Online Collaboration: Collaborative Behavior Patterns and Factors Affecting Globally Distributed Team Performance

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2011

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Pergamon-elsevier Science Ltd

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Organizational Unit
Information Systems Engineering
Information Systems is an academic and professional discipline which follows data collection, utilization, storage, distribution, processing and management processes and modern technologies used in this field. Our department implements a pioneering and innovative education program that aims to raise the manpower, able to meet the changing and developing needs and expectations of our country and the world. Our courses on current information technologies especially stand out.

Journal Issue

Abstract

Studying the collaborative behavior of online learning teams and how this behavior is related to communication mode and task type is a complex process. Research about small group learning suggests that a higher percentage of social interactions occur in synchronous rather than asynchronous mode, and that students spend more time in task-oriented interaction in asynchronous discussions than in synchronous mode. This study analyzed the collaborative interaction patterns of global software development learning teams composed of students from Turkey, US, and Panama. Data collected from students' chat histories and forum discussions from three global software development projects were collected and compared. Both qualitative and quantitative analysis methods were used to determine the differences between a group's communication patterns in asynchronous versus synchronous communication mode. K-means clustering with the Ward method was used to investigate the patterns of behaviors in distributed teams. The results show that communication patterns are related to communication mode, the nature of the task, and the experience level of the leader. The paper also includes recommendations for building effective online collaborative teams and describes future research possibilities. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Description

Alpaslan, Ferda Nur/0000-0002-9806-1543

Keywords

Collaborative learning, Computer-supported collaborative learning, Distributed teams, Collaborative behavior, Global software development, K-means clustering

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

Citation

63

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Source

Volume

27

Issue

1

Start Page

490

End Page

503

Collections