Interpersonal affect in groupwork: A comparative case study of two small groups with contrasting group dynamics outcomes

Cheryl Jones, S. Volet, Deborah Pino-Pasternak, Olli-Pekka Heinimäki
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Teamwork capabilities are essential for 21st century life, with groupwork emerging as a fruitful context to develop these skills. Case studies that explore interpersonal affect dynamics in authentic higher education groupwork settings can highlight collaborative skills development needs. This comparative case-study traced the sociodynamic evolution of two groups of first-year university students to investigate the high collaborative variance outcomes of the two groups, which reported starkly contrasting group dynamics (negative and dysfunctional or positive and collaborative). Mixed-methods (video-recorded observations of five groupwork labs over one semester, and group interviews) provided interpersonal affect data as real-time visible behaviours, and the felt experiences and perceptions of  participants. The study traced interpersonal affect dynamics in the natural fluctuation of not just task-focused (on-task), but also explicitly relational (off-task) interactions, which revealed their function in both task participation and group dynamics. Findings illustrate visible interpersonal affect behaviours that manifested and evolved over time as interactive patterns, and group dynamics outcomes. Fine-grained analysis of interactions unveiled interpersonal affect as a collective, evolving process, and the mechanism through which one group started and stayed highly positive and collaborative over the semester. The other group showed a tendency towards splitting to undertake tasks early, leading to low group-level interpersonal attentiveness, and over time, subgroups emerged through interactions both off-task and on-task. The study made visible the pervasive nature of interpersonal affect as enacted through seemingly inconsequential everyday behaviours that supported the relational and task-based needs of groupwork, and those behaviours which impeded collaboration.  
小组工作中的人际关系:两个小组动态结果的比较案例研究
团队合作能力对21世纪的生活至关重要,团队合作成为培养这些技能的富有成效的背景。在真实的高等教育小组工作环境中探索人际影响动态的案例研究可以突出合作技能发展的需求。这项比较案例研究追踪了两组一年级大学生的社会动力学演变,以调查这两组学生的高协作方差结果,报告了截然不同的群体动力学(消极和功能失调或积极和协作)。混合方法(一个学期内对五个小组工作实验室的视频观察和小组访谈)提供了作为实时可见行为的人际影响数据,以及参与者的感受和感知。该研究追踪了人际情感动态,不仅在任务集中(任务上)的自然波动中,而且在明确的关系(任务外)互动中,这揭示了它们在任务参与和群体动态中的作用。研究结果表明,随着时间的推移,明显的人际影响行为表现为互动模式和群体动力学结果。对互动的精细分析揭示了人际影响是一个集体的、不断发展的过程,以及一个群体在整个学期中开始并保持高度积极和协作的机制。另一组表现出分裂的倾向,倾向于尽早完成任务,导致小组人际关注度较低,随着时间的推移,小组通过任务外和任务内的互动而出现。这项研究表明,人际影响的普遍性是通过看似无关紧要的日常行为产生的,这些行为支持了团队工作的关系和基于任务的需求,以及那些阻碍合作的行为。
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来源期刊
Frontline Learning Research
Frontline Learning Research Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
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