Aizle wrote:
Correct, and some of the things you bring up are IMHO the exact point of the group projects. As I'm sure you know, there are times where you have a group of "equals" that have to work together for some goal. Natural leaders will rise and attempt to provide direction to the group and they will have to figure out how to work together to be successful. So from that perspective, a crappy grade because the group as a whole isn't able to work well together is appropriate. Even if one individual could do the "work" solo and not need assistance from the others.
In any situation where I have had this happen, there has either been a designated person in charge
or it has been an instructional setting. The only instructional setting other than regular school where this happened, performance by everyone was pretty much a given due to the fact that they had to put in significant effort to be there in the first place, and failure at the course of instruction was essentially not an option.
Any organization that makes people do a group project
without designating a person who is in charge is incompetant, unless it's being done for instructional purposes. Even then, there really should be someone in charge unless the primary objective is to teach group dynamics. Part of group dynamics, however, is learning how to be in charge, or deal with it when you aren't. Teaching people how to deal with a group that's been organized by an incompetant higher headquarters is really not that productive a use of time.
Finally a good teacher will also be able to determine who did and didn't contribute. As you mentioned about managers and raid leaders, that teachers ability or inability to do that is their own failing. And the students ability to cope with that is also another valuable life skill as well. I'm sure everyone here has had a crappy or ineffectual boss at one point or another.[/quote]
Except that the teacher or manager is not the raid leader in this situation; the group's designated leader would be. A group without one is about as effective as a guild trying to raid by democracy.
Moreover, dealing with a crappy or ineffectual boss is not the same skill as dealing with a lazy or incompetant partner.
A good teacher may be able to determine who did what, but as a practical matter they won't differentiate in gterms of grades in order to avoid irate phone calls from parents.
Quote:
Not all of one's school experience is just learning the specific material.
That's the problem. Certain specific school settings may be appropriate for such lessons, but most of them are not. Science class, for example, is not about group dynamics.