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Veröffentlichung von Sabine Schermeier und Prof. Nikol Rummel in Fachzeitschrift

Studie zur Qualität der Zusammenarbeit im Hochschulunterricht

Sabine Schermeier und Prof. Dr. Nikol Rummel vom Center for Advanced Internet Studies veröffentlichen gemeinsam mit Prof. Anne Deiglmayr von der Universität Leipzig ihre Studie „Small group collaboration in hybrid university learning: Contrasting collaboration quality in hybrid, F2F and remote settings“ in der Fachzeitschrift „Learning and Instruction“.

5. Dezember 2025

Die beiden Forscherinnen des CAIS-Forschungsprogramms „Bildungstechnologien und künstliche Intelligenz“, Sabine Schermeier, wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin, und Prof. Dr. Nikol Rummel, Leiterin des Forschungsprogramms, veröffentlichen gemeinsam mit Prof.  Anne Deiglmayr von der Universität Leipzig einen Open-Access-Artikel mit dem Titel „Small group collaboration in hybrid university learning: Contrasting collaboration quality in hybrid, F2F and remote settings“ in der internationalen, erziehungswissenschaftlichen Fachzeitschrift „Learning and Instruction“. In dem Artikel erläutern sie ihre Studie zu hybrider Zusammenarbeit von sowohl vor Ort Lernenden als auch Fernlernenden mit Hilfe von Online-Tools. Die Studie zielt darauf ab, die Qualität der Zusammenarbeit in hybriden Umgebungen im Vergleich zu Präsenz- und Fernunterricht zu bewerten.

Abstract

Background

Hybrid collaboration, where both onsite and remote learners work together using online tools, is gaining prominence in educational contexts due to its high flexibility in terms of location. While considerable research has compared face-to-face (F2F) to remote collaboration, there is a notable gap in the literature regarding hybrid settings. Existing research suggests that remote learners in hybrid collaboration often feel less affectively engaged than onsite learners, with negative effects for learning process and outcomes.

Aims

The study aims to assess the collaboration quality in hybrid compared to F2F and remote settings.

Sample

N = 180 university students solved a collaborative task in groups of three.

Methods

Student groups were randomly assigned to either F2F, remote, or hybrid collaboration modes. Collaboration quality was analyzed using self-reported learner perceptions and external observer ratings across three dimensions: learner participation, interaction quality and quality of the collaborative product.

Results

Conditions did not differ with regards to learner participation or observed interaction quality. Overall, the remote condition tended to self-report lower interaction quality than the F2F and hybrid conditions. However, the only statistically significant difference was between the remote and the F2F condition for the dimension ‘sustaining mutual understanding’. Finally, the hybrid condition outperformed the two other conditions regarding the quality of the collaborative product.

Conclusion

Our study revealed an unexpectedly strong performance of the hybrid condition, with interaction quality comparable to F2F collaboration. This points to opportunities for educational practice. Additionally, our findings highlight the importance of researching different configurations of hybrid collaboration.

Schermeier, S., Deiglmayr, A., & Rummel, N. (2026). Small group collaboration in hybrid university learning: Contrasting collaboration quality in hybrid, F2F and remote settings. Learning and Instruction, 102, Article 102276.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.learninstruc.2025.102276