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TEAMS

TEAMS. TEAM DEFINED. TEAMS HAVE: Two or More Members Specific Performance Objective or Recognizable Goal Coordination Among Members is Required for Goal Attainment. TUCKMAN’S STAGES MODEL TEAM DEVELOPMENT. Forming Storming Norming Performing Adjourning.

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TEAMS

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  1. TEAMS

  2. TEAM DEFINED TEAMS HAVE: • Two or More Members • Specific Performance Objective or Recognizable Goal • Coordination Among Members is Required for Goal Attainment

  3. TUCKMAN’S STAGES MODELTEAM DEVELOPMENT • Forming • Storming • Norming • Performing • Adjourning Different interpersonal relationships and task behaviors at each stage

  4. TUCKMAN’S STAGES MODELTEAM DEVELOPMENT • Forming – Unclear Objectives, Lack of Commitment, Hidden Feelings • Storming – Arguments About Structure, Conflicts, Hidden Agendas • Norming – Review Clarifying Objectives, Opening Risky Issues, Establish Implicit or Explicit rules

  5. Teams Progress Through Different Characteristics • Caution & Inclusion Issues (Forming) • Conflict is inevitable & necessary to establish trust. Development of unified set of goals, values, & operational procedures. (Storming) • Willingness to cooperate, mature negotiations, & positive working relationships (Norming) • Productivity & task accomplishment (Performing)

  6. HIGH PERFORMING TEAMS • Clear and Unified Understanding of the Goal • Shared Belief that the Goal Embodies a Worthwhile or Important Result • Appropriate Structure

  7. TYPES OF TEAM STRUCTURE

  8. CORPS’ PDT STUCTURE • Broad Objective is Problem Solving • Dominant Feature is Trust • Basic Structure is Focus on Issues • Clear Roles and Accountability • Effective Communication System • Monitoring Individual Performance and Providing Feedback

  9. TEAM FAILURE # 1 Reason: Loss of Focus Where the Team Had Raised Or Allowed To Be Raised Some Other Issue Above the Team’s Performance Objective • Problems Complex • High Degree of Collaboration • Often Intense Concentration Required

  10. GREATEST THREATS Politics and Personal Agendas are the Greatest Threat to Goal Clarity. • Lost Focus • What’s In it for Me vs. Team Objective • Once Started Almost Impossible To Stop

  11. TRUST PARADOX Trust is a paradox in human communication. One can trust or distrust but one can never knowfor certain…

  12. TRUST AND DISAPPOINTMENT

  13. TRUST Trust is Produced in a Climate That Includes: • Honesty • Openness • Transparency • Consistency • Respect

  14. Integrated Model of Group Development - Stages Recall the Integrated Model of Group Development that said: “Conflict is inevitable and necessary for the establishment of trust.” Allowing development of the next stage -- willingness to cooperate, mature negotiations, and positive working relationships.

  15. POP QUIZ An example of team “Norming” is: • Members start questioning their performance • Real issues begin to emerge; team sessions begin to be heated. • The team is producing work as a team, resolving problems and getting the job done. • Members learn about each other.

  16. POP QUIZ An example of team “Norming” is: • Members start questioning their performance

  17. POP QUIZ The number one cause of team failure is: • Improper Team Structure • Lack of Management Support • Team Members Too Technically Orientated • Loss of Focus • Interpersonal Differences

  18. POP QUIZ The number one cause of team failure is: d. Loss of Focus

  19. CONFLICT TO COOPERATION

  20. CONFLICT • Conflict is Always Present in a Relationship • The Absence or Presence—Amount of Conflict does not Determine Relational Satisfaction, BUT • How Conflict is Handled Determines Relational Satisfaction

  21. A trained psychologist can predict (95% certainty) if a couple will divorce within one year by observing their conflict behavior for 5 minutes!

  22. VALUE • CONFLICTS • Day to day values • Terminal values • Self definition values • RELATIONSHIP CONFLICTS • Strong Emotions • Misperceptions or Stereo types • Poor or miscommunication • Negative behavior • STRUCUTRAL • CONFLICTS • How situation is set up • Role definitions • Time constraints • Geographic/physical • Unequal power/authority • Unequal control of resources • DATA CONFLICTS • Lack of Information • Misinformation • Dif. Views on what is relevant • Dif interpretations of data • Dif assessment procedures • INTEREST • CONFLICTS • Substantive • Procedural • Psychological

  23. THREE BASIC RESPONSES • Avoidance – Can be Either Aggressive or Passive • Aggression • Integration

  24. FEELINGS OF POWER IN A CONFLICT “Each person may firmly believe that the other person has more power” Conflict often escalates because each person believes they are in the low power position.

  25. POWER IN A RELATIONSHIP • Dynamic • Collaboration – requires power sharing and realignment of power • Competition over power involves equalizing behaviors—”cutting down to size”-- and results in a downward spiral

  26. CRITERIA FOR COLLABORATION • Low power participants must have opportunity for influence • Participants are being honest • Potential gains are worth the emotional and economic investments

  27. FIVE CONFLICT STYLES • Collaboration • Compromise • Competition • Accommodation • Avoidance

  28. COLLABORATION • High Energy Emotional Investment • High Concern for Self and Others • Search for Solutions: compromise assumes a “fixed pie,” whereas collaboration looks for new solutions and addresses underlying concerns

  29. BEHAVIORS FOR HANDLING CONFLICT • Recognize the Signs of Conflict and Don’t Fear Them • Begin With The Positive Intent • Center On a Specific Content Topic • Discuss Content • Avoid Value Discussions • Avoid Ego Content and Involvement

  30. BEHAVIORS Cont’d • Keep An Open Mind and Look For Common Ground • Render Judgments on Facts and Merit • Consider Cultural Differences • Individualistic- Content and Outcome • Collectivist - Social Relationships and Process

  31. PERCEPTUAL BIAS • Lake Woebegone: We view ourselves as above average • Actor/Observer Bias: we view ourselves as being cooperative and others as being competitive. (e.g. our behavior is driven by circumstances while theirs is driven by some attribute of their personality

  32. BEHAVIORS Cont’d Finally, if Possible Prearrange Conflict Management Procedures • There is Always Conflict • Doesn’t Matter How Much Conflict is Present • How Conflict is Handled Determines the Health/Strength of the Relationship

  33. POP QUIZ Which of the following is not a sign of an escalating dispute? • Seeing the other person or group as an advisory or opponent. • Lost awareness of caring about the impact upon the person. • Denial of responsibility. • Identifying areas of disagreement. • Unwillingness to change.

  34. POP QUIZ Which of the following is not a sign of an escalating dispute? d. Identifying areas of disagreement.

  35. INTERESTS VS POSITIONS

  36. POSITIONAL BARGAINING • The sides open the negotiations by taking fixed positions. • Charges and countercharges about the other parties’ behavior or proposals • The parties enter into a series of reciprocal concessions until a compromise is reached or the negotiations break off.

  37. POSITIONAL BARGAINING • The absolute best outcome that positional bargaining can produce is a "compromise" • There's no potential for all parties to be fully satisfied with the outcome. • The adversarial posturing and unsatisfactory nature of the compromise may destroy the working relationship.

  38. The alternative is to focus on interests... INTERESTS: Fundamental needs or conditions which people or groups must meet for continued survival, success or fulfillment

  39. …instead of positions POSITIONS: How people would like to achieve their interests.

  40. FOCUS ON INTERESTS • Even when positions appear mutually exclusive, parties' fundamental interests may be met in a number of ways.

  41. INTEREST- BASED PROCESS • This approach is entirely consistent with the Corps Six-Step Planning Process • Just as the “zero-sum” assumption is a self-fulfilling prophecy, experience shows that the belief that there is a solution that meets everybody's interests can also be a self-fulfilling prophecy.

  42. HOW DO YOU IDENTIFY INTERESTS • The key is listening closely to what people are really telling us • Most of the time we are just listening to get our arguments ready

  43. ACTIVE LISTENING

  44. LISTENING Listening is making sense out of what you hear. • Passive/Recreational Listening • Understanding • Evaluation • Listening to be Helpful • Active Listening: High Receive

  45. WHAT HAPPENS WHEN PEOPLE FEEL RESISTED • They feel compelled to repeat whatever they felt was not acknowledged • They “escalate” -- more emotional language; voice tone sarcastic; volume increases. • They become more accusatory. • Their position becomes more rigid and fixed. • They become less open to alternatives. • They start seeing others as the enemy.

  46. ROADBLOCKS TO LISTENING • Ordering, demanding • Warning, threatening • Admonishing, moralizing • Persuading, arguing, lecturing • Criticizing, judging, evaluating • Interpreting, diagnosing

  47. ROADBLOCKS TO LISTENING - Continued • Advising, giving answers, offering solutions • Criticizing, disagreeing, contradicting • Praising, agreeing • Reassuring, sympathizing • Probing, questioning • Sarcasm, kidding, humor • Diverting, avoiding

  48. Active Listening • Focus on what the message sender is feeling and thinking. • Rather than on the message receiver’s own feelings and judgments • Summarize in your own words what the speaker isfeelingand thinking

  49. ACTIVE LISTENING • Summarize, rather than judge, what the other person is saying • Summarize both feelings and ideas • Avoid lead-in phrases – “I hear you saying…” • Choose words that match the intensity of the feeling (transmitted viaword choice, tone of voice, body language & other non-verbals.)

  50. Identify the Positive Intent of the Sender Task Focus Aggressive Passive People Focus

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