Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
352747 Contemporary Educational Psychology 2011 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Two studies (Study 1: n = 137; Study 2: n = 192) were conducted to investigate how upper-elementary students’ affect during small group instruction related to their social-behavioral engagement during group work. A circumplex model of affect consisting of valence (positive, negative) and activation (high, low) was used to examine the relation of affect to social loafing and quality of group interactions. Across both studies, negative affect (feeling tired or tense) was associated with higher rates of social loafing. Neutral to deactivated positive affect, such as feeling happy or calm, was positively related to positive group interactions, while deactivated negative affect (tired) was negatively associated with positive group interactions. Follow-up cross-lagged analyses to examine reciprocal relations suggested that positive group interactions altered affect on subsequent group tasks, but affect was not related to changes in positive group interactions. These quantitative findings were supplemented with a qualitative analysis of six small groups from Study 2. The qualitative analyses highlighted the reciprocal and cyclical relations between affect and social-behavioral engagement in small groups.

Research highlights► Negative affect (tense, tired) associated with social loafing. ► Positive affect (happy, calm) associated with positive group interactions. ► Negative affect (tired) negatively related to positive group interactions. ► Cross-lagged analyses suggested positive group interactions shaped affect. ► Cycles of affect and quality of group interaction observed during group work.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Applied Psychology
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