for working together as one - shared language, shared pedagogy.

Kagan is Universal

Experienced teachers, PCTs, or leaders - bring your entire faculty, cluster, or Kahui Akō, to a Kagan workshop because it's true shared-pedagogy & suitable for every age, level, subject, & context.

Our core workshop, Kagan Cooperative Learning, can accommodate teachers from all sectors at the same time, because the same philosophy and pedagogy applies to all learners. During the workshop, teachers have frequent opportunities to interact with the course content and each other, as well as time to process, share and apply the new learning to their context.

Everyone will leave with the necessary knowledge to use many of the strategies from the workshop the next day, with full implementation only dependent on each teachers’ individual motivation and openness to change.

Accommodating large numbers

In many ways, we prefer a large workshop (upwards of 50 people), because it helps teachers see that the Kagan structure steps don’t change should the numbers in their room increase or decrease. Our classbuilding and management strategies become even more powerful when experienced in a large group, and how Kagan integrates teaching social and communications skills is even more evident.

Our workshops are not ‘sit and get’, but are very interactive and brain-friendly, with lots of talking, and moving. We build in safety through classbuilding structures where you meet the other attendees, and fun through Silly Sports and Goofy Games. In effect, we ‘walk the talk’ by teaching the way we want you to teach.

Kagan trainers go through an extremely rigorous process to become certified and can easily work with groups from 12 to 200 and more.

So what we are saying, is the more the merrier!

If you’d like to know more, or set up a free Discover Kagan session please feel free to contact us.

  • Kagan Cooperative Learning is a teaching approach developed by Dr Spencer Kagan, which is different from traditional cooperative learning. While traditional cooperative learning is usually lesson-based and involves students working together on a specific task or project, Kagan's approach uses a series of repeatable steps called Kagan Structures to promote active engagement and cooperative learning throughout the day.

    Kagan Structures are content-free, meaning they can be used with any age group, any curriculum area, and in any context, from early education to adult education. They are designed to be easy to implement, requiring little to no special preparation or materials. Unlike other cooperative learning approaches that may require complex lesson plans or specialised equipment, Kagan Structures can be used as part of any existing lesson, making active engagement and cooperative learning easy for teachers to incorporate into their teaching.

    Kagan Cooperative Learning is a holistic, multi-faceted pedagogical approach that aims to make a difference in students' academic and social development. Teachers who have undergone Kagan training use the term "Kagan" as an all-encompassing term to describe the many components and benefits of the approach.

  • To ensure students have the skills to work with others, and the will to do so, Kagan has specific structures and strategies that create a safe, caring, culturally responsive and cooperative learning environment to ensure all students are able and willing to engage in these structures.

    Teambuilding and Classbuilding occurs regularly, constantly helping students seeing past the exterior and to the person inside.

    Social and communication skills are built into every structure, which means they are learning and applying them at the same time - it’s like magic!

  • When students are engaged, they pay attention, they're motivated, they learn more, and the learning sticks. The biggest difference between the Kagan approach and teaching using ‘traditional’ methods is the ability to engage every student. Traditional classroom teaching captures the minds and attention of some students, but not all. Good teachers engage more students. But even the best teachers who use traditional instruction don't require every student to participate. With traditional instruction, there is always a subset of students who fall through the cracks. We're all too familiar with the results: a widening gap between high achievers and low achievers.

    When students are actively engaged on a daily basis, everything changes. Engagement is the key! Engagement is the reason why veteran teachers who turn to Kagan Structures experience their greatest success ever.

    Engagement is why low-performing and priority students who’s teachers use Kagan Structures outperform their peers who’s teachers don't.

    Engagement is why students report they like school more, their teachers more, the academic content more, and feel better about themselves, and are less disruptive.

    Engagement is the reason why principals of failing schools can turn schools around, quickly. Active student engagement gets straight to the root of the problem in many classrooms.

  • When you are using a Kagan Structure you know how many students are engaged at any one time, because we have structured the interaction.

    When you look at photos of a structure, you can see the engagement taking place.

    Without Kagan, unstructured interaction, its a bit of a guess as to how many are involved and participating. And we know which students will be opting out.

  • Kagan Structures close the achievement gap by creating dramatic gains for struggling students. Now they can no longer ‘hide’, but are supported to participate through the structure, and through sitting in carefully selected learning teams.

    But the gains are not bought at the expense of high achievers; they too are engaged in a richer, more interactive learning environment. As brain-research is proving, meaningful engagement is just a better way to reach and teach all students.

    Students need to work/talk at least as hard/often as the teacher. The more they interact with their peers and with the curriculum, the more they'll learn.

    Kagan Structures require every student to participate frequently and approximately equally. Many of our priority learners contribute very little in the normal classroom.

  • We know that as soon as you have students interacting with other, you need really strong classroom management.

    Kagan micro-manages movement and interactions, so even new teachers can use structures. In fact, feedback from new teachers is that Kagan made a huge difference to their classroom and behaviour management. When students are engaged, moving, and ‘allowed’ to talk to others, many of your behaviour issues will disappear.

    We are so confident of this, that we like to model a structure or two for teachers while they watch their ‘difficult clients’.

  • Of course, other classroom practices and schoolwide changes can make a positive difference for students. But nothing makes an impact as immediate, powerful, and on so many outcomes as active student engagement.

    When students are actively engaged on a daily basis, everything changes. Engagement is the key! Engagement is the reason why veteran teachers who turn to Kagan Structures experience their greatest success ever.

    Engagement is why low-performing and priority students who’s teachers use Kagan Structures outperform their peers who’s teachers don't.

    Engagement is why students report they like school more, their teachers more, the academic content more, and feel better about themselves, and are less disruptive.

    Engagement is the reason why principals of failing schools can turn schools around, quickly. Active student engagement gets straight to the root of the problem in many classrooms.

  • Great question!

    The answer: Most teachers think they are, but they lack the practical tools they need to make high levels of student engagement a daily reality. By no fault of their own, teachers learned traditional methods, and are teaching as they were taught. Many are simply unaware of an easier and more effective approach.

    The power of Kagan Structures is that they distil the best of educational theory and research into very specific, easy-to-use teaching strategies. Mediocre teachers become good. Good teachers become great. And great teachers—well, they're already using Kagan Structures!

    We like to say Kagan is powerful teaching, made simple.

  • Yes, due to our structures being content-free, Kagan can be used with any age group from 4-80 year olds, in any context, and in any curriculum area. This is one of the biggest advantages of Kagan, as it is true across-school and region PLD.

    Once you learn Kagan Structures, you can use them for life - no matter what educational context. Or business context!

  • Over the past decades, Dr. Kagan and his team have developed, perfected, and shared with the world over 200 Kagan Structures. Dr. Kagan's book, Kagan Cooperative Learning, is the single most comprehensive and most popular book in the field of cooperative learning and is considered the must-have guide for active engagement strategies.

    Kagan NZ prefers that this book is purchased when you attend your first workshop, because we have found that you really need to experience Kagan for yourself in order to successfully implement it in a classroom. Teachers have commented to us that they didn’t really get it until they had trained.

    Our workshops are highly interactive and situational, and model exactly what we want to see in classrooms. Once you have mastered cooperative learning, then yes, you can easily learn new structures and strategies from a book.

  • Cooperative learning is our foundational workshop, so we would always encourage you to start there. This can be run as a whole school workshop, ie TOD, or with a group of teachers, across a Kahui Ako, or you can attend an open workshop.

    It’s best that we meet and discuss whether Kagan is right for you, as often schools have a lot of PLD going on, (to be honest Kagan will replace many of them), and we have found it’s best to wait until the following year when we can be the main focus for the school.

    We offer a wide range of professional development, covering cooperative learning, behaviour, leadership, literacy, maths, science, social science, growth mindset, and SEL, all delivered using Kagan Structures.

    Throughout our site we use photos to show students and teachers and using Kagan Structures.

 Frequently Asked Questions