[For Staff Only]
Forming effective groups with Moodle’s Team Builder tool
[僅供職員]
如何使用 Moodle外掛—Team Builder進行有效分組教學
Ref. No :
CFUN-CBR9X6
Posted by :
ChrisFulton/UMAC
Department :
CTLE
Posted Date :
18/02/2022
Category :
Bulletin
公告
Forming effective groups with Moodle’s Team Builder tool
By Christopher Fulton, Centre for Teaching and Learning Enhancement
Team-based learning combined with active learning techniques can help students internalize, understand, and remember material (
Eliason, 2022
)
and enhance communication skills (
Jackson & Riebe, 2014
), and various ways of forming groups can facilitate student activities, e.g., random, self-selected, mixed, or instructor-generated groups (
Baepler, 2016
).
This post describes how a Team Builder tool in Moodle can facilitate the formation of instructor-generated groups. While research on the composition and selection of groups is not conclusive, several approaches to instructor-generated groups are outlined below.
Effective instructor-generated groups can be formed based on:
a topic that a group of students would like to study,
a time that members are available to meet outside of class,
a role in the group, e.g., leader, reflector, encourager, questioner, etc. (
Center for Teaching and Learning
),
fostering variety within groups, e.g., leadership skills, language ability, etc.
The Team Builder activity in Moodle facilitates the creation of groups in Moodle based on survey responses from students.
Process
Guide
1.
In Moodle, turn editing, select
Add an activity
, then click on
Team Builder
.
2.
Give the activity a name, e.g., Assignment for group project 1.
Set
opening
and
closing
dates. Note that you
cannot
edit your questions after the survey opens.
3.
Add questions by filling in the blanks, then click on
Add a new question
.
4.
Students answer the survey questions in UMMoodle.
5.
Teacher
builds
teams using Team Builder activity after the survey’s end date.
Choose the
number of teams
you want to create.
Assign students to teams
based on criteria
, i.e., responses to questions.
Click
build teams
to create teams.
Review by clicking on names to see how each student responded.
Reset
if the composition of the teams is not right.
Or, assign students to teams
manually, by dragging names
into teams.
Students who did not respond can be allocated to a team.
Only when you are satisfied with the composition of the teams, then click
create groups
.
The members of the groups will only appear under
Participants
and can be revised on the page Groups.
6.
Students will not know to which group they have been assigned. So, one way for team members to meet one another is by creating a forum with groups enabled so that students can introduce themselves to their group members. In the settings for an activity, set the group mode to visible or separate groups, and select a grouping.
Video: Team Builder Demo
Activities that work with
groups
/ groupings on Moodle
Forums
, e.g., general forum (allows students to introduce themselves, instructor can track participation, etc.)
Assignments
(group submission, allows teacher to assess with a rubric and give feedback)
Peerwork Activity
(used to assess individuals’ contribution)
Workshop
(used for giving detailed peer feedback and peer assessment)
Group choice
Other activities suitable for groups
Resources
Baepler. (2016).
A guide to teaching in the active learning classroom : history, research, and practice
(First edition.). Stylus Publishing. (Ch. 6;
Ebook Central
)
Brame, C.J. & Biel, R. (2015).
Setting up and facilitating group work:
Using cooperative learning groups effectively
. Vanderbilt University Center for Teaching.
http://cft.vanderbilt.edu/guides-sub-pages/setting-up-and-facilitating-group-work-using-cooperative-learning-groups-effectively/
.
Center for Teaching and Learning, Washington University in St. Louis. (2022)
Using Roles in Group Work
.
https://ctl.wustl.edu/resources/using-roles-in-group-work/
Centre for Teaching Excellence, University of Waterloo. (2022).
Group Roles: Maximizing Group Performance.
https://uwaterloo.ca/centre-for-teaching-excellence/teaching-resources/teaching-tips/developing-assignments/group-work/group-roles-maximizing-group-performance
Eliason, S., (2022, February 8).
Active Learning Ideas
, Center for Teaching & Learning at Brigham Young University.
https://ctl-staging.byu.edu/tip/active-learning-ideas
Jackson, Sibson, R., & Riebe, L. (2014). Undergraduate perceptions of the development of team-working skills.
Education & Training (London)
,
56
(1), 7–20.
https://doi.org/10.1108/ET-01-2013-0002
UNSW Teaching. (2022). Create Moodle Groups and Groupings using Team Builder.
https://www.teaching.unsw.edu.au/moodle-team-builder-activity