|
Article Excerpt The purpose of this study was to probe the presence of slackers in college classroom work group, how students react to slackers, and the recommendations students would make for working with slackers in future group projects. Thirty-seven college students participated in one of five focus groups. Results indicate that (a) college students working in classroom work groups report working with slackers to be frustrating due to a lack of indifference on the slackers' part, (b) they deal with slackers by either ignoring them or including them in the group task, and (c) they would confront slackers in future work group endeavors. Future research should examine the influence of slackers on group members' feelings of grouphate.
**********
Most college students have favorable impressions about participating in group work in their courses (Payne, Monk-Turner, Smith, & Sumter, 2006). Students believe that they accomplish more by working in groups by working alone (Winter & Neal, 1995), they are able to contribute to their group projects in a meaningful way (Payne & Monk-Turner, 2006), and they enjoy learning about and gaining new perspectives from their group members (Duin, 1990). Moreover, group work provides students with immediate educational and social benefits as well as exposure to future career skills (Colbeck, Campbell, & Bjorklund, 2000; Monk-Turner & Payne, 2005).
Yet, as researchers (Duin, 1990; Livingstone & Lynch, 2000) have noted, one complaint students have about group work centers on personnel (i.e., group members) issues. One issue in particular is dealing with slackers, which is the label given to group members who fail to contribute equally or equitably to a group task. Considered to be deviant group members (Gillespie, Rosamond, & Thomas, 2006), the presence of slackers can be debilitating to a group. For example, students who have worked with slackers report that they are less likely to agree that group members learned from them, less likely to agree that they learned from group members, and less likely to look forward to future group work than students who have not worked with slackers (Payne & Monk-Turner, 2006).
Although students worry about having slackers in their groups, their most common solution is to avoid them (Colbeck et al., 2000). This solution is not altogether surprising, given that not only are many students conflict avoidant when it comes to work groups (Schullery & Gibson, 2001), but dealing with disputes and coordinating member tasks are two issues with which students in work groups face difficulty (Duin, 1990). To probe further the presence of slackers in small groups and how students react to slackers, the following two research questions are posed:
RQ1: What do group members find frustrating about working with slackers?
RQ2: How do group members deal with slackers?
Because a negative group experience impacts how students view...
|
|

More articles from College Student Journal
A comprehensive profile of health risk behaviors among students at a s..., June 01, 2009 Center for Continuing Education and Community Service at Kuwait Univer..., June 01, 2009 Searching for homogamy: an in-class exercise.(Report), June 01, 2009 Preservice Teacher Institute: developing a model learning community fo..., June 01, 2009 Attitudes of Jordanian college students towards learning English as a ..., June 01, 2009
Looking for additional articles?
Search our database of over 3 million articles.
Looking for more in-depth information on this industry?
Search our complete database of Industry & Market reports by text, subject, publication
name or publication date.
About Goliath
Whether you're looking for sales prospects, competitive information, company
analysis or best practices in managing your organization,
Goliath can help you meet your business needs.
Our extensive business information databases empower business
professionals with both the breadth and depth of credible,
authoritative information they need to support their business
goals. Whether it be strategic planning, sales prospecting,
company research or defining management best practices -
Goliath is your leading source for accurate information.
|
|