Teamlearning versus lecture-based learning

Authors:

Evelien Opdecam
Patricia Everaert

Date:

Students in the team-oriented learning approach show a significant higher level of satisfaction and a more positive learning experience compared to classroom teaching.

Improving student satisfaction in a first-year undergraduate accounting course by team learning

Evelien Opdecam and Patricia Everaert (2012) Improving Student Satisfaction in a First-Year Undergraduate Accounting Course by Team Learning. Issues in Accounting Education: February 2012, Vol. 27, No. 1, pp. 53-82.
https://doi.org/10.2308/iace-10217

This paper discusses student satisfaction and course experiences of first year undergraduate students in an introductory financial accounting course where team learning was implemented during tutorials. Course experiences and satisfaction, as perceived by students in the team learning condition, were compared to those in a traditional lecture-based control condition.

A post-experimental questionnaire, with open and closed-ended questions, was administered. Students reported significantly higher levels of satisfaction in the team learning condition and a more positive course experience compared to students in the lecture-based condition. The increased time spent on accounting in the team learning condition resulted in increased learning, as evidenced by higher grades on the final exam in the team learning condition. An analysis of open-ended questions revealed that both learning conditions fit for particular students.

High pre-class preparation was considered a strength of the team learning condition, while the comprehensive explanation by the teacher was the most frequently mentioned advantage of the lecture-based condition. This paper further contributes to the practice of accounting education by illustrating a way to implement team learning in a large undergraduate accounting course

Download the paper here: https://doi.org/10.2308/iace-10217