Cooperative Teams
Essential Elements of Cooperative Teams-1
• Positive interdependence• Promotive interaction• Individual accountability• Learning and practicing interpersonal and group
skills• Group processing
Positive interdependence
Promotive interaction
Individual accountability
• hold group accountable for achieving its goals• hold each member accountable for contributing
his/her share
Learning and practicing interpersonal and group skills
• need to learn and practice skills– effective leadership– decision-making– trust-building– communication– conflict-resolution
• know how to do it, reflect and refine use, and use automatically
Group processing
• reflect on how group is functioning
• improve continuously
Stages of Team Growth
• Forming• Storming• Norming• Performing
Forming• Explore the boundaries of acceptable group
behavior; test the leader’s guidance. • Feelings: excitement, optimism, tentative
attachment to the team, suspicion, fear, and anxiety.
• Behaviors: complaints about the organization and barriers to the task, discussion of problems not relevant to the task, impatience with discussions, decisions on what information needs to be gathered.
Storming• Most difficult stage; team members realize that the task
is different and more difficult than realized; members become testy, blameful, or overzealous.
• Feelings: resistance to task and quality improvement approaches; sharp fluctuations in attitude about team and project’s chance of success.
• Behaviors: arguing among members even when they agree on real issues; defensiveness and competition, questioning of wisdom of guidance team, leaders; establishing unrealistic goals; concern about excessive work; some disunity, tension and jealousy.
Norming• Members reconcile competing responsibilities; they
accept the team and the individuality of team members. • Feelings: a new ability to express criticism
constructively, acceptance of membership in the team, and relief that everything is going to work out.
• Behaviors: attempt to achieve harmony by avoiding conflict, more friendliness, confiding in each other and sharing of personal problems; team cohesion, common spirit and goals, establishing and maintaining team ground rules and boundaries (norms).
Performing• Team has settled its relationships and expectations. They
can begin performing--diagnosing and solving problems-and choosing and implementing changes. All members have discovered and accepted each other’s strengths and weaknesses, and learned what their roles are.
• Feelings: members having insights into personal and group processes, and better understanding of each other’s strengths and weaknesses.
• Behaviors: constructive self-change, ability to prevent or work through group problems and close attachment to team.
Guidance Team• Guidance Team
– Oversee and support activities of project teams– Guide efforts– Evaluates Individual Efforts– Before the project
• identify the project goals• prepare a mission statement• determine needed resources• select team and team leaders• assign quality advisor
– During the project• meet regularly with project team• develop and improve teams• insure changes are made
Role of Team Leader• Team Leader
– calls and facilitates meeting– handles and assigns administrative details– orchestrates all team activities, and– oversees preparations for reports and
presentations
“Best Practice”
• Rotate task assignments for meetings• Recorder writes task assignments, each
person signs, and task assignments are emailed within 24 hours of meeting
• Each task is assigned to 2 people: a primary (who does the task) and a “nagger” who checks on primary to ensure progress is being made
Team Notebooks• One for each team: Graded. • There is no predefined format for the notebook.
o Meeting recordso Emailo Individual contributions o Draftso Task assignmentso Team processing documentation
• to protect you: describes your contribution to the team.
Discussion Skills
• Necessary for effective team meetings• Every meeting should include actions that
facilitate discussion. • Need to practice these.
Guidelines for Constructive Feedback
• Acknowledge the need for feedback• Give positive and negative feedback
Common Discussion Problems• One or two people dominate the
conversation and ignore contributions• One or two people contribute and the others
do not participate
Common Discussion Problems• “I say something at a meeting and everyone
agrees, but later, no one remembers or they say they didn’t agree.”
• “My teammate says something at the meeting, but later claims (s)he said something different.”
• “My teammates don’t listen to what I’m saying: they hear what they want to hear.”
Discussion, More Do’s• Listen - This is the hard part. Try to understand what
is being said before making any comments about it. Don't interrupt or complete sentences. Before commenting on an idea, rephrase it and ensure you understand.
• Summarize - Occasionally compile what’s been said and restate it to the group in summary form. Follow a summary with a question to check for agreement.
• Contain digression - Do not permit overlong examples or irrelevant discussion.
Discussion Skills• Manage time • End the discussion • Test for consensus• Constantly evaluate the meeting process.