An Examination of Peer Learning Promoting Cooperation and Deeper Understanding Among Mild Intellectual Students

Authors

  • Neelam Arjun Gadling, Dr. Shakuntala Bhosale

Keywords:

Peer Learning, Special Education Pedagogy, Collaborative Understanding, Social Constructivism, Inclusive Education, Cooperative Learning, Mild Intellectual Disability (MID)

Abstract

Peer learning has emerged as an effective instructional approach for supporting the academic, social, and cognitive development of students with Mild Intellectual Disability (MID). Learners with MID often experience challenges related to abstract reasoning, independent problem-solving, academic confidence, and social participation. This review paper critically examines how peer learning promotes cooperation, enhances conceptual understanding, and supports inclusive participation among students with MID through structured peer interaction, shared problem-solving, and guided collaboration. Drawing upon social constructivism, Vygotskian socio-cultural theory, cooperative learning theory, cognitive development frameworks, and special education research, the paper analyses how peer-mediated learning environments enable students with MID to articulate thinking, clarify misconceptions, scaffold comprehension, and engage meaningfully in collective knowledge construction. The review further explores the socio-emotional benefits of peer learning, including improved self-esteem, reduced anxiety, increased belonging, and strengthened interpersonal relationships—factors that are particularly critical for learners with MID. The findings indicate that peer learning is most effective for students with MID when instructional design includes structured interaction formats, clearly defined peer roles, intentional heterogeneous grouping, teacher facilitation, visual and verbal scaffolding, and assessment practices that value collaborative contribution. The paper concludes by outlining implications for inclusive curriculum design, teacher preparation, equitable classroom practices, and future research on peer learning as a core pedagogical strategy for enhancing cooperation and deep learning outcomes among students with Mild Intellectual Disability.

References

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How to Cite

Neelam Arjun Gadling, Dr. Shakuntala Bhosale. (2026). An Examination of Peer Learning Promoting Cooperation and Deeper Understanding Among Mild Intellectual Students. International Journal of Research & Technology, 14(2), 1658–1663. Retrieved from https://ijrt.org/j/article/view/1511

Issue

Section

Original Research Articles

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