SMARTER teamwork : system for management, assessment, research, training, education, and remediation for teamwork
conference contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00authored byMatthew Ohland, R Layton, M Loughry, H Pomeranz, D Woehr, E Salas
The rapid adoption of Team-Maker and the Comprehensive Assessment of Team Member Effectiveness (CATME), tools for team formation and peer evaluation, make it possible to extend their success to have a significant impact on the development of team skills in higher education. The web-based systems are used by over 700 faculty at over 200 institutionsinternationally.This paper and its accompanying poster will describe strategies for broadening the scope of those tools into a complete system for the management of teamwork in undergraduate education. The System for the Management, Assessment, Research, Training, Education, and Remediation of Teamwork (SMARTER Teamwork) has three specific goals: 1) to equip students to work in teams by providing them with training and feedback, 2) to equip faculty to manage student teams by providing them with information and tools to facilitate best practices, and 3) to equipresearchers to understand teams by broadening the system’s capabilities to collect additional types of data so that a wider range of research questions can be studied through a secure researcher interface. The three goals of the project support each other in hierarchical fashion: research informs faculty practice, faculty determine the students’ experience, which, if well managed based on research findings, equips students to work in teams. Our strategies for achieving these goals are based on a well-accepted training model that has five elements: information, demonstration, practice, feedback, and remediation.Different outcomes are expected for each group of people. For the students, both individual outcomes, such as student learning, and team outcomes, such as the development of shared mental models, are expected. For the faculty, individual outcomes such as faculty learning andfaculty satisfaction are expected. The outcomes for researchers will be community outcomes, that is, benefits for stakeholders outside the research team, such as generating new knowledge for teaming theory and disseminating best practices. Measuring these outcomes is the basis for the project’s evaluation plan.
History
Parent Title
Proceedings of the American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference and Exposition 2010.
Start Page
1190
End Page
1197
Number of Pages
8
Start Date
2010-01-01
ISBN-13
9781617820205
Location
Louisville, Kentucky
Publisher
American Society for Engineering Education
Place of Publication
Washington, DC.
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Open Access
No
External Author Affiliations
Conference; Georgia Southern University; Not affiliated to a Research Institute; Purdue University; Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology; SANS Institute; University of Central Florida; University of Tennessee;
Era Eligible
No
Name of Conference
American Society for Engineering Education. Conference