Social regulation of learning in interdisciplinary groupwork

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Titel: Social regulation of learning in interdisciplinary groupwork
Autoren: O´Connell, Michael, 1982, Stöhr, Christian, 1977, Wallin, Patric, 1985, Negretti, Raffaella, 1971
Quelle: European Journal of Engineering Education. 49(4):683-699
Schlagwörter: collaborative learning, socially shared regulation of learning, project-based learning, Social Regulation or learning, co-regulation of learning, interdisciplinary groupwork
Beschreibung: Engineering education has seen a growing interest in how students regulate their learning as a group in interdisciplinary projects. This study adds to the current literature on social regulation of learning by conducting a comparative case study of three interdisciplinary group projects addressing real-world challenges. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were synthesised into narrative episodes representing key aspects of the groups’ regulative behaviours. We found indications of co- and socially shared regulation across all groups, with noteworthy differences in the project phases that led to varying student experiences. We discuss key factors that affected regulation along four themes we identified: (1) goal setting and planning, (2) implementation, monitoring, and evaluation, (3) the role of supervisors, and (4) the impact of disciplines. We offer insights for practitioners and provide a foundation for future research on social regulation in interdisciplinary group learning.
Dateibeschreibung: electronic
Zugangs-URL: https://research.chalmers.se/publication/539124
https://research.chalmers.se/publication/538716
https://research.chalmers.se/publication/539133
https://research.chalmers.se/publication/539133/file/539133_Fulltext.pdf
Datenbank: SwePub
Beschreibung
Abstract:Engineering education has seen a growing interest in how students regulate their learning as a group in interdisciplinary projects. This study adds to the current literature on social regulation of learning by conducting a comparative case study of three interdisciplinary group projects addressing real-world challenges. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were synthesised into narrative episodes representing key aspects of the groups’ regulative behaviours. We found indications of co- and socially shared regulation across all groups, with noteworthy differences in the project phases that led to varying student experiences. We discuss key factors that affected regulation along four themes we identified: (1) goal setting and planning, (2) implementation, monitoring, and evaluation, (3) the role of supervisors, and (4) the impact of disciplines. We offer insights for practitioners and provide a foundation for future research on social regulation in interdisciplinary group learning.
ISSN:03043797
14695898
DOI:10.1080/03043797.2023.2292258