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From:
"Kubitz, Karla" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Kubitz, Karla
Date:
Wed, 14 Dec 2011 14:49:57 +0000
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I've noticed the same thing.  I run downstairs to put the Scantrons through the machine during the team RATs or to my office for something I need during an Application Exercise and my teams are so involved/ invested in their 'work' that they don't seem to notice that I've left or returned.  Karla

-----Original Message-----
From: Team-Based Learning [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Bill Goffe
Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2011 7:21 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Research concept: Assessing team learning with remedial learners at a Japanese university

Ah -- very interesting. I wasn't aware of much of this background. At the end, you ask:

> So, the question becomes, does TBL allow teachers to scaffold students 
> and teams toward self-direction in learning or must the faculty keep 
> constant vigilance regardless of the context?

While I don't have data, I'd suggest a tentative "yes." Several weeks into the semester, when they've experienced TBL and have bought into it, I'll sometimes leave the classroom for a minute or two to get a sip of water or to get something I left in my office. On my return the room is still abuzz with activity and hardly a students even acknowledges my return as they're busy working with their team. I love how TBL sets up incentives for this to come about.

I don't know if this extends beyond my class, but I'd like to think so. It would be really interesting and indeed useful to know.

   - Bill


Brent said:

> Thanks for your thoughts on the Hawthorne Effect, Bill. Like it came 
> straight from one of my workshops.
> 
> I fully agree; and, as you point out, so does most of the research. My 
> point might not have been clear; I was not introducing the Hawthorne 
> effect to advocate for it, but to point out that constant faculty 
> oversight is like an application of the Hawthorne effect.
> 
> To avoid further confusion, I think it is important to differentiate 
> between the Hawthorne study conclusions and the Hawthorne effect. 
> Management gurus and practitioners still hold tight to the “happy 
> employees are productive employees” conclusion of the Hawthorne 
> studies. However, this conclusion is essentially “cow psychology”; as 
> in, “a happy cow produces more milk.” Last time I checked, most humans 
> are a bit more complex than cows.  Contrary to the conclusions of the 
> Hawthorne studies and the assertions of some organizational 
> psychologists, most research shows that performance precedes 
> satisfaction, not the other way around. in other words, employees who perform tend to be more satisfied on the job.
> 
> Rather than finding a connection between satisfaction and performance 
> as many assert, the Hawthorne studies showed that paying attention to 
> employees can result in temporary increases of productivity. MBWA 
> serves as an example of how a manager can use the Hawthorne effect to 
> elicit temporary increases in performance; “the boss is coming, look 
> busy.” Faculty oversight in TBL also serves as an example of how 
> teachers use constant oversight in attempt maintain performance levels in the classroom.
> 
> A problem with relying on attention events to motivate performance is 
> that employees performance becomes dependent on extrinsic motivational forces.
> This is why the Hawthorne Effect is the enemy of trainers; performance 
> will usually increase through an attention event, but it is difficult 
> to determine the degree to which performance increases can be 
> attributed to the training or to the attention. If training is not 
> reinforced or if it does not provide subjects with substantial new 
> tools for sustained performance improvements, performance will likely 
> drop in direct correlation to the performance that was motivated by the attention event. Homeostasis at work; it all balances out.
> However, this does not mean that there is anything wrong with the 
> extrinsic motivators; we just need to be aware of the psychological 
> forces at work, and make sure we are productively using the attention 
> events to foster development rather than dependence.
> 
> Regarding faculty oversight as an application of the Hawthorne effect, 
> we have to apply a certain degree of micromanagement when we are 
> working with students who have no experience in applying teamwork to 
> learning, and with students who lack the maturity for self-direction.
> 
> However, is there ever a point at which students can develop 
> sufficient capacity and intrinsic motivation to collaborate without faculty oversight?
> 
> In professional and adult development environments, managers and 
> teachers attempt to facilitate individuals toward independence and 
> teams toward interdependence by helping them gain skills and 
> motivation for perpetual development beyond the classroom. Fully 
> delegating responsibility and authority without any oversight is 
> usually a mistake; but, we might find that continuous attention events 
> can ultimately hinder development of intrinsic skills and motivation.
> 
> So, the question becomes, does TBL allow teachers to scaffold students 
> and teams toward self-direction in learning or must the faculty keep 
> constant vigilance regardless of the context?
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Brent

--
Bill Goffe
Department of Economics
SUNY Oswego, 416 Mahar Hall
Oswego, NY 13126
315-312-3444(v), 315-312-5444(f)
[log in to unmask]
http://cook.rfe.org

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