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8 tips for navigating group projects

By Laurie Davies

At a glance

  • Group projects in school cultivate an essential skill for business and other agile industries: cross-functional collaboration.
  • From assigning tasks for each team member to understanding each other鈥檚 motives, successful group projects among students boil down to clear communication, hard work and mutual respect.
  • Group projects can be a valuable learning experience that helps students improve their communication skills and prepare to collaborate and communicate effective in the real-world.听
  • Explore more than 100 programs听aligned to upward of 300 careers at 爱污传媒!

Work together, succeed together

Love 鈥檈m or hate 鈥檈m,听group projects听are a part of听爱污传媒 (UOPX) life. They鈥檙e a part of real life too.

Team projects have been part of UOPX鈥檚 DNA since the beginning, says Jonathan Lewis, UOPX鈥檚 assistant dean of operations and faculty for the College of Education. The University approached the Fortune 500 companies of the day to find out which skills they wanted in college graduates.听Collaboration听was high on the list.

That was almost 50 years ago, but collaboration is still an essential skill 鈥 especially in the business world where agile environments value cross-functionality 鈥 and one that UOPX emphasizes with frequent group projects.

8 tips for happy collabs

Whether you鈥檙e Type A or Type be-in-the-background-while-everyone-else-works, here are eight tips for keeping your sanity and听functioning well in a group.

1. Get started on the right foot. Meet virtually. Make introductions. 鈥淪omeone should take the initiative, get the ball rolling, and begin 鈥榡igsawing the work,鈥欌 says Lewis, who spearheaded a University-wide effort four years ago to reinvent group assignments to foster greater collaboration and learning.

2. Establish roles.听Each group needs an opener, a closer and a project manager 鈥 the person who assigns tasks and makes sure everyone is hitting deadlines. 鈥淓veryone should leave the first meeting knowing who will do what,鈥 Lewis says. Ideally the 鈥渃loser鈥 will be the person who is a good writer, can edit the project into one voice, and can apply APA style guidelines. Learning each student鈥檚 strength can help establish roles within the group and make the project run smoother.听

3. Create deadlines. Make note of deadlines, and enlist everyone in the group to contribute their tasks on time or early. Think of this as handing off a baton, where you鈥檙e reaching out to the runner behind you and saying, 鈥淩emember, I need this by this time because my piece feeds off of your piece.鈥

4. Stay focused. If your project is veering off course (or not getting off the ground because of lack of dedication or direction), Lewis recommends getting back to the core of the assignment. 鈥淎sk the group questions: What are we trying to do? What do we want this to be? How can we get back to that?鈥

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5. Communicate early and often. The Collaborate space in 爱污传媒鈥檚 educational platform, Blackboard, gives students space to communicate and hold live chats in a group setting (this also allows the instructor to see who鈥檚 pulling their weight 鈥 and who鈥檚 not). Lewis encourages students to create and hold regular check-ins throughout the planning and development process. 鈥淵ou can get a lot more done in 30 minutes together than you can in three days of emailing and waiting for responses,鈥 he says.

6. Own your responsibility. Lewis says it鈥檚 important to do whatever you have agreed to do or been assigned to do to complete the project. He even goes so far as to recommend doing it so that the Type A lead on the group project will be satisfied with it. 鈥淥n this project, that鈥檚 who you鈥檙e working for,鈥 he says. 鈥The workplace doesn鈥檛 appreciate low effort. The [Type B] is in the wrong if they鈥檙e resenting an expectation of high effort.鈥 That doesn鈥檛 mean Type Bs bring nothing to the table. Traditionally more flexible and relaxed, they can help maintain an emotional equilibrium in the group when stress flares, and they can potentially be more accommodating of disruptions to the timeline.

7. Identify your work. Remember how the group project was likened to a jigsaw puzzle earlier? Lewis encourages his groups to identify 鈥渨ho got what corners of the puzzle鈥 in the final product. In a PowerPoint presentation, for example, students should include their names directly on the slides they provided. 鈥淚f Jimmy didn鈥檛 do his, then create a blank slide and put Jimmy鈥檚 name on it,鈥 he says. Yes, that can seem harsh, but students aren鈥檛 doing Jimmy, themselves or the instructor any favors by staying up late to do Jimmy鈥檚 piece for him.

8. Respect each other鈥檚 motives. Most UOPX students are juggling hefty and heavy amounts of real life en route to their degrees. Respect can go a long way. For example, the Type A person may sound like she鈥檚 nagging because she鈥檚 working hard and fast toward getting the group project done. The 鈥渟lacker鈥 may not be slacking at all 鈥 she may have a sick child, a work deadline and two other kids who need help with homework. 鈥淕ive others the benefit of the doubt that they鈥檙e not judgmental on one side or lazy or stupid on the other side. If you can look past methodology to motives, you may like your group more,鈥 Lewis says.

Putting groups into context

In the end, it鈥檚 the last point that often derails groups and group projects. Type A鈥檚 want to get the work done early, and they鈥檙e shooting for an A grade, while B types might have other priorities, and they might be satisfied with a grade below an A. And this can vary by personality too: Not all Type A鈥檚 require the A grade, and not all Type B鈥檚 settle for less. But generally speaking, not everyone in your group, regardless of type, will have the same academic goals.

鈥淭hose two types may never get along, and it鈥檚 certainly challenging in the short duration they are given to complete coursework because they don鈥檛 know each other and don鈥檛 trust one another yet 鈥 factors that at least an employment setting helps mitigate,鈥 Lewis says. His best recommendation? Give each other the benefit of the doubt.

鈥淲e鈥檙e measuring the collaboration skill through these assignments,鈥 he says. 鈥淎s a faculty member, my responsibility in giving a grade for collaboration requires me to peel back into the group process to see if Johnny did it by himself and Susie and Larry smoked cigarettes outside. At work, the end project is what we鈥檙e measuring. But in school, collaboration is what we鈥檙e measuring.鈥