Abstract

This paper presents two studies that examine emergent leadership in children’s collaborative learning groups. Building on research that finds that leadership moves are distributed among group members during learning activities, we examined whether there were patterns in the distribution of moves, resulting in different types of emergent leaders in groups. Study one examines individual groups working with a teacher, on the same task either with paper or multi-touch tables. Study two examines groups of students in a multi-touch classroom. Results from study one indicated that the leadership was distributed among the students; the distributions aligned with classifications of intellectual leadership moves and organizational leadership moves for about half of the groups. There were no differences in emergent leadership between the multi-touch and paper conditions. These results were explored in more detail in a multi-touch classroom study, exploring emergent leadership in 22 groups of students across six classes. Again, leadership was distributed among group members, and specific roles of intellectual and organizational leader, taken on by two different students, could be identified in half of the groups. These results suggest that attention should be paid to how students are engaging in collaborative learning tasks to ensure all students participate in the intellectual as well as organizational demands of the task. Additionally, the pattern of the distribution of roles suggests that care should be taken to specify behaviors if the role of leader is assigned to collaborative groups.

Highlights

  • Georgia, Amy, Molly and Lucy1, four ten year old girls, stand around a multi-touch table, looking at the question “In which room is the statue hidden?” and 12 clues that contain number facts to determine the answer to the question (e.g., The room number is not even)

  • The distribution of leadership moves within each group is shown in Table 2, which shows the percentage of accepted leadership moves made by each group member

  • We explored emergent leadership in eight groups of students, each working with a teacher present

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Summary

Introduction

Amy, Molly and Lucy, four ten year old girls, stand around a multi-touch table, looking at the question “In which room is the statue hidden?” and 12 clues that contain number facts to determine the answer to the question (e.g., The room number is not even). The teacher directs them back to the clues, saying there is one they had missed, which they begin to look for: Amy: “The statue is in a room whose number is lower than fifty”, “The room number where it is hidden is a multiple of five”, “The room number where the statue is hidden is not even.” [reviewing 3 clues] Lucy: So it could even be thirty, thirty-five, forty or forty-five. It says that “the room number where the statue is hidden is not even” Molly: So it’s either thirty-five or forty-five [returning to the same conclusion as before] Lucy: “The statue is hidden in a room in the grand hotel” [reading a clue] Georgia: No, it’s got to be forty-five.

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