When team members are positively interdependent they share common goals and thus support each other's efforts. This group dynamic has numerous benefits for the individual learner and the team.
Individual benefits • Individuals trust other members and make sure they act in trustworthy ways themselves. This sense of trust and responsibility does not only help individuals develop personally but it also acts as glue that holds the team together. • Positive interdependence intrinsically motivates individuals to try harder because they know that their teammates are dependent on them. • It fosters high level critical thinking and reasoning strategies. • It leads to greater long term retention of what is learned and increases the members willingness to take on more challenging tasks. • It gives individuals the opportunity to hear a variety of insights and perspectives. • Comparison and contrasting of others reasoning, opinions and conclusions helps promote higher quality decision making, better problem solving and also increases creativity. • Individuals have low amount of anxiety and stress when performing in a group that is positively interdependent. • Positive interdependence has a favorable impact on the psychological health and the
self-esteem of an individual.
Team benefits • An individual's performance affects the performance of the group, which creates a responsibility force that increases one's effort to achieve. Thus, positive interdependence helps in the attainment of the group goal by making every member personally responsible for the team's success. • Positive interdependence increases achievement and productivity of the team as a whole. • It leads to the development of more discoveries as compared to competitive or individualistic learning approaches. • Within positively interdependent groups, conflicts have positive outcomes, such as higher achievement, respect for other's perspectives, more integrative agreements, greater liking for each other and positive attitudes towards conflicts. • Positive relations and
social support are formed between members from different ethnic background, culture, language, social class, ability and gender groups.
Limitations • The biggest limitation of the positive interdependence theory is that it assumes people with different experiences, backgrounds, opinions, and ideals will all be willing to come to a consensus. It does not take into consideration real life situations and challenges such as non-cooperative members, untrustworthy individuals, slowly emerging roles and influential leaders, etc... • Being a member of a group is not sufficient. There has to be positive interdependence among all the group members. Imbalance of positive interdependence can lead to failure in achievement of the goal or even to the dissolution of the team. If there is failure, blame is also shared. • Constructive controversy or conflicts occur when group members have different information, perceptions, opinions, theories, willingness to take risks, and they need to reach to one conclusion. In positive interdependence conflicts occur not because of the final goals but over how best to achieve those mutual goals. • Application of positive interdependence in teaching is very demanding on the part of a teacher. Just putting students in groups and asking them to work together may not be sufficient to achieve positive interdependence among them. The teacher needs to explain the task and the concept and structure collaborative activities in order to promote positive interdependence. Group work does not imply positive interdependence. • Too much positive interdependence may eventually lead to social dependence. • Positive interdependence neglects the benefits of healthy competition. • Positive interdependence in computer-supported collaborative learning is hard to achieve as it is difficult to create shared understanding when people are distant and come from diverse backgrounds, cultural values and norms. ==References==