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Second Step® Insights

How Collaboration Helps Kids Succeed

August 6, 2025 | By: The Second Step® Team

Kids love working together. Whether they’re designing a poster or solving a complex chemistry problem, sharing a common goal helps kids depend on and learn from each other, bolstering their growth and their ability to achieve new things.

Collaboration comes naturally to many students, but it still needs to be proactively fostered in classrooms through intentional instruction and repeated practice. This includes low-stake opportunities like partnered tasks as well as higher-stake group projects, where successful collaboration is critical to their shared success.

Here are four ways that collaboration drives success for kids, along with some simple tips to cultivate it in classrooms and school communities.

Collaboration prepares students for the workforce

Whether they’re writing code, building houses, or serving customers, workers in most professional spheres work with others to get the job done. Increasingly, employers are seeking young people who come equipped with excellent collaborative abilities, including skills like active listening, empathy, and self-awareness. Practicing collaboration in the classroom is vital to ensuring that young people can work well with others when they enter the professional world.

Collaboration tip #1: In group projects, allow students to pick which responsibility they would like to have, such as writer, illustrator, group speaker, and so on. Try to make the selection process fair.

Collaboration supports relationships

When kids are given opportunities to strengthen their collaboration skills, they also grow their ability to build relationships. A group social studies project is about more than just mastering content—it’s a chance for students to connect and build relationships with their classmates. In this process, students can form meaningful relationships, even friendships, which eventually come to support them in their lives in and out of school.

Collaboration tip #2: When students are working together for the first time, include a brief get-to-know-you task or question at the beginning of the assignment.

Collaboration builds confidence

Collaboration helps kids build confidence by allowing them to witness how their own efforts support the success of others. For example, in a partnered poster project, one student might draw a great picture while another student writes a strong text to accompany it. Though their contributions are different, both students get to see how their unique effort supported their partner’s and combined to create a successful project. As students develop their collaboration skills through experiences like these, they can build confidence in their own abilities.

Collaboration tip #3: After completing a collaborative assignment, give students the chance to reflect on how their own efforts supported the group.

Collaboration strengthens problem-solving skills

Working with others allows students to approach challenges from multiple angles. When students engage in collaborative problem-solving, they learn to value different viewpoints, negotiate solutions, and persevere through setbacks as a team. These experiences not only enhance academic outcomes but also help students build resilience and creative thinking skills—both of which are essential for lifelong learning and success.

Collaboration tip #4: Use open-ended tasks that allow for multiple problem-solving approaches and encourage students to explain their reasoning to their peers.

Fostering collaboration at every level

Collaboration is more than a classroom strategy—it’s a powerful way to nurture essential human skills that set students up for success in school, relationships, and life. By intentionally creating space for teamwork, educators help students build relationships, confidence, problem-solving skills, and workforce readiness.

Connect with our Education Partnerships Team to learn how Second Step® programs can foster collaboration in your school community and help students thrive—together.