Student perception of group dynamics predicts individual performance: Comfort and equity matter.

Active learning in college classes and participation in the workforce frequently hinge on small group work. However, group dynamics vary, ranging from equitable collaboration to dysfunctional groups dominated by one individual. To explore how group dynamics impact student learning, we asked students...

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Main Authors: Elli J Theobald, Sarah L Eddy, Daniel Z Grunspan, Benjamin L Wiggins, Alison J Crowe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5519092?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-54b9b51f2add45fdb82410d8e05270cb2020-11-24T21:49:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01127e018133610.1371/journal.pone.0181336Student perception of group dynamics predicts individual performance: Comfort and equity matter.Elli J TheobaldSarah L EddyDaniel Z GrunspanBenjamin L WigginsAlison J CroweActive learning in college classes and participation in the workforce frequently hinge on small group work. However, group dynamics vary, ranging from equitable collaboration to dysfunctional groups dominated by one individual. To explore how group dynamics impact student learning, we asked students in a large-enrollment university biology class to self-report their experience during in-class group work. Specifically, we asked students whether there was a friend in their group, whether they were comfortable in their group, and whether someone dominated their group. Surveys were administered after students participated in two different types of intentionally constructed group activities: 1) a loosely-structured activity wherein students worked together for an entire class period (termed the 'single-group' activity), or 2) a highly-structured 'jigsaw' activity wherein students first independently mastered different subtopics, then formed new groups to peer-teach their respective subtopics. We measured content mastery by the change in score on identical pre-/post-tests. We then investigated whether activity type or student demographics predicted the likelihood of reporting working with a dominator, being comfortable in their group, or working with a friend. We found that students who more strongly agreed that they worked with a dominator were 17.8% less likely to answer an additional question correct on the 8-question post-test. Similarly, when students were comfortable in their group, content mastery increased by 27.5%. Working with a friend was the single biggest predictor of student comfort, although working with a friend did not impact performance. Finally, we found that students were 67% less likely to agree that someone dominated their group during the jigsaw activities than during the single group activities. We conclude that group activities that rely on positive interdependence, and include turn-taking and have explicit prompts for students to explain their reasoning, such as our jigsaw, can help reduce the negative impact of inequitable groups.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5519092?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elli J Theobald
Sarah L Eddy
Daniel Z Grunspan
Benjamin L Wiggins
Alison J Crowe
spellingShingle Elli J Theobald
Sarah L Eddy
Daniel Z Grunspan
Benjamin L Wiggins
Alison J Crowe
Student perception of group dynamics predicts individual performance: Comfort and equity matter.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Elli J Theobald
Sarah L Eddy
Daniel Z Grunspan
Benjamin L Wiggins
Alison J Crowe
author_sort Elli J Theobald
title Student perception of group dynamics predicts individual performance: Comfort and equity matter.
title_short Student perception of group dynamics predicts individual performance: Comfort and equity matter.
title_full Student perception of group dynamics predicts individual performance: Comfort and equity matter.
title_fullStr Student perception of group dynamics predicts individual performance: Comfort and equity matter.
title_full_unstemmed Student perception of group dynamics predicts individual performance: Comfort and equity matter.
title_sort student perception of group dynamics predicts individual performance: comfort and equity matter.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Active learning in college classes and participation in the workforce frequently hinge on small group work. However, group dynamics vary, ranging from equitable collaboration to dysfunctional groups dominated by one individual. To explore how group dynamics impact student learning, we asked students in a large-enrollment university biology class to self-report their experience during in-class group work. Specifically, we asked students whether there was a friend in their group, whether they were comfortable in their group, and whether someone dominated their group. Surveys were administered after students participated in two different types of intentionally constructed group activities: 1) a loosely-structured activity wherein students worked together for an entire class period (termed the 'single-group' activity), or 2) a highly-structured 'jigsaw' activity wherein students first independently mastered different subtopics, then formed new groups to peer-teach their respective subtopics. We measured content mastery by the change in score on identical pre-/post-tests. We then investigated whether activity type or student demographics predicted the likelihood of reporting working with a dominator, being comfortable in their group, or working with a friend. We found that students who more strongly agreed that they worked with a dominator were 17.8% less likely to answer an additional question correct on the 8-question post-test. Similarly, when students were comfortable in their group, content mastery increased by 27.5%. Working with a friend was the single biggest predictor of student comfort, although working with a friend did not impact performance. Finally, we found that students were 67% less likely to agree that someone dominated their group during the jigsaw activities than during the single group activities. We conclude that group activities that rely on positive interdependence, and include turn-taking and have explicit prompts for students to explain their reasoning, such as our jigsaw, can help reduce the negative impact of inequitable groups.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5519092?pdf=render
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