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"I Hate Group Work!": Addressing Students' Concerns About Small-Group Learning
Author(s) -
Elizabeth Allan
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
insight a journal of scholarly teaching
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1933-4869
pISSN - 1933-4850
DOI - 10.46504/11201606al
Subject(s) - group (periodic table) , group work , work (physics) , mathematics education , psychology , group learning , pedagogy , engineering , physics , mechanical engineering , quantum mechanics
This article identifies the strategies used by architecture professors and their undergraduate students to mitigate common issues that students raise about group work. Based on participant-observation, interviews with students and faculty, and analysis of instructional materials and student work, this IRB-approved ethnographic case study complicates the separation of collaborative, cooperative, and problem-based learning into distinct pedagogical models. Rather than viewing students’ concerns as a form of resistance that can be avoided with the right approach to small-group learning, this article explores how the hybrid model operating in design studio pedagogy confronts the problems inherent in any form of group work.

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