Bored Panda works better on our iPhone app
Continue in app Continue in browser

The Bored Panda iOS app is live! Fight boredom with iPhones and iPads here.

Student Does Entire Group Project Alone, Then Lets The Q&A Do The Talking
Three young women, two smiling, one looking thoughtfully, holding documents for a group project. Deals with lazy people.

FOUND: Group project literature malicious compliance | Mind Blowing Facts

32

ADVERTISEMENT

Group projects do prepare people for working in the real world, in the sense that one learns that nothing is fair, someone will always get by on someone else’s work and that you rarely get credit for taking on the hardest tasks.

A student went online to both vent and share their rather clever bit of malicious compliance. They were struck with the usual curse of group projects, as they did all the work and the rest did nothing. So when it came time to present their project, they decided to let their team dig their own grave.

RELATED:

    Some people see group projects as a way to just do nothing

    Image credits: A. C. / Unsplash (not the actual photo)

    So one netizen decided to make sure everyone knew they were the only one to put in any effort

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Image credits: westend61 / Envato (not the actual photo)

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Image credits: Sensitive_Nature2990

    ADVERTISEMENT

    Non-individual work is often dreaded for a good reason

    Image credits: Getty Images / Unsplash (not the actual photo)

    Group projects have a way of turning into psychological experiments nobody signed up for, and the story of a memorized presentation and a strategically vague worksheet is a pretty perfect illustration of why. The core issue almost always comes down to something researchers call social loafing, sometimes referred to as the free rider problem, which happens when some students in group projects put in less effort into the work than when they work alone, try to survive in the group, and then take credit for someone else’s work. It sounds almost too simple to be the culprit, but it shows up constantly, and it tends to demotivate the people actually doing the work while breeding resentment that festers long after the grade gets posted.

    Part of the reason this keeps happening traces back to a phenomenon first documented over a century ago by a French engineer named Max Ringelmann, who noticed something strange happening with people pulling rope. A man pulling alone exerted significantly more force than those working in groups, and the average force per person kept dropping as group size increased.

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Translate that from rope to research papers, and you get exactly what unfolded in that Scottish madness project, where two out of three people quietly assumed someone else would handle it. When people are placed in a group, they often feel less personally responsible for the outcome and assume someone else will pick up the slack, which leads to disengagement. Nobody has to consciously decide to be lazy for this to kick in, it is baked into how humans process shared responsibility.

    Not being the only one responsible means some folks just check out

    Image credits: Vitaly Gariev / Unsplash (not the actual photo)

    Diffusion of responsibility is the more precise term for what makes this so insidious, and it explains why free riding is not always a deliberate act of laziness. Free-riding behavior is not necessarily due to apathy or a deliberate attempt to do as little work as possible, and there can be numerous and complex reasons behind why a student fails to contribute equally. That does not make it any less frustrating for the person left holding the entire syllabus, but it is worth remembering that plenty of free riders are not villains twirling a mustache so much as people who never quite clicked into a sense of ownership over the outcome. Anonymity, in this context, is doing a lot of damage. When contribution cannot be easily tracked or measured, individual accountability tends to evaporate, and the group becomes a place to hide rather than a place to build something.

    ADVERTISEMENT

    This is exactly why professors increasingly lean on peer evaluations and individualized grading, which is what ultimately saved the day in that story once the professor pulled the storyteller aside. Research backs this instinct up: using structured evaluation methods with early implementation and specific criteria has been shown to mitigate free-rider problems and improve students’ perceptions about groups and group projects. Grading everyone identically regardless of contribution is basically an invitation for the Ringelmann effect to thrive, since there is no cost to coasting. Separate grading, or a public Q&A that puts knowledge on display in real time, restores the individual stakes that group work tends to erase.

    There is also a structural problem baked into how these assignments get assigned in the first place, since students rarely get a say in who they are paired with or how work gets divided beforehand. Without clear roles, contribution becomes a fog, and fog is where free riders thrive. One widely cited fix for teams outside the classroom is to keep the group as small as possible for the task, since if a task can be handled by five people, a manager should not automatically make it ten. Universities rarely have this luxury given class sizes and course requirements, so mismatched groups keep happening, and stories like this one keep getting written, because the underlying incentive structure has never really been solved. It has just been quietly managed by professors clever enough to grade the truth rather than the performance.

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    A few readers wanted more details

    They also responded to some readers

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    A few thought they were being too harsh

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Others shared similar stories

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT

    Poll Question

    Total votes ·

    Thanks! Check out the results:

    Total votes ·
    Share on Facebook
    Justin Sandberg

    Justin Sandberg

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    I am a writer at Bored Panda. Despite being born in the US, I ended up spending most of my life in Europe, from Latvia, Austria, and Georgia to finally settling in Lithuania. At Bored Panda, you’ll find me covering topics ranging from the cat meme of the day to red flags in the workplace and really anything else. In my free time, I enjoy hiking, beating other people at board games, cooking, good books, and bad films.

    Read less »
    Justin Sandberg

    Justin Sandberg

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    I am a writer at Bored Panda. Despite being born in the US, I ended up spending most of my life in Europe, from Latvia, Austria, and Georgia to finally settling in Lithuania. At Bored Panda, you’ll find me covering topics ranging from the cat meme of the day to red flags in the workplace and really anything else. In my free time, I enjoy hiking, beating other people at board games, cooking, good books, and bad films.

    Mindaugas Balčiauskas

    Mindaugas Balčiauskas

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    I'm a visual editor at Bored Panda. I kickstart my day with a mug of coffee bigger than my head, ready to tackle Photoshop. I navigate through the digital jungle with finesse, fueled by bamboo breaks and caffeine kicks. When the workday winds down, you might catch me devouring bamboo snacks while binging on the latest TV show, gaming or I could be out in nature, soaking up the tranquility and communing with my inner panda.

    Read less »

    Mindaugas Balčiauskas

    Mindaugas Balčiauskas

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    I'm a visual editor at Bored Panda. I kickstart my day with a mug of coffee bigger than my head, ready to tackle Photoshop. I navigate through the digital jungle with finesse, fueled by bamboo breaks and caffeine kicks. When the workday winds down, you might catch me devouring bamboo snacks while binging on the latest TV show, gaming or I could be out in nature, soaking up the tranquility and communing with my inner panda.

    What do you think ?
    Gande Harg
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Had a similar situation in a pre-med class, 1990's. 4 person group projects where one person each separately led experimental design, actual experimentation, data analysis, and report writing, but everyone is supposed to collaborate for each step. Even though I had owned more than my fair share in the previous projects, for one project I missed a class for a doctor's appointment, so the team decided somehow I was slacking, that they refused to give me the data to write the report, and cut me out to write their own. I was able to find a similar data set based on the same experiment in a textbook, and wrote an excellent report, and also found conclusions that the rest of the team were unable to. I explained the situation to the confused TA, and I ended up getting an A while the rest of the team ended up getting worse grades. Sweet victory.

    Alani Wagner
    Community Member
    20 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My last salary was $8750, ecom only worked 12 hours a week. My longtime neighbor yr estimated $15,000 and works about 20 hours for seven days. I can't believe how blunt he was when I looked up his information, This is what I do..... 𝐉𝐨­𝐛­𝐀­𝐭­𝐇­𝐨­𝐦­𝐞­𝟏.𝐂­𝐨­𝐦

    Load More Replies...
    L. Ohler
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I knew this was Byron immediately. He's my favorite And of course it was The Darkness

    JayWantsACat
    Community Member
    13 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'm half-Asian. I went to a college with a large Asian population, many of who's first language isn't English. Several times I made deals with my groups that if they write up the project, I'd basically copy-edit it and it has always worked out for me.

    Load More Comments
    Gande Harg
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Had a similar situation in a pre-med class, 1990's. 4 person group projects where one person each separately led experimental design, actual experimentation, data analysis, and report writing, but everyone is supposed to collaborate for each step. Even though I had owned more than my fair share in the previous projects, for one project I missed a class for a doctor's appointment, so the team decided somehow I was slacking, that they refused to give me the data to write the report, and cut me out to write their own. I was able to find a similar data set based on the same experiment in a textbook, and wrote an excellent report, and also found conclusions that the rest of the team were unable to. I explained the situation to the confused TA, and I ended up getting an A while the rest of the team ended up getting worse grades. Sweet victory.

    Alani Wagner
    Community Member
    20 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My last salary was $8750, ecom only worked 12 hours a week. My longtime neighbor yr estimated $15,000 and works about 20 hours for seven days. I can't believe how blunt he was when I looked up his information, This is what I do..... 𝐉𝐨­𝐛­𝐀­𝐭­𝐇­𝐨­𝐦­𝐞­𝟏.𝐂­𝐨­𝐦

    Load More Replies...
    L. Ohler
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I knew this was Byron immediately. He's my favorite And of course it was The Darkness

    ADVERTISEMENT
    JayWantsACat
    Community Member
    13 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'm half-Asian. I went to a college with a large Asian population, many of who's first language isn't English. Several times I made deals with my groups that if they write up the project, I'd basically copy-edit it and it has always worked out for me.

    Load More Comments
    Related on Bored Panda
    Popular on Bored Panda
    Trending on Bored Panda
    Also on Bored Panda
    ADVERTISEMENT