Powerful Group Activities that Work! Christine Harrington Ph.D. Middlesex County College charrington@middlesexcc.edu University of Wisconsin- Eau Claire January 8, 2015 1 Agenda Research on Active Learning and Group Work Discuss and Engage in a Variety of Group Activities Making Research Based Changes in your Classroom 2 Turn and Talk: Why is Group Work Important? 3 Employers want…. Teamwork skills Communication skills Koc (2011); Costigan & Donahue (2009) 4 Group Work Works! Springer, Stanne & Donovan (1999) Increases in… Achievement Persistence Attitudes Meta-analysis of 37 studies! 5 Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory Social www.eca.usp.br Language Cognitive 6 Not all group work is equal… Unstructured Group Work Talk to others about a topic 7 May get off topic Monopolizers/Social loafers Minimal investment Cooperative Group Work Structured Clear purpose Everyone is involved and accountable BrainstormingThe Power of Groups? 8 BrainstormingThe Power of Groups? Brainstorm Work together to create a list Nominal Work independently until I tell you, then share answers to create a list (Mullen, Johnson, & Salas, 1991) 9 Problems with Brainstorming Production Blocking 10 My idea is not “good enough” Forget idea by time other member is finished Group Think- support others and avoid conflict Social Loafing- view contribution as not important or needed Brainwriting (Paulus & Yang, 2000; Heslin, 2009) 11 Direct Instruction is BEST for Novice Learners 12 Clark, Kirschner & Sweller (2012) Brief Opportunities for Active Learning: How Often? 13 Prince (2004) Jigsaw Classroom (Aronson et al., 1978) HOME BASE GROUP: 3-5 students EXPERT GROUP: Work together to learn the topic and be ready to teach your home base group members HOME BASE GROUP: Teach each other 14 Your Task: Decide on “experts”: 1. 2. 3. 15 Self-selection vs. assigned groups Strategies to equalize workload Grading group work In “expert” groups: Discuss the topic Determine 2-3 most important points Be prepared to “teach” your home base group members- they are depending on you! In Expert Groups, Answer: SELF-SELECTION vs. ASSIGNED GROUPS Should you allow students to choose groups or should you assign students to groups? Why? EQUALIZING WORKLOAD How can you reduce social loafing and increase the likelihood that all students are contributing? GRADING Should you give individual, group, or combination grades? What are the advantages and disadvantages of each approach? 16 Jigsaw Classroom (Walker & Crogan, 1998) 17 Improved academic performance Better attitude toward peers Reduced prejudice Self-Selection Vs. Assigned Groups 18 Assign Groups Assign Groups to avoid homogeneous groups and to increase individual and group outcomes (Hinds, Carley, Krackhardt, & Wholey, 2000; McClelland, 2012) Self-selection has NEGATIVE impact on minority and low ability students (Shimazoe & Aldrich, 2010) 19 Optimizing Creativity (Paulus, 2000) Cognitive diversity leads to more ideas 20 Change Groups After a Few Sessions Changing groups led to better results than groups who stayed together for more than half a semester (Tomcho & Foels, 2012) 21 Strategies to Equalize Workload 22 Group Training, Rules and Roles 23 The 5R Approach to Group Work Establish Rapport Develop Rules Determine Get Roles Ready to Work and Support One Another Remember to Evaluate 24 (Harrington, 2016) Group Roles Group Leader Note-Taker Visual Aid Leader Finishing Touch Specialist Questioner Rehearsal Director Harrington (2016) 25 Training students on group process works! 26 Peterson (2012) Team Skills TrainingPrichard, Stratford, & Bizo (2006) Groups in Experiment Trained Together Trained Re-assigned Two 45 minute training sessions 27 Untrained Individual And Group Learning Outcomes n=108 Results… Individual Score Group Score 70 60 50 40 30 20 Group Score 10 0 Not significantly different 28 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Individual Score *Significantly different p <.05 Group Work – Research Based Tips Working individually on entire project BEFORE working together resulted in better academic performance Knowing full CONTENT first (vs. part of the content) led to better performance (Sarfo and Ellen, 2011) 29 Inter-teaching Boyce & Hineline (2002) Prep Reading Guide to be completed before class • 10-12 questions • 10-15 pages Clarifying Lecture • Based on prior record sheets Pair with another student to review Reading Guide • Professor answers questions • Record sheet on discussion, identifying difficult concepts 30 Inter-teaching Class Time Clarifying Lecture Work in Pairs on Guided Reading Sheet 31 Save the Last Word for Me Inter-teaching Skim Saville, Lambert & Robertson (2011) article Identify one quote or statement that you find interesting- write this on your index card. On the back: Why did you choose this quote? Group Share 1. 2. 3. 4. 1. 2. 3. 4. Share Quote only Other members react to the quote Initial member shares thoughts and reflects on group contributions Repeat until everyone has shared their quote (Vaughan & Estes,1986; Short, Harste, & Burke,1996) 32 Structured Problem Solving Approach Group members are informed that someone will be randomly chosen to report out on their work No one knows who is presenting what until the day of the presentation (Millis 2002) 33 Individual Accountability to Group 11.5 11 10.5 Told Not Told 10 9.5 9 8.5 Performance 34 (Sarfo and Ellen, 2011) Grading Issues 35 Grading Issues High achieving students often receive lower grades Low achieving students often receive higher grades on group work (Almond, 2009) 36 Grading Group Work: The Student Perspective Barfield (2003) Inexperienced group members more likely to believe everyone should get the same grade Part time workers more likely to believe grading is fair as compared to full time workers Older students were most dissatisfied with group grades 37 What about Introverts? 64 Although extraverts like group work more than introverts, they performed equally well on assessments 62 60 58 56 54 52 38 Extroverts Introverts Grading Self and Others Students tend to give high grades to self and peers (Breneiser, Monetti, & Adams, (2012) 39 Group Accountability Log 40 Individual vs. Group Grade http://decker.com/blog/tag/pros-and-cons/ 41 Grading Considerations 42 (King & Behnke 2005) Not everything needs to be graded Avoid “Firing” members Group grades can have negative interpersonal impact Applying What You’ve Learned What “take-away” did you get from this workshop? What might you do differently as a result of participating today? 43 Brainwriting 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 44 Write down one “take-away” from this workshop on the index card. Pass the card to your right. Read the card. Add another “take-away”. It can’t be an idea written on the card or one you have already written on a card. Continue passing the card to your right and writing additional “take-aways” until we tell you to stop. Discuss the “take-aways” with your group. Questions? Contact me at charrington@middlesexcc.edu Thank You and Best Wishes with Group Work in your Classroom! 45 References Almond, R. J. (2009). Group assessment: Comparing group and individual undergraduate module marks. Assessment & Evaluation In Higher Education, 34(2), 141-148. doi:10.1080/02602930801956083 Aronson, E., Blaney, N., Stephan, C., Sikes, J. and Snapp, M. (1978) The Jigsaw Classroom, Sage, Beverley Hills, CA. Barfield, R. L. (2003). 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