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Gopinath, C.; Saleem, Farida – Journal of Education for Business, 2020
Team projects are a component of many business courses. The objective is to build team skills in addition to learning subject matter. However, instructors often pay less attention to team design and behavior and assume students already have or will learn team skills on their own. The authors examined the effect of providing structure to team work…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Group Behavior, Group Dynamics, Student Projects
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Boiangiu, Costin-Anton; Stanica, Iulia-Cristina – Education Sciences, 2019
Maybe you heard the line "managing programmers is like herding cats", and if you consider there is some truth behind this, then you should, perhaps, think how it is to teach people to perform this job. As we know from the research literature, there is no such thing as a consensus about the most suitable teaching method of a software…
Descriptors: Models, Teaching Methods, Computer Software, Programming
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Largent, David L. – ACM Transactions on Computing Education, 2016
To prepare graduates for today's work environment, they must be immersed in positive (and perhaps negative) small group experiences in their courses, which will in turn provide a basic understanding of how teams form and develop over time. In the fall of 2009, we started exploring how software development teams form and interact in a computer…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Cooperative Learning, Group Dynamics, Group Structure
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Grant-Vallone, E. J. – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2011
This research study examined student perceptions of group experiences in the classroom. The author used cooperative learning and team-based learning to focus on three characteristics that are critical for the success of groups: structure of activities, relationships of group members, and accountability of group members. Results indicated that…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Group Activities, Teamwork, College Instruction
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Gueldenzoph, Lisa E. – Business Communication Quarterly, 2007
This article discusses the use of teaching teams to encourage active learning in a business communication class. The author offers examples of short activities that can be used to help create an active learning environment. Some of these favorite activities include homework reviews, the value line, 3-2-1 processor, and muddiest point. In each of…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Active Learning, Teaching Methods, Writing (Composition)
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Chapman, Kenneth J.; Meuter, Matthew; Toy, Dan; Wright, Lauren – Journal of Management Education, 2006
In today's business world, the ability to work efficiently and effectively with others in a group is a mandatory skill. Many employers rank "ability to work with a group" as one of the most important attributes for business school graduates to possess. Therefore, it is important for instructors to understand the factors that influence group…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Group Dynamics, Group Experience, Business Administration Education