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The Impact of Undergraduate Mentorship on Student Satisfaction and Engagement, Teamwork Performance, and Team Dysfunction in a Software Engineering Group Project

Claudia Iacob, Shamal Faily

202024 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mentorship schemes in software engineering education usually involve professional software engineers guiding and advising teams of undergraduate students working collaboratively to develop a software system. With or without mentorship, teams run the risk of experiencing team dysfunction: a situation where lack of engagement, internal conflicts, and/or poor team management lead to different assessment outcomes for individual team members and overall frustration and dissatisfaction within the team. The paper describes a mentorship scheme devised as part of a 33 week software engineering group project course, where the mentors were undergraduate students who had recently completed the course successfully and possessed at least a year's experience as professional software engineers. We measure and discuss the impact the scheme had on: (1) student satisfaction and engagement, (2) team performance, and (3) team dysfunction.

Topics & Concepts

MentorshipTeamworkTeam software processMedical educationTeam effectivenessPsychologyScheme (mathematics)SoftwareEngineering managementEngineeringSoftware developmentComputer scienceKnowledge managementSoftware development processMedicineManagementMathematicsMathematical analysisEconomicsProgramming languageSoftware Engineering Techniques and PracticesTeaching and Learning ProgrammingInnovative Teaching and Learning Methods