Organizational leadership and effective team problem solving strategies in engineering design projects: Analysis of student perceptions

Abstract

As engineering educators, we seek to promote types of effective and satisfactory team experiences that will be required in professional practice. This project expands findings from a previous case study examining the perceptions of individual team members working within teams to determine each team's processes of communication, problem solving, and leadership strategies used in Capstone Design projects. Our objectives in this study are to identify and categorize this perceptual data at both individual and team levels in order to identify any consistent factors or characteristics that may contribute to each group member's perception of a shared experience. Findings from a previous case study involving one team of Capstone Design students consistently indicated links between each team member's perception of shared team experiences and the team's overall levels of effectiveness. Based on these findings, it seems reasonable to conclude that analysis of perceptual data from a larger number of team members would yield increased levels of understanding of these interactions. For these reasons, this expanded study shared research questions similar to the original case study: • How do individual members of Capstone Design Teams perceive and describe types/forms of team communication and collaboration? • How do team members support their own perceptions? • Does a relationship exist between team members' perceptions of shared group experiences and the ability to transfer "lessons learned" from the design project to future leadership skills? The results of this study further reinforced the findings of the previous case study. The success of an engineering capstone design project is influenced to a large degree by the perceptual alignment of the individual members of the team. Students' perceptions regarding the level of communication and work distribution in a group are integral to group alignment and agreement. Instructors should understand these facts and take steps to both measure and influence student perceptions to promote group alignment. Additionally, groups that have a balanced attribution between external and internal factors and a balanced level of leadership have greater perceptual alignment as well. © American Society for Engineering Education, 2009.

Publication Title

ASEE Annual Conference and Exposition, Conference Proceedings

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