Title
Challenges in online collaboration: effects of scripting shared task perceptions.
Abstract
Difficulties with planning, such as negotiating task understandings and goals, can have a profound effect on regulation and task performance when students work collaboratively (Miller and Hadwin, Computers in Human Behaviour, 52, 573-588, 2015a). Despite planning being a common challenge, teams often fail to identify strategies for addressing those challenges successfully. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of team planning support in the form of awareness visualizations (quantified, nominal, and no visualization of individual planning perceptions summarized across group members) on the challenges students face during collaboration, and the ways they report regulating in the face of those challenges. Findings revealed differences across conditions. Individuals in the no visualization condition (a) rated planning as more problematic, and (b) were likely to encounter doing the task, checking progress, and group work challenges when they encounter planning challenges, (c) reported more time and planning main challenges compared to doing the task and group work challenges, and (d) reported that planning strategies (adopted as a team) were most effective for addressing planning challenges, followed by teamwork strategies which were less effective. In contrast, individuals belonging to groups who received one of the two visualizations (a) reported that both planning and teamwork strategies to be equally effective for addressing planning challenges, and (b) reported higher levels of success with their strategies than groups without a visualization support. Findings attest to the importance of supporting group planning with planning visualizations.
Year
DOI
Venue
2018
10.1007/s11412-018-9279-9
I. J. Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning
Keywords
Field
DocType
Computer-supported collaborative learning, Metacognition, Planning, Regulation, Collaborative learning, Scripting, Group awareness tools, Decision contingencies
Teamwork,Collaborative learning,Computer science,Knowledge management,Group work,Metacognition,Computer-mediated communication,Cooperative learning,Computer-supported collaborative learning,Negotiation
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
13
3
1556-1607
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
2
0.36
9
Authors
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Allyson Hadwin118713.43
Aishah Bakhtiar220.36
Mariel Miller3291.41