Group formation
- Should teachers form the groups or let students form their own?
- If teachers form the groups, what criteria should they use?
- How long should a group stay together?
The authors found that letting students partner with friends and then form groups with pairs of friends improved performance and satisfaction.
In this study, stable groups performed better.
The authors found that how groups were formed influenced outcomes, with permanent groups producing better work and fostering greater development of interpersonal communication skills than temporary groups.
Tasks: activities and assignments
- What learning goals are best accomplished in groups?
- What kinds of content can be learned in groups?
- What lessons about group process can be learned?
- What kinds of tasks most effectively engage students?
- What differentiates online and in-class groups, and what design details address those differences?
Handling small group dynamics
- What about students who are not doing their fair share of the work?
- What about students who are doing more than their fair share of the work?
- What about groups who are managing their time poorly (socializing, procrastinating, etc.)?
- What about groups with role problems (too many leaders, no leaders, no one disagrees, etc.)?
- What problems should the group solve, and what problems should the teacher solve?
- What should teachers do when they intervene in a group’s problems?
Assessing learning that occurs in collective contexts
- What’s best? Group grades? Individual grades? Some combination of both?
- What about peer assessment within the groups? Should it count? For how much?
- What about groups assessing other groups?
Anson, R., & Goodman, J. A. (2014). A peer assessment system to improve student team experiences. Journal of Education for Business, 89(2), 27–34. https://doi.org/10.1080/08832323.2012.754735 The researchers developed an online peer assessment system that students gave high marks for its efficiency, provision of high-quality feedback, and positive impact on team processes.
Baker, D. F. (2008). Peer assessment in small groups: A comparison of methods. Journal of Management Education, 32(2), 183–209. https://doi.org/10.1177/1052562907310489 On the basis of a comprehensive literature review, the author developed and tested with positive results a long and short form of a peer-review instrument. The instrument appears in the article.
Sadler, D. R. (2010). Beyond feedback: Developing student capability in complex appraisal. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 35(5), 535–550. https://doi.org/10.1080/02602930903541015 An interesting perspective on feedback in which the author proposes that students’ ability to make accurate judgments about their own work and that of their peers develops through practice. It argues for peer assessment.
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