Chapter 6: Groups and Teamwork Flashcards
Defining Groups/Teams
• Groups: two or more people with a common relationship
–Something similar between the people, affiliates you together
• Team: a small number of people working together to achieve a common objective
• We use these terms interchangeably in this course
Four types of Teams
- Self-managed: Complete tasks without a supervisor
- Problem-solving: Solving problems etc…
- Cross-functional: Pull people from different functions and ask them to work together
- Virtual: problem-solving, self-managed, cross-functional all can be in virtual teams, difficult to develop cohesion in virtual teams though.
An effective team model
- Context: Adequate resources, leadership/structure, climate of trust
- Composition: Abilities of members, personality, allocating roles
- Process: Common purpose, specific goals, team efficacy, team identity
Team’s consist of 4 following
- Resources: What money is thrown into departments
- Leadership and structure: Given clear guidance?
- Climate of trust: Not being embarrassed to ask a question
- Evaluation and rewards: how you’re going to be rewarded
Norms
• Acceptable standards of behaviour within a group that are shared by the group’s members
o Example: raising your hand
o Norms helps us learn what goes on in an organization
• How do norms develop?
o Develop from prior experiences
o Initial interactions can set the tone
• What makes norms important?
o Begin to understand what is important in an organization
o Ensures predictability
Allows us to prepare better
• Danger of conformity
o Asch effect: 10 ppl in room, 9 working for him
o Put up a standard line, then like a, b, c
o Asch asked which line is close to ABC, C= wrong answer, b= right answer
o All 9 people working for him said C, last person 40% of the time said C
Roles of members
• A role is a set of expected behaviour patterns attributed to someone occupying a given position in a social unit
o Role expectations
What is expected in that role (example: police)
o Role conflict
What someone is supposed to do in that role
o Role ambiguity
Unclear whats expected of you
o Role overload/underload
Too much in a role/Too little
Status of members/Group size
• Status: A socially defined position or rank given to groups or group members by others
• Status Credits
o Example: Travis Scott, wealthy people
o Allows you to break norms everyone else has to follow
• Impact of group size on effectiveness
o Social Loafing: when working in a team you expend less effort than working alone
o If group is too big then it means not enough meaningful work is going around
Diversity of Team
• Some diversity categories include age, gender ,race, tenure, occupation, personality, and work experience
• Pros and cons to having group diversity
o Pros: Different experiences, opinions, thinking
o Cons: Conflict
o Pros/cons of diversity can go either way
Group Process Issues
- Common Purpose
- Team Cohesion
- Managed level of conflict
Stages of Group Development
• Forming stage: A lot of uncertainty
• Storming: Hopefully where you can work through conflict and develop some order
• Norming: what others expect of you and what you expect of them
• Performing: Asking can we do the job properly
-Adjourning: The group disbanding
-Very linear model