| Literature DB >> 28727749 |
Elli J Theobald1, Sarah L Eddy2, Daniel Z Grunspan3, Benjamin L Wiggins1, Alison J Crowe1.
Abstract
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.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28727749 PMCID: PMC5519092 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0181336
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Questions on the survey and the percentage of responses.
Results are aggregated across all three iterations of the survey, so students’ views are repeated.
| Question | Possible Answers | n Student Responses | % of Students Responding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Are you friends with at least one person that was in your group? (Eng2) | Yes | 1022 | 78.6% |
| No | 278 | 21.4% | |
| I felt comfortable with my group. (NewEng19) | Strongly Agree | 502 | 38.6% |
| Agree | 589 | 45.3% | |
| Somewhat Agree | 151 | 11.6% | |
| Somewhat Disagree | 41 | 3.2% | |
| Disagree | 13 | 1% | |
| Strongly Disagree | 4 | 0.3% | |
| One group member dominated discussion during today’s [topic] activity. (NewEng22) | Strongly Agree | 97 | 7.5% |
| Agree | 195 | 15% | |
| Somewhat Agree | 240 | 18.5% | |
| Somewhat Disagree | 291 | 22.4% | |
| Disagree | 391 | 30.1% | |
| Strongly Disagree | 86 | 6.6% |
Final models and associated estimates for predicting students’ performance on the post-test and which students report a dominator, being comfortable, and working with a friend.
Coefficients are presented as odds (transformed from logodds); models were fit as cumulative link mixed models (postscore, dominator, comfort) or logistic regression (friend; see methods for details). Bolded coefficients represent statistical significance to α = 0.05. Grey cells indicate variables that were not included in the full model, empty cells indicate variables that were included in the full model and then were dropped during the model selection process. Superscripted notes indicate starting models and additional notes.
| Outcome | Pre-score | Dominator | Comfort | Friend | Sex | Ethnicity | First Gen. | Trt | Grade | ΔAIC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Postscore | 423.96 | |||||||||
| Postscore | 413.15 | |||||||||
| Postscore | 414.16 | |||||||||
| Postscore | 402.55 | |||||||||
| Dominator | URM 1.40 | 57.43 | ||||||||
| Comfort | 90.57 | |||||||||
| Friend | 0 | |||||||||
1Included in the initial model as ordinal categorical, retained in the final model as continuous
2Reference group: Female
3Reference group: white students; abbreviations: AA = Asian American, URM = Under-represented minority (see methods for details), Int = International students (see methods for details)
4Reference group: Single-group activity
5Final Grade in course
6Change from null model: Outcome ~ 1 + (student random effect); Models were selected using backwards selection, starting with the most complex model
7Controling for topic
8Outcome (Postscore) ~ Performance (Prescore) + Sex + First Generation Status + URM + Dominator + Friend + Treatment + Topic + (student random effect) (note: there were no interactions in the initial model)
9Outcome (Postscore) ~ Performance (Prescore) + Demographic Characteristics (Sex + First Generation Status + URM) + Dominator OR Friend OR Treatment + Topic + Interactions between Dominator, Comfort, OR Friend*Demographic Characteristics + (student random effect)
10Outcome (Dominator OR Comfort OR Friend) ~ Performance (Course Grade) + Demographic Characteristics (Sex + First Generation Status + URM) + (the two that are not the outcome of Dominator, Friend, or Treatment) + Topic + Interactions between Treatment *Demographic Characteristics + (student random effect)
11Null model selected as best fit model.
Fig 1Raw means showing student performance on the post-test as a function of reporting a dominator, being comfortable in their group, and working with a friend.
A) Controlling for pre-score, students who strongly agree there was a dominator in their group performed worse on the post-score than students who reported low levels of a dominator; B) Controlling for pre-score, students who report being comfortable in their groups score higher on the post-test; C) There is no effect of friend on performance (note that there is a difference in post-score, not controlling for pre-score wherein students who work with a friend score higher on the post-test (t = -2.6, p<0.05); this difference is noticeable in this figure). Error bars indicate standard error. Students answered the dominator and comfort questions on a 6-point Likert scale, from Strongly Disagree (1) to Strongly Agree (6). See Table 2 for final models and modeled estimates.
Fig 2Raw means show that some student characteristics predict which students report a dominator and being comfortable in their group.
A) Students who have low course grades report higher levels of a dominator; B) International students (Int) and Asian-American students (AsAm) report higher levels of a dominator than white students (Wht), and there is no difference in dominator report rate between white students and URM students; C) The single predictor determining a student’s comfort in their group was whether (or not) they worked with a friend. Error bars indicate standard error and are present on all plots, despite being very small and subsumed by points in some cases. See Table 2 for final models and modeled estimates.
Fig 3Raw means show that a carefully designed jigsaw in-class activity reduced the dominator report rate compared to a single-group activity.
Error bars, which are present but subsumed by the point, indicate standard error. See Table 2 for final models and modeled estimates.