Performance of student software development teams: the influence of personality and identifying as team members
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Date
Authors
Monaghan, Conal
Bizumic, Boris
Reynolds, Katherine
Smithson, Michael
Johns-Boast, Lynette
Van Rooy, Dirk
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Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
One prominent approach in the exploration of the variations in project team performance has been to study
two components of the aggregate personalities of the team members: conscientiousness and agreeableness.
A second line of research, known as self-categorisation theory, argues that identifying as team members and
the team’s performance norms should substantially influence the team’s performance. This paper explores
the influence of both these perspectives in university software engineering project teams. Eighty students
worked to complete a piece of software in small project teams during 2007 or 2008. To reduce limitations
in statistical analysis, Monte Carlo simulation techniques were employed to extrapolate from the results of
the original sample to a larger simulated sample (2043 cases, within 319 teams). The results emphasise the
importance of taking into account personality (particularly conscientiousness), and both team identification
and the team’s norm of performance, in order to cultivate higher levels of performance in student software
engineering project teams.
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European Journal of Engineering Education