Week 7 Chapter 8 Team Dynamics Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in Week 7 Chapter 8 Team Dynamics Deck (100)
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1
Q

In theory _____ employees will contribute to a high-performance work culture. To support this theory team members, at At RPG Group, are trained to work together identifying and solving work-related problems with minimal supervision

A

empowered

2
Q

Name some features of groups

A

Groups of two or more people
Exist to fulfil a purpose
Interdependent—interact and influence each other
Mutually accountable for achieving common goals
Perceive themselves as a social entity

3
Q

Examples of teams

A
Task force (project) teams
Skunkworks
Virtual teams
Communities of practice
Departmental teams
Production/service/ leadership teams
Self-directed teams
Advisory teams
4
Q

Groups that exist primarily for the benefit of their members

A

Informal groups

5
Q

Reasons why informal groups exist:

A

Innate drive to bond
Social identity—we define ourselves by group memberships
Goal accomplishment
Emotional support

6
Q

Disadvantages of Teams

A

Individuals better/faster on some tasks
Process losses—cost of developing and maintaining teams
Social loafing

7
Q

Advantages of Teams

A

Under the right conditions, teams make better decisions, develop better products and services and create a more engage workforce, Information sharing is quicker,
Increased motivation due to accountability to co-workers,
Improved performance as co-workers become benchmarks for comparison.
Increase employee motivation and engagement
Fulfils drive to bond
Closer scrutiny by team members
Team members are benchmarks of comparison

8
Q

A problem that occurs when people exert less effort (and usually perform at a lower level) when working in teams than when working alone.

A

Social Loafing

9
Q

How can social loafing be reduced

A

by reducing team size, or measuring each member’s performance

10
Q

Informal groups tend to increase an employee’s _____ _____ – the knowledge and other resources available to people or social units (teams, organisations) from a durable network that connects them to others.

A

social capital

11
Q

All teams are groups, but not all groups are teams. Humans are _____ animals, hardwired to bond which creates the need to belong, so they join groups to shape and reinforce self-concept. Groups can accomplish tasks that individuals cannot. In stressful situations, the presence of others provides comfort.

A

social

12
Q

Social loafing is less prevalent when task is _____, or when objective is _____, and is also lower among members who value team

A

interesting, important

13
Q

Features of Organisation/Team Environment

A
Reward systems 
Communication systems
Organisational structure
Organisational leadership 
Physical space
14
Q

Features of Team Design

A

Task characteristics
Team size
Team composition

15
Q

Task characteristics state that Teams are _____ when _____ work can be divided into _____ roles that require frequent coordination

A

useful, complex, specialised

16
Q

One task characteristic that is extremely important for teams is

A

Task interdependence

17
Q

the extent to which team members must share materials, information or expertise in order to perform their jobs

A

Task interdependence:

18
Q

The principle that adding more people to a late software project only makes it later

A

Brook’s law (aka mythical man-month):

19
Q

A team is effective when it benefits the _____

A

Organisation

20
Q

Features of Team effectiveness

A

Accomplish tasks
Satisfy Member needs
Maintain team survival

21
Q

Features of team processes

A

Team development
Team norms
Team cohesion
Team Trust

22
Q

The main problems with teams is that they have additional costs or

A

process losses (team development and maintenance etc)

23
Q

Process losses:

A

resources (including time and energy) expended towards team development and maintenance rather than the task

24
Q

In new work teams, trust tends to decrease rather than increase over time T or F?

A

True

25
Q

Calculus-based trust refers to the logical calculation that team members will always act in the interests of the group. T or F

A

False

26
Q

Calculus-based trust represents a _____ calculation that other team members will act appropriately because they face sanctions if their actions violate reasonable _____. It offers the lowest potential trust and is easily broken by a violation of expectations. Generally, calculus-based trust alone cannot sustain a team’s relationship, because it relies on deterrence.

A

logical, expectations

27
Q

According to the integrated team effectiveness model, team effectiveness is a product of team context, design and team processes but does not influence these. T or F?

A

True

28
Q

Other than psychological drives, individuals may also join informal groups to serve their own interests. T or F?

A

True

29
Q

Team members communicate mainly using information technology are known as a

A

virtual team

30
Q

What is the reason why people initiate and join informal groups, but is not an important aspect of work teams?

A

To satisfy the human drive to bond.

31
Q

Achieving its objectives and satisfying the needs of its members are two elements of team effectiveness. What is the third?

A

Ability to survive over time

32
Q

Teams in which all members possess the same specialised skill are likely to be _____ effective than teams where there is diversity and therefore a broader pool of technical competencies

A

less

33
Q

What are team norms?

A

Expected behaviours which are seen as acceptable by the team

34
Q

What are the two main groups of team roles?

A

Task and relationship

35
Q

An important part of team development process is forming and reinforcing team _____.

A

roles

36
Q

A role is a set of _____ that people are expected to perform because they hold certain positions in a team and organisation. In team settings some roles help the team to achieve its goals, other roles maintain relationships within the team. Many roles exist informally and are shared among team members. Norming and performing are two of the stages in the team development process.

A

behaviours

37
Q

A popular (but untested) rule is that optimal _____ _____ is between 5 – 7 people. Teams should be large enough to provide necessary _____ and perspectives to perform the work, but small enough to maintain efficient _____ (coordination and involvement).

A

team size, competencies, communication

38
Q

Team composition

The move frequently mentioned characteristics of effective teams are the five C’s of team-member competency

A
Cooperating
Coordinating
Communicating
Comforting
Conflict Resolving
39
Q

Team diversity is also an important aspect of team composition. Diverse teams make better decisions under some circumstances because:

A
  1. People from different backgrounds see problem/opportunity from different angles (mental models).
  2. Diverse teams have a broader pool of technical competencies
  3. Diverse teams provide better representation of the team’s constituents (other departments/clients)
40
Q

Diversity also has a potentially _____ influence on internal functioning of the team because they take _____ to become high-performing teams because they take longer to bond, and are susceptible to ‘fault lines’ – divisions based on gender, ethnicity, etc.).

A

opposing, longer

41
Q

_____ teams tend to be more effective on tasks requiring a high level of cooperation and coordination.

A

Homogenous

42
Q

Advantages of Diversity within teams

A

View problems and possible solutions from different perspectives
Broader knowledge base
Better representation of team’s constituents

43
Q

Team development

A

Performing
Norming
Storming
Forming

44
Q
Discover expectations
Evaluate value of membership
Defer to existing authority
test boundaries of behaviourForming
Are all processes of \_\_\_\_\_
A

Forming

45
Q
Experience interpersonal conflict
Compete for team roles
Influence goals and means
Establish norms
Are all processes of \_\_\_\_\_
A

Stormin

46
Q
Establish roles
Agree on team objectives
Form team mental models
Develop Cohesion
Are all processes of \_\_\_\_\_
A

Norming

47
Q
Become task-orientated, and committed
Coordinate efficiently
Build high levels of cooperation and trust
Resolve conflicts quickly
Are all processes of \_\_\_\_\_
A

Performing

48
Q

The model masks two other processes during team development:

A
  1. Developing team identity:

2. Developing team competence:

49
Q

The transition individuals make from viewing team as something ‘out there’ to something that is a part of them, is known as

A

Developing team identity

50
Q

Developing habitual routines with teammates and forming shared/complementary mental models is

A

Developing team competence

51
Q

An important part of the team development process is forming and reinforcing team _____

A

roles

52
Q

Sets of behaviours that people are expected to perform because of the positions they hold in a team and organisation

A

Roles

53
Q

Many companies try and speed up the team development process through

A

team building

54
Q

team building a process that consists of

A

formal activities intended to improve the development and functioning of a work team.

55
Q
  1. general solution to a general problem
  2. ‘one-shot’ instead of ongoing process
  3. Team building occurs on the job, not only in artificial environments.
A

Reasons why the success of team building is uncertain because

56
Q

What are the key features of a self-directed team?

A

Autonomy in undertaking a major operation/project

57
Q

Self-_____ teams work on a complete task with all its interdependent features and have substantial autonomy over the execution of their tasks.

A

directed

58
Q

Team cohesiveness increases as a result of _____ _____

A

team success

59
Q

Group _____ is an aspect of groupthink and a bad idea for ill-defined situations. The team could take decision-making processes as far as possible before acknowledging any uncertainty, which may need to be resolved by the person carrying the responsibility.

A

harmony

60
Q

Groupthink is the tendency of highly _____ groups to value consensus at the price of decision _____.

A

cohesive, quality

61
Q

When executives are facing ill-defined problem the most important thing to do is make

A

sure the group is harmonious

62
Q

When participants are asked to (1) silently and independently document their ideas, (2) describe these ideas to the other team members without critique, and (3) silently and independently evaluate the ideas presented, this is called?

A

Nominal group technique

63
Q

Team cohesion can lead to pressure to conform which has which of the following effects:

A

Keeps focus on group goals

64
Q

_____ ____ _____ is a variation of traditional brainstorming that tries to combine the benefits of team decision making without the associated problems. The method is called ‘nominal’ because participants form a group in name only during two of its three stages.

A

Nominal group technique

65
Q

Team _____ is a characteristic of a team. It includes the extent to which its members are attracted to the team and are committed to the team’s goals. Members of high-cohesion teams are generally more _____ to each other’s needs and develop better interpersonal relationships, thereby reducing dysfunctional conflict. When conflict does arise members tend to resolve their differences swiftly and effectively. With _____ cooperation and more conformity to norms, high cohesion teams usually perform better than low cohesion teams.

A

cohesion, sensitive, better

66
Q

the informal rules and shared expectations that groups establish to regulate the behaviour of their members

A

Norms:

67
Q

Team cohesion also depends on instrumentality, a factor which refers to:

A

The teams level of success

68
Q

Cohesion is both _____ and _____, with the latter referring to the notion that people feel more cohesion to teams that fulfil their needs and goals. Consequently, cohesion increases with the team’s level of success. Furthermore, individuals are more likely to attach their social identity to successful teams than to those with a string of failures.

A

instrumental, emotional

69
Q

Role definition team building also helps the team develop shared mental models which may be defined as including:

A

Common internal representations of the external world

70
Q

What type of team is usually multi-skilled and has the specific purpose to solve a problem, realise an opportunity, or design a product or service?

A

Skunkworks

71
Q

multiskilled teams that are usually located away from the organisation and are relatively free of its hierarchy; often initiated by an entrepreneurial team leader who borrows people and resources (bootlegging) to design a product or service.

A

Skunkworks

72
Q

Team _____ can become deeply anchored so the best ways to avoid creating ______ norms is to clearly state desirable norms when the team is _____ created or to select people with appropriate values.

A

norms, dysfunctional, first

73
Q

Why are cultural differences likely to be magnified in multicultural teams?

A

ach employee brings his or her own country’s cultural values

74
Q

Several factors influence team cohesion:

A
  1. Member similarity
  2. Team size: smaller teams tend to have more cohesion than larger teams but smaller teams have less cohesion when they lack enough members to perform their required tasks
  3. Member interaction: frequent interaction encourages cohesion
  4. Difficult entry: when entry to a team is restricted, there is greater cohesion but severe initiations can weaken cohesion if humiliation is involved
  5. Team successes
  6. External competition or challenges
75
Q

Every team must have some level of minimal _____ to maintain its existence.

A

cohesion

76
Q

Team cohesion has an effect on task _____:

A

performance

77
Q

Team norm support company goals there fore there is a ___ to _____ high task performance

A

high, moderately

78
Q

Team norms conflict with company goals therefore there is a ____ to _____ low task performance

A

low, moderately

79
Q

the positive expectations that one person has towards another person or group in situations involving risk.

A

Trust

80
Q

There are 3 levels of trust

A

calculus-based trust
knowledge-based trust
Identification based trust

81
Q

This type of trust is based on deterrence and has a fragile and limited because dependent on punishment

A

calculus-based trust

82
Q

This type of trust is predictable, competent and fairly robust

A

knowledge-based trust

83
Q

This type of trust is based on common mental-models and values and increases with the person’s social identity with the team.

A

Identification trust

84
Q

a cross-functional work group that is organised around work processes, completes an entire piece of work requiring several interdependent tasks and has substantial autonomy over the execution of those tasks.

A

Self-directed team (SDT):

85
Q

Success factors for self-directed teams

A
Responsible for entire work process
High interdependence within the team
Low interdependence with other teams
Autonomy to organise and coordinate work
Work site and technology support team communication/coordination
86
Q

Managers of multicultural teams can make one of three kinds of interventions:

A

Encourage adaptation
Implement a structural intervention
Direct manager intervention

87
Q

The performance of multicultural teams will be affected by the different _____ that influence their work styles. It is also affected by the differences between local _____ of within-country team members and the global perspectives espoused by team members.

A

norms, perspectives -

  • Norms about power, status and authority
  • Norms about communicating
  • Norms about decision-making
88
Q

Encourage _____: identify and acknowledge cultural differences in order to develop strategies t manager those differences.

A

adaptation

89
Q

Implement a structural _____: change structure of team (e.g. divide team into subgroups to improve communication)

A

intervention

90
Q

Direct manager intervention: managers can intervene in the _____ stage

A

norming

91
Q

Teams whose members operate across space, time and organisational boundaries, and are linked through information technology to achieve organisational tasks.

A

Virtual teams:

92
Q

Virtual Team Member characteristics

A

Technology savvy
Self-leadership skills
Emotional intelligence

93
Q

• Constraints on team decision making

A

o Time constraints: teams take longer than individuals to make decisions
o Production blocking: a time constraint in team decision making due to the procedural requirement that only one person may speak at a time
o Evaluation apprehension: a decision-making problem that occurs when individuals are reluctant to mention ideas that seem silly because they believe (often correctly) that other team members are silently evaluating them
o Pressure to conform
o Groupthink: the tendency of highly cohesive groups to value consensus at the price of decision quality

94
Q

a type of conflict in which people focus their discussion on the issue while maintaining respect for people having other points of view

A

o Constructive conflict:

95
Q

a freewheeling, face-to-face meeting where team members aren’t allowed to criticise but are encouraged to speak freely, to generate as many ideas as possible and to build on the ideas of others

A

o Brainstorming

96
Q

a form of brainstorming that relies on networked computers for submitting and sharing creative ideas

A

o Electronic brainstorming

97
Q

• Team structures to improve decision making

A
  1. Team norms should encourage critical thinking
  2. Team membership should be sufficiently diverse
  3. Checks and balances should be in place to prevent 1-2 people from dominating discussion
98
Q

: a variation of brainstorming consisting of three stages: participants (1) silently and independently document their ideas; (2) collectively describe their ideas to the other team members without critique; and (3) silently and independently evaluate the ideas presented

A

o Nominal group technique

99
Q

The four team processes

A

Team development
Norms
Cohesion
Trust

100
Q

Three team design elements are

A

task characteristics, team size and team composition