Setting Students up for Success with Groupwork

About this resource

Description

This resource is a how-to guide on setting up group projects to improve student experience when working in groups. It provides instructors with tips on how to teach students to work effectively in a group. The examples provided can be adapted into any discipline with group work components. The resource also contains an example group assessment task in the biochemistry discipline that can be adapted by other biochemistry educators.

Length

Multi-week

Pedagogical backing

Rationale

Learning to work together in a group is a graduate attribute all university students must master. While students complete multiple group projects across courses throughout their undergraduate years, they are often not taught how to work in a group. Therefore, group work is consistently rated as one of the most disliked activities by students across all Faculties. Therefore a term-long program was developed to teach students how to work successfully work in a group.

How is the resource used

This is a term long assessment task that improves student skills around group work, communication, problem solving, and critical thinking.

Student evaluation

Yes, the group project was first introduced in 2018 and has been part of the BIOC2181 course since then. Changes were implemented to the project to involve a component to teach students about how to work effectively in a group in 2019, based on student feedback from 2018. Up to date close to 650 students have partaken in the project. From 2017 to 2020 (when the course went fully online), there has been an annual increase in students reporting that they felt part of the learning community. The program appears to have helped students form better connections with their peers from the beginning, which led to better engagement in the course overall. The majority (88%) of students agreed or strongly agreed that through the group activity they learned invaluable skills such as strategies to meet deadlines, problem solving through open discussions, understanding some aspects of scientific research, having the flexibility to be creative, improving presentation skills, seeing the real-life applications of biochemistry, sharing the workload, using feedback to improve work, and learning through teaching.

Authors

Nirmani Wijenayake – b.wijenayakeg@unsw.edu.au

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