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The impact of social motivation on cooperative learning and assessment preferences

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posted on 2024-07-13, 03:38 authored by Christopher Selvarajah, John Chelliah, Denny MeyerDenny Meyer, Edwina Pio, Pacapol Anurit
This study explores the assessment preferences of 453 postgraduate business students in New Zealand, Australia, and Thailand using a survey linking motivational and educational preferences. This study compares the needs of Western students (Australian and New Zealand), Asian (Thai) and international students (predominantly Chinese and Indian students) in Australia and New Zealand (ANZAC). One major finding is that students from these three countries who are socially motivated prefer 'cooperative learning'. Further, the study specifically shows that students from Thailand are more socially motivated than students from Australia and New Zealand (ANZAC) while International ANZAC students have the greatest desire for cooperative learning. It also shows that group assessment poses quite significant challenges for local ANZAC students and therefore, remedial intervention from universities is essential if group assessments are to remain relevant and useful in achieving meaningful teaching and learning outcomes.

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ISSN

1833-3672

Journal title

Journal of Management and Organization

Volume

16

Issue

1

Pagination

13 pp

Publisher

eContent Management

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2010 eContent Management. The published version is reproduced for non-commercial use only in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

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