A Group Work Model in Education
I
have better things to do with my life than read school textbooks to analyse
them for the quality of Independent Learning so I have not read many. However,
there is one author that I have come across, Chuck Sandy, who stands head and
shoulders above the rest. His use of the Independent Learning model is
exemplary and to the letter.
Other
school textbooks, which have been written by internationally acknowledged
educationalists in their own subject, too often slip and get distracted from
the basics. It shows the level of discipline that is required in Independent
Learning. The writers start thinking about what is interesting to the reader
and clever ways to put things and suddenly they have deviated. They have got
the basics wrong....
Of
course, we all know medical examples of those with experience and especially
name and reputation who think that they know better than the basics and can do
what the hell they feel like....
I
have read Chuck Sandy textbooks for the pleasure of the educational experience
and seeing an educational genius at work. He and his co-authors do not try to
prove their genius by dumbing down for the sake of popularity. They get the
basics absolutely right, dotting the ‘I’s and crossing every ‘t’. Their genius
is to culturally add to this model rather than distort it and teach the
cultural tools to really make the model work.
And
it was in a Chuck Sandy book, Passages 1, that I found an ideal model for group
work in the classroom. This impossible genius had used it as a comprehension
text with somebody enthusiastically proclaiming how it had changed their life
and recommending it to all.
Now
that is what I call educational genius!
Corporate
Team Building
I
had been taught corporate team building by some very expensive experts. It was
focused on boardroom decision making and projects using a multidisciplinary
team as applied to medical and healthcare. It was not for the classroom or
students who are learners rather than experts representing the various points
of view and conflicting interests of departments but it was still an
educational experience for all. It was a means of creating a whole picture in
which all of the basics were taken into account and nothing forgotten. The educational
experience of corporate team work is to teach each expert the most important
basics of all of the other departments so that they can put their expert
knowledge into context.
The
short-term aim of corporate teambuilding is good, solid decision making that
takes everything into account. The medium-term aim is harmony because every
department understands why they cannot always have their own way. It creates a
team that is working together rather than trying to tear themselves apart.
However, the long-term aim is to create ‘T-shaped’ experts who are both
generalists in everything as well as being specialists in their own area.
I
learned this for medical purposes, mainly centred around the key worker role in
primary care, working in multidisciplinary teams and administering healthcare
as a business with varying priorities.
It
is the responsibility of each expert to educate the rest of the team about the
most basic concepts of their specialist subject as it relates to the issue at
hand. The rest of the team must be educated to grasp those fundamental concepts
so that they can apply them to the real world problem and solve that problem.
Education
by Formal Group Working
The
moment I saw this model of group working, I knew I had stuck educational gold.
In the corporate setting, the decision making process is the primary
consideration and education is an important but secondary part of the process.
It is the long term process and effect.
So
many elements of the corporate team working structure are appropriate in
education. The Kolb Experiential Learning Cycle
(http://clinicalarts.blogspot.mx/2013/12/independent-learning-in-meded.html) is
all about grasping basic concepts in real world language, Plain English that
can be applied to the real world.
Group
work is primarily a tool of Reflective Observation where the participants
deduce their own rules in their own words for the examples that they have been
given in Concrete Experience. This is a fundamental of Reflective Observation
before the students are introduced to the jargon of Abstract Conceptualisation.
Of
course, practicing the skill of communication in Plain English dramatically
improves communication with patients.
One
of the main responsibilities of the Co-ordinator (team leader) is to prevent
the experts from getting their own way by using incomprehensible language as a
weapon of intimidation. They cannot make the non-specialists in their area buy
them new toys by talking about the bench test speeds of the XYZ 472 chip as if
anybody will know what that means in real life. They must explain how it will
help productivity in real life, the cost of software to take advantage of the
new computers and whether the secretaries are going to be confused by changing
programs and need retraining.
It
is the responsibility of the Coordinator to ensure that every member of the
team understands what is being said and its real world implications so that
they can vote on the issue in an informed manner. They can participate.
In
education, this type of group becomes a self-educating process. Those that
grasp the concepts are encouraged to explain them to those that did not grasp
them. The student becomes the teacher.
The
concept of the student teacher is acknowledged as highly effective in the
modern educational world. Students often make more adequate teachers than the
teachers themselves because they can easier relate to their peer groups and
explain things in concepts that belong to their lives. It is enhanced
individualised, small group teaching that the teacher cannot compare with.
This
is cascading knowledge and understanding. The teacher only has to achieve the
understanding of one person in the group. They spend the time explaining it in
different ways until all of the group understands the concepts. The Coordinator
is responsible for ensuring that all group members understand the concepts.
This
is why bigger classes with multiple groups are preferred by the best
international modern educationalists. Their humility is the unimportance of the
teacher in the process of education. The best education happens in the group
work. Counter-intuitively, small classes with more teacher attention are
counterproductive to the learning process.
Mixed
ability classes are also preferred. The quicker, more capable peers grasp the
concepts and explain them better to their less astute peers than a teacher who
was usually gifted at their favourite subject and succeeded in a traditionally
dependent, theoretical teaching environment.
Traditionally,
the failure to learn has been caused by a communication breakdown between the
older, more academic teacher and those that do not believe that they are
capable of academic competence. This further destroys their confidence in
academic work. Cans come in cans, as educationalists say. Academic success
breeds more confidence and success. As the lower students succeed more in
understanding the subject, they gain confidence and ability.
And
it is the role of the Coordinator to ensure that they do not drop out.
The
more gifted students also benefit. They are known to clarify their theoretical
knowledge as they teach it in the groups to the lower performing students.
It
is a common experience that you only really think through and grasp a subject
once you have tried to teach it to others. It brings a deeper knowledge and
understanding that you did not have as a student. It brings true mastery of
that knowledge in place of the superficial.
The
participants are there to learn from each other and the experience. That is
Independent Learning. Anything that comes from their peers comes from their
equals proving what is possible. It does not come from the teacher as expected
from somebody who is senior to them. Anybody is capable of it.
They
are there to think together. They are learning the skills of making decisions
in complex situations where many different factors must be taken into account.
This
is a formalised, external representation of the everyday complexities of the
best clinical thought processes. It treats the patients as individual, complex
human beings with psychosocial influences as well as complex organic beings
with multiple interacting organs. A balance must be reached. Nothing must be
left to chance. The best treatment plans are multidisciplinary.
As
an external representation of this gold standard clinical thought process, it
can be observed, analysed and fed back upon. Clinical thought processes can be
improved both by experience and evaluation.
Time
Limiting Democracy
It
is also the Co-ordinator’s responsibility to keep the group focused on the
central points so that they cover everything that is important in the time
allowed. It is like real life where time is the most precious of all resources.
They cannot be distracted into going off at a tangent considering the small
point details ad nauseam while neglecting important matters.
Everybody
must participate. Nobody should be allowed to dominate the limited time of the
group. Mutual respect means allowing others to have their turn too. Minorities
of one get their chance to express their views and convince the group but they
get no more than their turn before the vote takes place. From then, they must
agree with the majority view when a consensus is not possible.
And
they soon learn from experience to use their equal share of the time wisely
rather than interrupting every discussion. They learn to be concise rather than
verbose with their opportunity.
Sorry!
You have had your share of time already. Now it is your turn to listen to
everybody else.
John.
You have not said much. What do you think?
Unstructured,
hierarchical groups based on the loudest mouths significantly damage the
confidence of those that start with little confidence. Formal and structured
groups bring such people out of their shells and improve their self-confidence.
They make the over-confident more respectful. They are learning to think of
others too.
As
the know-it-all, loud mouths are rotated to the role of the Coordinator, they
learn some respect for the responsibilities and difficulty of the job. They are
placed into this caring role and will be made accountable by their peers.
This
is a really profound learning experience.
The
Writer
Group
work is always working towards a formal presentation that is also time limited
to combat the culture of everybody saying whatever they want all at the same
time as happens in hierarchical, unstructured groups. The Coordinator should
stop this from happening and ensure democratic decisions of the majority or a
consensus. The second member of the group’s administrative team that Sandy
describes is a back up for this. Only one person in the team is going to write
the presentation down.
This
assures that the presentation of the opinions of the group is consistent rather
than everybody writing down whatever they feel like saying without discussion
or debate leading to a shared opinion.
Okay...
so what do you want me to write/type for the presentation?
The
Speaker
And
only one person from the team is going to give the presentation. They are also
going to have to field any questions from the audience about what the team
thinks about the topic.
It
is great for classroom structure. Structured group work kills the chaos.
Some
things have to be learned by experience. Negative experience soon teaches in
group work. My experience with teachers as participants is that it does not
matter how many times you warn the participants. They will not get the fact
that if they want their opinion to be expressed, they must express it to the
group and particularly the Writer and Speaker or the class will not here that
opinion.
As
Facilitator, you have to laugh. The results of the first times that the
participants work in this structured manner, they are seething. They seethe at
the face that they are not allowed to express themselves in the question and
answer session.
As
they take turns as the Speaker, they appreciate the other side of this. They
are standing up their exposed unless the group has fully discussed, debated and
decided on its opinions on the matter. The worst case scenario is that the
Speak did not have the basics explained to them by the rest of the group and is
supposed to be answering question on them in front of the class.
I
always get the Speaker to feed back to the group how they felt standing up in
front of the class under such vulnerable circumstances. As the Speak role
rotates around the group, they quickly learn to fully discuss the topic and
educate one another.
It
is matter of learning a new culture. It takes time but surprisingly little of
it. Massive improvements in group work happen after only a single session and
those improvements are dramatic in the third and fourth exercises.
The
Final Outcome
This
structure of three named and defined roles within the team gives three controls
over the group work process. There are three key members of the team that must
understand the subject profoundly. It is the responsibility of the rest of the
team members to ensure that this happens. It is the theoretical responsibility
of the Coordinator to make this happen. It is the practical responsibility of
the Writer and Speaker to make sure that they know what the team thinks about
every imaginable part of the theme that they have been asked to deal with. If
they do not achieve that, painful, stressful disaster ensues.
The
most practical team size is seven to eight. That means four or five team
members are responsible for explaining all that they know to three others with
varying abilities until they understand. This ratio almost guarantees that
everybody will understand. It guarantees that knowledge and understanding are
presented at a level where everybody can understand.
The
Three Administrators
The
role of the three administrators of the team, The Coordinator, Writer and
Speaker, is to structure the team and its time management for both the group
work and the presentation. They ensure that utopian, informed democracy occurs
where everybody has an informed point of view and all opinions are heard and
respected. Everybody participates and understands the questions involved. They
have all been educated on the various points of views by experts with different
experience and disciplines. They can make a good decision bearing in mind the
greatest context available so that nothing basic is forgotten.
And
that is all that the Coordinator, Writer and Speaker do during the formal, flat
structured teamwork process. They organise the team. They do not express their
own opinions.
The
three administrators are already too powerful. No Coordinator will be perfectly
fair and objective in their decisions about who talks and when to vote. That is
their influence and power. The Writer will always colour what they write for
the presentation with their personal opinion. The words of the Speaker are
equally coloured.
So
these three administrators are not allowed to contribute by expressing
themselves in the discussion. They are there to structure and to listen. They
do not get a vote either unless the vote is a tie.
If
only medical administrators that are supposed to bring the best of corporate practices
to the world of healthcare would follow these rules from the gold standards of
corporate psychology. Say nothing. Listen to the experts. Make sure that
everybody understands the complex issues from all direction and perspectives.
Get them to vote without being able to further influence the decision. Accept
their majority decision.
At
every level, the world would be a much better place for learning the culture of
formal, flat-structured teamwork ;)
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