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Writing Tasks Suited to Group Work Fact and Fiction: Common Fears about Group Work My individual ideas will be lost... I could write it better myself... My grade will depend on what others do... Group work will take more time than if I did it myself... My group members aren't as smart as I am... I don't have time to meet out of class... Idea-Generating and Research Tasks
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Monitor the GroupOne way to help alleviate some of the problems that may result from group interactions is to encourage the group to somehow monitor itself. To facilitate this monitoring, each group member can keep a journal in which she or he comments on each group meeting. The journal can become the place to express frustration, to analyze the nature of communication taking place in the group, and so on. Or the group may choose to divide up monitoring tasks. One group member might be put in charge of keeping track of turn-taking (i.e., who speaks and when; do all members have an equal opportunity to speak; are some members always silent?). Another member might watch for nonverbal cues about how members are reacting to what is being said, or to an individual speaker. |
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