麻豆村

麻豆村

Collaboration & Teamwork

Why does this add value for students?

Image of 麻豆村 buggy racesCollaboration and teamwork are very important skills for our Carnegie Mellon students to develop in preparation for professional and personal endeavors before and after graduation. Although students are engaging in collaboration and teamwork across many contexts inside and outside the classroom, these activities are not always coordinated, leaving students with inconsistent access to training or explicit skill development and educators with limited evidence of student learning and data points to target systematic learning improvement. While students may develop their collaboration and teamwork skills just by engaging in these experiences, this inconsistency may result in lessons that are not correct, robust, or generalizable, thereby resulting in ineffective, inefficient, and stressful team interactions (Leonardi, Jackson, & Diwan, 2009). 

Learning Outcomes

      • Participate in constructive dialogue to support both the process and product of the collaboration
      • Shape teams and navigate collaborations in consideration of individual differences and interpersonal dynamics
      • Apply skills and processes to resolve and manage disagreements in collaborative settings
      • Participate constructively in planning, leading and improving meetings
      • Plan, organize, and deliver coordinated work targeted to a project goal

Catalog your course or program

Please help us to catalog the courses and other educational offerings where core competencies are explicitly taught or required.

Resources & Tools

Assessment: Social Shapes Test

A validated measure of social intelligence

Learn more

Online Module: CollaborativeU

Online OLI modules designed to teach team collaboration skills.

Learn more

Online Module: ConflictU

Online OLI modules designed to develop skills and strategies for managing the conflicts that arise in teams.

Learn more

Online Tool: FeedbackFruits Peer Review

A review tool enabling instructors to design guided peer feedback activities.

Learn more

Online Tool: FeedbackFruits Group Formation

A tool allowing instructors to create student teams using customizable criteria.

Learn more

Online Tool: FeedbackFruits Group Member Evaluation

An evaluation tool supporting  structured peer evaluation of individual contributions within group work.

Learn more

Online Module: MeetingU

Online OLI modules designed to develop skills and strategies for managing and participating in productive meetings.

Learn more

Rubric: Collaboration Rubric

Rubric designed to evaluate artifacts of collaborative student work.

Learn more

share icon Contribute a resource or tool

If you have developed or used a resource or tool for teaching a core competency, please consider sharing it with us.

Contact eberly-assist@andrew.cmu.edu for help with identifying, implementing, and/or measuring this core competency for your context.

References

Leonardi, P. M., Jackson, M. H., & Diwan, A. (2009). The enactment-externalization dialectic: Rationalization and the persistence of counterproductive technology design practices in student engineering. Academy of Management Journal, 52(2), 400-420.