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Kendall, Catherine; Etheredge, Jessica; Moody, Dana; Cooper, Ashley – Journal of Learning in Higher Education, 2014
The ability to work in groups is fundamental to education and professional environments. Today's classrooms are predominately filled with Millennials who have been working in teams their whole lives. Millennials enjoy group work because it is perceived as more fun and gives them a sense of unity and collaboration; unfortunately, it also gives them…
Descriptors: Group Activities, Cooperative Learning, Teamwork, Student Characteristics
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Tseng, Hung Wei; Yeh, Hsin-Te – Computers & Education, 2013
Teamwork factors can facilitate team members, committing themselves to the purposes of maximizing their own and others' contributions and successes. It is important for online instructors to comprehend students' expectations on learning collaboratively. The aims of this study were to investigate online collaborative learning experiences and to…
Descriptors: Teamwork, Trust (Psychology), Student Attitudes, Learning Experience
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Clark, Kathleen; James, Alex; Montelle, Clemency – Research in Mathematics Education, 2014
The ability to address and solve problems in minimally familiar contexts is the core business of research mathematicians. Recent studies have identified key traits and techniques that individuals exhibit while problem solving, and revealed strategies and behaviours that are frequently invoked in the process. We studied advanced calculus students…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Problem Solving, Teamwork, Educational Practices
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Dierdorff, Erich C.; Bell, Suzanne T.; Belohlav, James A. – Journal of Applied Psychology, 2011
We examined the influences of different facets of psychological collectivism (Preference, Reliance, Concern, Norm Acceptance, and Goal Priority) on team functioning at 3 different performance depictions: initial team performance, end-state team performance, and team performance change over time. We also tested the extent to which team-member…
Descriptors: Teamwork, Team Training, Statistical Data, Psychology
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Waistell, Jeff – Higher Education Research and Development, 2011
The argument presented in this paper is that today's workplaces and universities both require and promote individual and collective responsibility for work and that students need to be adequately prepared for this. UK national culture has been characterised as highly individualist. Therefore, internationalisation of home management students in the…
Descriptors: Individualism, Home Management, Foreign Countries, Group Behavior
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Maiden, Barbara; Perry, Bob – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2011
Potential employers require graduates to be able to demonstrate competent teamwork skills in initiating ideas and solving problems cooperatively. Teamwork is prevalent in educational institutions and often included as a way of enriching learning and assessment. Whilst group working can provide a rich opportunity for cooperative learning, its…
Descriptors: Schools, Cooperative Learning, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
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Pearsall, Matthew J.; Ellis, Aleksander P. J. – Journal of Applied Psychology, 2011
The purpose of this study was to uncover compositional and emergent influences on unethical behavior by teams. Results from 126 teams indicated that the presence of a formalistic orientation within the team was negatively related to collective unethical decisions. Conversely, the presence of a utilitarian orientation within the team was positively…
Descriptors: Safety, Psychology, Ethics, Teamwork
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Grinnell, Lynn; Sauers, Amy; Appunn, Frank; Mack, Larry – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2012
Students and faculty are grappling with learning teams in the online environment - more than half of all higher education organizations offer online courses (Hoffman, 2006). As online course developers try to replicate the best practices of traditional classrooms, the asynchronous technology of the Internet has added great capability while also…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Best Practices, Distance Education, Asynchronous Communication
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McClelland, Giles Peter – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2012
This study explores whether randomly assigning group membership enhances the student learning experience. The paper starts with a critical analysis of the approaches to student learning within higher education and how these approaches conflict with findings from applied psychology on group behaviour. The study adopts a serendipitous qualitative…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Attitudes, Conflict, Program Effectiveness
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Porter, Christopher O. L. H.; Webb, Justin W.; Gogus, Celile Itir – Journal of Applied Psychology, 2010
The authors draw on resource allocation theory (Kanfer & Ackerman, 1989) to develop hypotheses regarding the conditions under which collective learning and performance orientation have interactive effects and the nature of those effects on teams' ability to adapt to a sudden and dramatic change in workload. Consistent with the theory, results…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Program Effectiveness, Resource Allocation, Decision Making
Gifford, Christopher M. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This dissertation focuses on the collaboration of multiple heterogeneous, intelligent agents (hardware or software) which collaborate to learn a task and are capable of sharing knowledge. The concept of collaborative learning in multi-agent and multi-robot systems is largely under studied, and represents an area where further research is needed to…
Descriptors: Architecture, Topography, Learning Strategies, Group Behavior
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Jassawalla, Avan R.; Malshe, Avinash; Sashittal, Hemant – Decision Sciences Journal of Innovative Education, 2008
There is a rich body of research devoted to the causes and remedies of social loafing in workplace teams. However, the social loafing phenomenon remains underinvestigated from the perspective of students in undergraduate business classroom teams. In particular, how they define and respond to loafing remains unknown. This article reports findings…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Business Administration Education, Teamwork
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Bucic, Tania; Robinson, Linda; Ramburuth, Prem – Journal of Workplace Learning, 2010
Purpose: This paper seeks to explore the effect of leadership style of a team leader on team-member learning in organizations, to conceptually extend an initial model of leadership and to empirically examine the new model of ambidextrous leadership in a team context. Design/methodology/approach: Qualitative research utilizing the case study method…
Descriptors: Investigations, Leadership Styles, Case Studies, Replication (Evaluation)
Page, Scott E. – Princeton University Press, 2008
In this landmark book, Scott Page redefines the way we understand ourselves in relation to one another. "The Difference" is about how we think in groups--and how our collective wisdom exceeds the sum of its parts. Why can teams of people find better solutions than brilliant individuals working alone? And why are the best group decisions…
Descriptors: Democracy, Expertise, Student Diversity, Cultural Pluralism
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Garmston, Robert J. – Journal of Staff Development, 1999
In adaptive schools, working groups grow, develop, and learn from experience, becoming more effective as they go. Three premises about group development include the following: each group is unique, some groups mature, and attrition need not block development. Four guidelines for successful group meetings include decide who decides, define the…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Group Behavior, Group Dynamics, Meetings
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