#  Designing Project Teams that Work 

 



##  Designing Project Teams that Work 

Teams are most productive and conducive to learning when students with complementary skills, knowledge, and dispositions work together. That said, students generally don’t enter classrooms already sorted in these diverse ways. Often they group together based on achievement and engagement or based on background characteristics. In this video, Eric Mazur and his teaching team explain how and why they intentionally design heterogeneous teams. By using pre-class surveys and student demographic data, they find ways to assign students to teams in ways that play to each member’s strengths and afford everyone the chance to learn.

*Profiled:* [*Eric Mazur*](https://prod-instructionalmoves.drupalsites.harvard.edu/eric-mazur)*, Balkanski Professor of Physics and Applied Physics, teaches "Physics as a Foundation for Science and Engineering" to 60 students at Harvard College.*



 

 

 

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 Classroom Considerations Relevant Research Related Resources 

## Classroom Considerations

 

 

- Find ways to collect data about students even before they step foot in your classes. For example, quiz students during enrollment to find out about their prior coursework experiences, current major/minor, self-efficacy in your discipline, future plans, and group work preferences.
- While heterogeneous teams are optimal, it is also important that students feel connected to one another. As such, when designing teams, make sure that you’re attentive to the social dynamics within your room and you consider issues of functionality.
- Foster a safe and welcoming learning environment. Stress is not conducive to deep and meaningful learning so make sure that there are simple and straightforward processes for conflict management and resolution.



 



 

 

 

## Relevant Research

 

 

 Effective teams are dependent on the resources available to the group, among other factors. Group heterogeneity can be one way to increase the group’s resources ([Michaelsen, Jones, &amp; Watson, 1993](https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/j.2334-4822.1993.tb00241.x)).



 



 

 

 

## Related Resources

 

 

- HGSE's Teaching and Learning Lab has created a[ Team Launch document ](https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kv9UsyyylqMywBYs8DAsgT2Q2iXXrIjJ/view)to help with that phase of team-based learning
- The University of New South Wales list helpful [tips for helping students reflect about the effectiveness of their team](https://teaching.unsw.edu.au/helping-students-reflect-group-work)



 



 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 See also:- [ Mazur, Eric ](/instructors/mazur-eric)
- [ Teaching Through Problems ](/modules/teaching-through-problems)
- [ Team-Based Learning ](/sub-modules/team-based-learning)
- [ Harvard College ](/school/harvard-college)