Characterizing Team Orientations and Academic Performance in Cooperative Project-Based Learning Environments
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Conceptual Framework
4. Research Design
4.1. Participants
4.2. Learning Design and Context
4.3. Pedagogy
4.4. Procedures
4.5. Team Retrospectives
4.6. Data Analysis Methods
5. Results
5.1. Reported Teamwork Skills
5.2. Collective Orientations
“Each of us was assigned to finish our own part. For [the] package diagram, we need to modify the class diagram that we made before. The package diagram is a little bit complicated, we assigned 1 person to finish it. As for the other material for the milestone, we split the tasks up by one person. Some of the more difficult tasks had 2 people completing them. At the end of the project for milestone 4, we finally worked well, we knew the strengths and weaknesses of our groups and implemented tactics to mitigate those weaknesses. We will separate the mission much more carefully and let each team member do their skilled part. Working as a group, we can learn a lot”.
“In our planning stage, we divided the work among our members. Two members worked on the package, one worked on Gantt and update backlog, one work on the summary.”
“We should keep in contact with each other after the work assignment constantly so we can make sure everything goes on well as we expect and there is nothing left for the whole project. Assign some work to every team member after each meeting can improve efficiency. Plan ahead (a week before) the deadline.”
5.3. Relationship between Team Orientations and Team Performance
- A unit increase in goals, with all other factors, held constant, increases the odds of team-high performance by a factor of 6.117.
- A unit increase in roles, with all other factors, held constant, increases the odds of team-high performance by a factor of 1.806.
- A unit increase in interpersonal communication, with all other factors, held constant, decreases the odds of the team-high performance by a factor of 0.336.
- A unit increase in process, with all other factors, held constant, decreases the odds of the team-high performance by a factor of 0.281.
6. Discussion and Implications
7. Conclusions, Limitations, and Future Work
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
References
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Male | Female | First-Year | Second-Year | Third-Year | Fourth-Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
18 | 95 | 0 | 40 | 41 | 32 |
Two or More Races | American Indian or Alaska Native | Asian | Black or African American | Hispanic or Latino | International | White | Unknown |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 0 | 13 | 5 | 7 | 25 | 59 | 2 |
Theme | Definition | Team Retrospective Questions |
---|---|---|
Goal | Explanation of the planning or overall vision for the current milestone. | How did you plan the organization of work for the milestone? |
Roles | All team members must know what part they play, what is expected, and how they are held accountable and responsible. | What were the team members’ roles? How were activities assigned to each team member, and what was the justification for that? |
Processes | Explanation about procedures that the team has to follow, in terms of workflow or review, for current milestones or improvements to be made for future milestones | What are areas or sections of the milestone that you just completed you think could be improved? What are the aspects you think can be done better for the next milestone in terms of team performance? What are the possible concerns? What do you think as a team was particularly good about the milestone you just completed? |
Interpersonal Relationships | Explanation about the quality of communication and collaboration among team members; any reference to communication platform; team participation; conflict management and resolution. | How was the communication handled among team members? What aspects of the team coordination/collaboration went well in this milestone? What aspects of the team coordination/collaboration went wrong in this milestone? |
Criterion | 0 | 1 | 2 |
---|---|---|---|
Goal | Did not address the overall plan for the current milestone in terms of goals and/or organization | Addressed goals and organization of the team in an insufficient manner | Comprehensively addressed the goals and organization of the team |
Roles | Did not delineate the roles and responsibilities of team members | Vaguely defined the roles and responsibilities of some team members or did so for all team members but was lacking clarity | Explicitly delineated roles and responsibilities of every team member |
Processes | No detailed explanation for procedures the team has to follow | Vaguely defined procedures for the team to follow | Explicitly defined procedures for the team to follow |
Interpersonal Relationships | Exhibited poor quality of communication and collaboration | Exhibited moderate quality of communication and collaboration | Exhibited excellent quality of communication and collaboration |
Teamwork Skills | Developing | Emerging | Proficient |
---|---|---|---|
Setting Goals | 26% | 44% | 30% |
Assigning Roles | 13% | 35% | 52% |
Implementing coordination Process | 4% | 13% | 83% |
Establishing Interpersonal relations | 4% | 22% | 74% |
Cluster 1 (Balanced Orientation) | Cluster 2 (Unbalanced Orientation) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Teams | Orientation | Teams | Orientation |
V | GRPI | K | I |
B | GRPI | O | I |
R | GRPI | U | I |
H | RPI | C | I, P |
Q | RPI | N | I, P |
E | RPI | J | I, P |
S | RPI | M | I, P |
G | P | ||
L | I | ||
P | P | ||
W | P | ||
A | G | ||
F | G, R | ||
D | R | ||
I | NO ORIENTATION | ||
T | NO ORIENTATION |
Balanced Team Orientation (n = 7) | Un-Balanced Team Orientation (n = 16) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Mean | SD | Mean | SD |
7.60 | 0.40 | 5.03 | 1.32 |
B | SE. | df | Exp(B) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Goals | 1.811 | 1.677 | 1 | 6.117 |
Roles | 0.591 | 0.984 | 1 | 1.806 |
Interpersonal Communication | −1.09 | 1.673 | 1 | 0.336 |
Process | −1.271 | 2.041 | 1 | 0.281 |
Principle | Definition [28,57] | Student Quotes |
---|---|---|
Positive interdependence | The group has a clearly defined plan for accomplishing tasks or goals | “The team planned for this project by communicating over what needed to be done during class time and using GroupMe for anything they did not mention in class. They made clear who was responsible for completing which parts of the milestone so that everyone was clear on exactly what their job was. People volunteered for their respective parts, and no one had to be forced to do a part of the milestone that no one wanted to do.” |
Individual and group accountability | The group holds members accountable for an individual share of work as well as overall group goals. | “No one had a greater share of the work on this milestone than the other group members. The roles of each group member were as follows: Student 1—4 Sequence Diagrams 2 Activity Diagrams and the team retrospective. Student 2—4 Sequence Diagrams 2 Activity Diagrams and the class diagram. Student 3–4 Sequence Diagrams 2 Activity Diagrams. Student 4—4 Sequence Diagrams 2 Activity Diagrams and the Gantt chart. Student 5—4 Sequence Diagrams 2 Activity Diagrams” |
Interpersonal and small group skills | Effectiveness in teamwork skills such as communication, conflict management, leadership, decision making, and trust-building. | “The aspects of team collaboration that went right during this project were our work ethic and communication. Everyone was done with their parts 24 h before we had to submit which gave us plenty of time to make needed corrections to the diagrams. The team divided work evenly and completed it efficiently. The only aspect of the milestone that needed work was communicating about how the diagrams were being made, but due to the excess time that was a non-issue as all errors were quickly corrected.” |
Face-to-face promotive interaction | The students work together as a group, help each other to achieve success by sharing resources and providing feedback. | “This team did very well on this milestone. The team communicated with one another and had a solid outline for who would do which parts of the project well before the deadline, as everyone knew exactly what it was that they needed to get done. The project was completed several hours in advance of the deadline, which allowed us to review our work before submission.” |
Group processing | Teams collectively decide as to which behaviors are acceptable and which behaviors need to change. | “While communication has continually improved over the course of this project, the team could still do better as several corrections were needed on diagrams due to there not being much communication on what each member was doing on the ones they had been assigned. Communication during work needs to be improved.” |
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Jaiswal, A.; Karabiyik, T.; Thomas, P.; Magana, A.J. Characterizing Team Orientations and Academic Performance in Cooperative Project-Based Learning Environments. Educ. Sci. 2021, 11, 520. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11090520
Jaiswal A, Karabiyik T, Thomas P, Magana AJ. Characterizing Team Orientations and Academic Performance in Cooperative Project-Based Learning Environments. Education Sciences. 2021; 11(9):520. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11090520
Chicago/Turabian StyleJaiswal, Aparajita, Tugba Karabiyik, Paul Thomas, and Alejandra J. Magana. 2021. "Characterizing Team Orientations and Academic Performance in Cooperative Project-Based Learning Environments" Education Sciences 11, no. 9: 520. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11090520
APA StyleJaiswal, A., Karabiyik, T., Thomas, P., & Magana, A. J. (2021). Characterizing Team Orientations and Academic Performance in Cooperative Project-Based Learning Environments. Education Sciences, 11(9), 520. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci11090520