Team-based instructional change in undergraduate STEM: characterizing effective faculty collaboration

Abstract Background Team-based instructional change is a promising model for improving undergraduate STEM instruction. Teams are more likely to produce sustainable, innovative, and high-quality outcomes than individuals working alone. However, teams also tend to involve higher risks of failure and c...

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Main Authors: Diana Sachmpazidi, Alice Olmstead, Amreen Nasim Thompson, Charles Henderson, Andrea Beach
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-04-01
Series:International Journal of STEM Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40594-021-00273-4
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spelling doaj-e87f78c4c5e041e8873ea96c39f5d7fc2021-04-04T11:44:23ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of STEM Education2196-78222021-04-018112310.1186/s40594-021-00273-4Team-based instructional change in undergraduate STEM: characterizing effective faculty collaborationDiana Sachmpazidi0Alice Olmstead1Amreen Nasim Thompson2Charles Henderson3Andrea Beach4Center for Research on Instructional Change in Postsecondary Education, Western Michigan UniversityCenter for Research on Instructional Change in Postsecondary Education, Western Michigan UniversityDepartment of Physics, Texas State UniversityCenter for Research on Instructional Change in Postsecondary Education, Western Michigan UniversityCenter for Research on Instructional Change in Postsecondary Education, Western Michigan UniversityAbstract Background Team-based instructional change is a promising model for improving undergraduate STEM instruction. Teams are more likely to produce sustainable, innovative, and high-quality outcomes than individuals working alone. However, teams also tend to involve higher risks of failure and can result in inefficient allocation of valuable resources. At this point, there is limited knowledge of how teams in the context of STEM higher education should work to achieve desirable outcomes. Results In this study, we collect semi-structured interview data from 23 team members from a total of 4 teams at 3 institutions across the USA. We analyze the results using a grounded theory approach and connect them to the existing literature. This study builds upon the first part of our work that developed a model of team inputs that lead to team outcomes. In this part, we identify the mechanisms by which input characteristics influence teamwork and outcomes. Team member data expand this initial model by identifying key aspects of team processes and emergent states. In this paper, we present five team processes: strategic leadership, egalitarian power dynamics, team member commitment, effective communication, and clear decision-making processes, that shape how teams work together, and three emergent states: shared vision, psychological safety, and team cohesion, that team members perceived as important aspects of how teams feel and think when working together. Conclusions This work furthers our understanding of how instructional change teams can be successful. However, due to the highly complex nature of teams, further investigation with more teams is required to test and enrich the emerging theory.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40594-021-00273-4Instructional changeTeamsGrounded theoryLeadershipFacultySTEM
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diana Sachmpazidi
Alice Olmstead
Amreen Nasim Thompson
Charles Henderson
Andrea Beach
spellingShingle Diana Sachmpazidi
Alice Olmstead
Amreen Nasim Thompson
Charles Henderson
Andrea Beach
Team-based instructional change in undergraduate STEM: characterizing effective faculty collaboration
International Journal of STEM Education
Instructional change
Teams
Grounded theory
Leadership
Faculty
STEM
author_facet Diana Sachmpazidi
Alice Olmstead
Amreen Nasim Thompson
Charles Henderson
Andrea Beach
author_sort Diana Sachmpazidi
title Team-based instructional change in undergraduate STEM: characterizing effective faculty collaboration
title_short Team-based instructional change in undergraduate STEM: characterizing effective faculty collaboration
title_full Team-based instructional change in undergraduate STEM: characterizing effective faculty collaboration
title_fullStr Team-based instructional change in undergraduate STEM: characterizing effective faculty collaboration
title_full_unstemmed Team-based instructional change in undergraduate STEM: characterizing effective faculty collaboration
title_sort team-based instructional change in undergraduate stem: characterizing effective faculty collaboration
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of STEM Education
issn 2196-7822
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Background Team-based instructional change is a promising model for improving undergraduate STEM instruction. Teams are more likely to produce sustainable, innovative, and high-quality outcomes than individuals working alone. However, teams also tend to involve higher risks of failure and can result in inefficient allocation of valuable resources. At this point, there is limited knowledge of how teams in the context of STEM higher education should work to achieve desirable outcomes. Results In this study, we collect semi-structured interview data from 23 team members from a total of 4 teams at 3 institutions across the USA. We analyze the results using a grounded theory approach and connect them to the existing literature. This study builds upon the first part of our work that developed a model of team inputs that lead to team outcomes. In this part, we identify the mechanisms by which input characteristics influence teamwork and outcomes. Team member data expand this initial model by identifying key aspects of team processes and emergent states. In this paper, we present five team processes: strategic leadership, egalitarian power dynamics, team member commitment, effective communication, and clear decision-making processes, that shape how teams work together, and three emergent states: shared vision, psychological safety, and team cohesion, that team members perceived as important aspects of how teams feel and think when working together. Conclusions This work furthers our understanding of how instructional change teams can be successful. However, due to the highly complex nature of teams, further investigation with more teams is required to test and enrich the emerging theory.
topic Instructional change
Teams
Grounded theory
Leadership
Faculty
STEM
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40594-021-00273-4
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