“You decide ‘cause you’re the Chair” Using discursive psychology to show how students ‘do’ being a group member in PBL Gillian Hendry, Dr Sally Wiggins, Dr Tony Anderson PBL Summer Workshop, University of Leicester, 7-9 July 2014 @StrathUni_Gill @drsallywiggins [email protected]
“You decide ‘cause you’re the Chair” Using discursive psychology to show how students ‘do’ being a group member in PBL Gillian Hendry, Dr Sally Wiggins, Dr Tony Anderson PBL Summer Workshop, University of Leicester, 7-9 July 2014. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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“You decide ‘cause you’re the Chair”
Using discursive psychology to show how students ‘do’ being a group member in PBL
Gillian Hendry, Dr Sally Wiggins, Dr Tony Anderson
PBL Summer Workshop, University of Leicester, 7-9 July 2014
- Existing research has highlighted the importance of focusing on group interaction between students in PBL sessions (e.g. Clouston, 2007; Holen, 2000; Visschers-Pleijers et al., 2004)
- The effectiveness of PBL can often rest of the quality of such interactions, and understanding what’s going on in ‘real time’ is crucial
- While students might report that they ‘worked well as a team’, for example, observations of actual PBL groups working together do not necessarily for with student and staff perceptions (Tipping et al., 1995)
RationaleRecent research has begun to explore the principles of ‘successful’ learning and, conversely, to identify areas of ‘poor interaction’ in PBL groups (Azer, 2009)
While such concepts are helpful in theory, in practice the distinction between ‘poor’ and ‘successful’ group interactions is less clearly defined.
A fine-grained approach to understanding interaction is required if we are to identify, in a practical and applicable way, the strategies through which effective learning can take place (Gukas et al., 2010)
Total of 85 hours of footage collected (14 from Leicester, 71 from Strathclyde)
Discursive research: although guided by a research question, no in-depth literature review needed before data collection. Data informs research; we don’t go in with any presumptions about what data will show!
Discursive psychology is a branch of discourse analysis that focuses on re-understanding psychological themes
The ‘opposite’ of cognitive psychology (which assumes we each live with a set of underlying mental processes), and that what we say is a ‘window’ to our internal thoughts
DP argues that who we are and what we say is a direct result of our interaction with the world. Can you be shy all by yourself?
Three Interdisciplinary Science students are working on a problem which requires them to produce a podcast. They are currently discussing how long it should be and what should be included.
Five (although only three can be seen) Psychology students are deciding which of two papers they should start with. The girl in the centre (Kate) is the Chair.
Decision making doesn’t usually happen this quickly in groups – there’s often a lot of uhming and ahhing – but Kate isn’t Kate in this context; she’s the chair and therefore has the right to make the decision without any scrutiny from anyone else
A different three (although only one a half can be seen!) Interdisciplinary Science students are also working on their podcast. The female member of the group has a question for her peers regarding how to word a section of her talk.
A different three (although only one a half can be seen!) Interdisciplinary Science students are also working on their podcast. The female member of the group has a question for her peers regarding how to word a section of her talk.
Neither colleague gives her a definitive answer, but rather make her think and thus answer her own question. This is excellent group work collaboration!
Thank you for listeningReferencesAzer, S.A. (2009). Interactions between students and tutor in problem-based learning: the significance of deep learning. The Kaohsiung Journal of Medical Sciences, 25 (5), 240-249.Clouston, T. (2007) Exploring methods of analysing talking in problem-based learning tutorials. Journal of Further and Higher Education, 31 (2), 183-193.Gukas, I., Leinster, S. & Walker, R. (2010) Verbal and nonverbal indices of learning during PBL among first year medical students and the threshold for tutor intervention. Medical Teacher, 32, e5-e11.Holen, A. (2000). The PBL group: self-reflections and feedback for improved learning and growth. Medical Teacher, 22 (5), 485-488.Tipping, J., Freeman, R.F. & Rachlis, A.R. (1995). Using faculty and student perceptions of droup-dynamics to develop recommendations for PBL training. Academic Medicine, 70 (11), 1050-1052. Visschers-Pleijers, A.J., Dolmans, D.H., Wolfhagen, I.H. & Van Der Vleuten, C.P. (2004). Exploration of a method to analyze group interactions in problem-based learning. Medical Teacher, 26 (5), 471-478.