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Strengths,
Weaknesses, Threats, Opportunities [SWOT] Analysis
This strategy is an excellent higher level thinking strategy students can engage with to evaluate and think laterally about a decision on an issue, a solution to a problem or an simply an existing situation. The information retrieved from this strategy is usually applied to another purpose or design. A suggested process for using this strategy effectively involves combining it with another strategy the Expert Jigsaw Strategy. Purpose A SWOT strategy assists students to analyse a text for its Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats. This is a higher thinking strategy that challenges students beyond a positive and negative analysis.
Grouping of Students: Through cooperative learning, students work in small groups or in pairs to actively engage in the learning process and improve their understanding of the content. Each member of the team is not only responsible for their own learning, but also for helping teammates learn. Cooperative learning promotes achievement, enhances retention, increases desire and motivation, develops interpersonal and social skills, builds self-esteem, and improves student satisfaction with their learning experience.
1. Students are given or negotiate a text, decision or
solution to analyse. They record this at the top of the SWOT analysis chart.
Before proceeding it is important for everyone in the learning team to be
familiar with the issue or problem under consideration.
Alternative Process 1. Divide students into groups. Or choose to keep the whole class together. 2. Distribute a blank SWOT diagram each group. Or have students create a large version on the board or on chart paper. (Note: If you use a large diagram on the board, have students write their ideas on sticky notes. These allow you to move ideas between boxes. And as a bonus, they get students out of their seats.) 3. Present students with a topic, video clip or written scenario. For example, you might show a video of an interaction with a customer. 4. Say, “As a group, analyze the video through four different lenses: strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats. Jot down ideas in each box as you go.” In the customer interaction example given, students would analyze the actions and words of the employee and gauge customer satisfaction. (Note: Don’t feel constrained to the exact terminology on the diagram. For example, if your situation does not include any threats, use the word “tweaks” instead. Leverage the tools available to help students brainstorm possible challenges.) 5. Lead a group discussion of the positive and negative aspects of the topic. For a customer interaction, challenge students to suggest changes the worker could make. For an added twist Have student groups practice performance testing and record themselves on video. Then have groups trade videos and analyze each other’s actions using a SWOT analysis. Final Thoughts The SWOT Analysis is one formative tool that provides a lot of flexibility for use. You can use this as a pre-assessment, while reading or delivering content, or as a post-instruction tool. It works to emphasize collaboration, connections and synthesizing information. It also serves as an efficient tool for connecting new information to prior learning. The gist: The SWOT analysis will encourage your students to think critically; implement this strategy in your classroom today.
Teaching Strategy--SWOT Analysis [very quiet]
SWOT Analysis - What is SWOT? Definition, Examples and How to Do a SWOT
Analysis
Materials sourced from
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