From: Team-Based Learning [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
On Behalf Of Gillette, Meghan T [HD FS]
Sent: Friday, February 17, 2017 9:38 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: inappropriate behavior between teammates
Hello,
I was just going to ask the same question as Jill. I would highly encourage considering moving the male, not the female. It is not the female who has a “problem” and should
be moved – it is the male who exhibited a problem behavior and should be moved. The victim should not have to reconstruct her “life” in the classroom; the “aggressor” should be made to adjust.
My two cents!
Meghan
Hi Laura,
I'm just curious why you removed the female and not the male who reached for the marker.
jill
Jill L. Atkinson, Ph.D.
Associate Professor and Chair of Undergraduate Studies
Dept. of Psychology, Queens University
Kingston, ON K7L 3S9
613-533-6018
Hello Laura - I think you did the right thing – I had this kind of situation years ago and didn’t deal with it quickly enough. (it was a case of 5 women and
1 man, who acted like he was the head of the harem) The students went to the sexual harassment people on campus and I was immediately under fire. We did replace him, but the whole experience created a poison that affected the entire class. Whenever there
is anything “sexual” involved, the rules about leaving teams together get changed in a hurry.
Gail Rice, EdD, EdS, RN, CHES
Professor, School of Allied Health Professions
Director, Faculty Development
Director, Graduate Assistant Program
Loma Linda University
Nichol Hall 1916
Loma Linda, California 92350
After using TBL in Intro Psych sections ranging from 80-140 students for the last 10 years, I’ve encountered a new situation that I wanted to share with the group. We finished our first major team activity in class on Wednesday. That evening,
I received the following message from one of my students:
Good Evening Dr. Madson,
I wanted to make you aware of an uncomfortable incident that happened to me during today's class. In my group I am the only girl, I am fine with that but today one of my group members made me feel very uncomfortable
and did something I see as very disrespectful. While working on our paper ads we were using some markers and I had one that I was using and I had placed it in between my legs because it kept rolling all over my little desk. Following that one of my group members
XXXXXXX turned around and tried reaching for it with out even announcing he needed the marker or addressing to me he wanted it. As his hand was reaching toward that area I stopped him and let him know that he needed to ask for it instead of trying to grab
from that area which he has no business trying to go near. He tried to apologize but the whole situation made me very uncomfortable and very angry. I let him know that what he did was disrespectful. I am explaining this to you because I no longer feel comfortable
working with him or being near him. If there is something we can do please let me know
Based on the advice of local colleagues and my academic dean, I’m going to move the author of the message to a different team. That said, I wonder whether anyone else in the TBL community has encountered a similar situation and how you
handled it (e.g., what did you tell the remaining teammates?). Has anyone published any guidelines for dealing with this sort of situations within a team? Also, I suspect that the student who engaged in the unwanted contact is on the high-functioning end
of the autism spectrum. If so, working in a team was already challenging for this student without throwing in this additional dynamic. I don’t want being respectful of one student’s needs to torpedo the team's or the other student’s chances of success.
All thoughts and suggestions are most welcome!
Laura Madson, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Department of Psychology
New Mexico State University
Las Cruces, NM 88003
[log in to unmask]
lauramadson.com
(575) 646-6207
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