How to Make Group Work Not Suck: Scaffolding the Collaborative Process through Agency and Self-Regulation

Credit: iStock.com/Nikada
Credit: iStock.com/Nikada
Employers love collaborators. Communities needs collaborators. Democracy requires collaboration. Students hate collaboration. And faculty feel . . . well . . . meh? We know that collaboration is powerful. We know that it both provides students with skills they need and deepens their learning by exposing them to viewpoints different from their own. But is it worth the hassle? There are the freeloaders, of course—the students that ride on the efforts of their peers. Then there are the controllers, those folks who assume their peers are going to freeload and so take over the projects, bossing people around and making everyone miserable. Between the two, every time we assign collaboration, we’re bound to have students showing up during office hours: “Someone in my group isn’t doing enough.” “So-and-so is doing too much.” “Everyone is either doing too much or not enough, and I’m starting to feel like a kid with divorced parents, stuck in the middle and loving it not so much.”

To continue reading, you must be a Teaching Professor Subscriber. Please log in or sign up for full access.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Related Articles

I have two loves: teaching and learning. Although I love them for different reasons, I’ve been passionate about...
A senior colleague mentioned to me recently that he had spent the early part of his career overcoming...
At the end of a course, students complete many things. They submit final papers, deliver presentations, and take...
There’s a lot of discussion in higher education about “AI literacy” and the need to teach it but...
Do a little recon when courses begin next semester. Is there an empty classroom nearby? That vacant space...
Think back to your first year as a college student. In September and October, you were bright-eyed and...
Online instructors often worry that strong teaching presence requires constant availability—rapid responses, frequent check-ins, and an always-on posture...

Create a free account, or log in.

Gain access to limited free articles, news alerts, and select newsletters

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Login here

Get unlimited access to The Teaching Professor

Stay informed. Subscribe Now.

WELCOME OFFER

$19.00 $14.00/month

for your first 6 months. Use coupon code TP6MO.

$19.00 thereafter. Cancel anytime.

Enjoy unlimited access to all of The Teaching Professor

You only have  free article views remaining.

WELCOME OFFER

$19.00 $14.00/month

for your first 6 months. Use coupon code TP6MO.

$19.00 a month thereafter. Cancel anytime.