Group Comm Final
Lessons about accountability from Mars Hill
Accountability is necessary with power. Those with power must be held accountable to certain standards by groups. In the case of Mars hill, Mark Driscol was not held accountable creating a multitude of solutions
Concertive Control
Concertive control is a shift in control from rational/bureaucratic system to value-based premises where control is exercised through identification with core values and is enforced by peers.
Currency
Considers whether the information is current and up to date. Currency is often critical for accuracy
North West
Council Chiefs (interrelatedness & timing)
5 Criteria for Making Good evaluations
Credibility, Currency, Relevance, Representativeness, and Sufficiency
Critical Thinking & Effective Decision Making Main Idea (Rothwell)
Effective decision-making relies on critical thinking throughout the process. Primary concern is how you gather and evaluate information.
Drawing People Out
First paraphrase the speaker's statement, then ask open ended, non directive questions. This is the skill that helps participants clarify, develop, and refine their ideas without coaching or intrusion.
Creative Problem Solving - Framing/Reframing
Frames determine whether people notice problems, how they understand and remember problems, and how they evaluate and act on problems. Reframing is the creative process of breaking a mindset by describing the problem from a different frame of reference. Open-ended questions can be a useful technique for reframing.
The problems with the Corporate training programs according to Garvey
Garvey believes one core problem with these programs is that they're education based, not training based. Education increases intellectual awareness of a subject but training makes someone proficient at the execution of a given task. Soft-skills growth in businesses requires training.
5 Lessons from the council ceremony (GTA ME)
Good decisions begin with listening, Truth not turf, A slower process yields better decisions, Make important decisions feel important, Emphasize information not advocacy
Respecting Diverse Communication Styles (kaner)
Groups that tolerate diverse communication styles can utilize more of the ideas put forth by its members. Facilitators aid in stretching the limits of acceptable communication styles.
Balancing
Helping a group broaden its discussion to include other perspectives that may not yet have been expressed. This supports individuals who don't feel safe to express minority views. Creates positive group norms and often comes in for of a question
East
Heyoehkah Chiefs (Freedom & Creativity)
(8 Chief Directions) North
Hunter/Work Chiefs (Clarity & action)
Challenges to building practice based on love?
I-Thou relationships take more attentiveness and Practices based on love require an increasing depth which is counter cultural
Identification (Burke)
Identification is the profound, collective process people use to overcome natural divisions as individuals. To form any sort of collectivity, we use language to transcend our divisions so we can be social. It's beyond team spirit or sharing values, it's about identity. The key is identification with the team's power relationships. This strengthens concertive discipline.
Manufacture of Consent/The Hidden Power of Ideaology
Ideology legitimizes hegemony by making it appear to be something other than it really is. Social legitimation holds groups and societies together, and people willingly adopt and enforce. System/society then can be blamed for the problem, not just one person
Dissent
If there is more than one dissenter in a group, conformity is less likely. Sometimes, the minority can even influence the majority by having more knowledge or using influence strategies
(Group Conformity) Group Locomotion hypothesis
States that the individual is motivated to facilitate the group's goal achievement. This motivation is a sign of commitment to the group, and is more likely when the group requires consensus or unanimous vote
Facilitating open discussion
The facilitators job is to support everyone to do their best thinking. Generally, this means encouraging full participation and promoting mutual understanding. Ultimately, the facilitator needs to organize the flow of the discussion (stacking, encouraging, balancing, etc.) and promote mutual understanding (paraphrasing, drawing people out, tracking, etc.)
Note taking & lettering
The lettering in chart writing is very important. Print should be in plain, block, capital letters, thick lined, straight up and down, without large gaps The goal is legibility.
Hegemony
The oppressed/less powerful identify the dominant group's interests as their own via systematically distorted communication. This happens through the power of rules, routines, and SOP's. People willingly participate in their own domination/control
Antecedent Conditions Present in the Challenger groupthink case study
The people who made the decision to launch had worked together for many years (high cohesiveness), two top level managers actively promoted their pro-launch opinions (leader preference), and decision makers didn't meet with the engineers who dissented (insulation from experts)
Discourse Power
The power to create the base of knowledge from which people reason and make decisions. This is the power to withhold or share information. It's the power to create identification
Role of Zero Chiefs
The role of the Zero chief is to ensure that the process is honored and the discussion moves as it should
What textbook example depicted inferential error
The train example
Ceremony as a Council, not an argument
The tribal council method is structured in such a way that each chief takes turns representing their designated perspective. Chiefs only add their perspective, NOT debate with others.
Decision Making in Cultural Diversity
The value of verbal participation in decision making is perceived differently across cultures. In America (an individualistic culture), speaking is highly valued. In collectivist cultures (like Japan, China, etc.) speaking is not highly prioritized. This is a challenge for culturally diverse groups. Finding ways to boost the verbal participation of cultural minorities in an American culture that values speech is a worthy undertaking.
Convergent Zone Overview
The zone where there is thinking among people who have developed mutual understanding where everything feels smoother, more productive, etc. The purpose of this zone is to aim towards a decision point.
Concertive Control & Shunning at Mars Hill
There was high amounts of concertive control at Mars Hill where the values stated by Mark that were "of the church" maintained a sense of control for "Mark's way." Loss of control resulted in shunning of those who dissented to regain control
"There is no power in wanting or predicting - the power is in deciding" Explain.
This is conveying the idea that ownership is significant, and in fact more important than results. Ownership brings alternative futures into being.
Representativeness
To determine whether statistics are representative, (1) the sample size must be adequate, and (2) the sample must be randomly selected, not self selected.
Facilitator's Main Objective in Divergent Zone
To reconcile these differences, the first step is to make them visible. A facilitator in this zone (regarding matters of content) aids in expanding the range of perspectives and possibilities. In regards to the process of communication, the facilitator is a neutral third party who needs to encourage a supportive, respectful atmosphere. By feeling secure and seeing that they're ideas differ from others, members are encouraged to speak up.
True or False: The shift to I-Thou is crucial to experiencing a dialogical and hospitable community
True
True or false: shadows can also be more positively framed as possibilities unrealized
True
Make important decisions feel important
Turning an important decision into a trivial discussion runs the risk of trivializing the decision. The formal rituals & practices of the council elevate the importance of the decision making process
What's wrong with questions with little power?
Typical questions do not create the possibility of an alternative future. Little-power questions call us to try harder at what we've been doing, while keeping us apart and deepening isolation. The hidden agenda of these questions is to maintain dominance and be right.
Power & Group Dynamic Lessons from Rise & Fall of Mars Hill
Unchecked power is dangerous. Group dynamics where dissent is discouraged and there is limited diversity is risky.
General indicators of power
Verbal include powerful/powerless language. Nonverbal indicators include touch, clothing, space, and eye contact.
South
War Chiefs (power & danger)
How does love allow us transition from ordinary to extraordinary
by allowing the work to be soulful and other centered
A slower process yields better decisions
careful, in dept reflection is needed
French & Raven's Definition of Power
coercive, reward, legitimate, expert, and referent
Shield of Warrior(ess) - North
courage, resourcefulness, strategy
"be your word - (Marshall, Est in the Business)
demands consistency in commitments
Acknowledging feelings
dentifying and naming the feelings of the group members to increase group awareness.
3 types of relational power
dominance - active, prevention - reactive, and empowerment - proactive
Revisions to the Classic/Janis Model of Groupthink from Challenger case study authors
element of time pressure as an influence on group think, leadership given more emphasis in its role in perpetuating (or limiting) groupthink
Summarizing
ending a conversation by restating key themes and main points to help people build categories and internalize them.
What do shadow's refer to?
issues not consciously acknowledged and dealt with that are pushed into the unconscious realm, only to manifest themselves at a later stage, and usually in a more destructive way
What makes Landmark Forum dangerous?
it's dangerous because it requires conformity and obedience, and is exclusive which limits dissent and alternative voices.
Listening for the logic
listening for the logic of the speaker's reasoning, and assessing whether the group appears to be digesting or resisting it.
Be Present (SE)
pay attention to the moment
Shield of the Little Child - South
place of trust and innocence, awe, & wonder
Shield of Nurturer - West
recognize what's needed to heal; balance & care
Legitimizing differences
recognizing that each party is making legitimate points, demonstrating that everyone's views are being respected.
Placemaking isn't only about becoming but also about __________
resistance
Shield of Magical Child - East
spirit of creativity & playfulness, imagination
Relational View of Power
states that power is not the property of an individual and that power/powerlessness is a false dichotomy. All group members have some degree of influence.
Let little child Play (NE)
stay open to vital information, be playful with forces at work in any given situation
The limits of tolerance (kaner)
suggests that an idea that is expressed in an acceptable communication style will be taken more seriously by more people
Encouraging
the art of creating an opening for people to participate without putting any one individual on the spot. Especially helpful early in discussion, and often comes in form of a question
Group polarization
the group tendency to make a decision after discussion that is more extreme (either riskier or more cautious) than the initial preferences of group members. It does NOT mean that disagreement among group members becomes more pronounced. Groups tend to polarize decision making if there is a clear majority leaning one way (risk) or another (caution)
Emplacement
the idea that as people engage in everyday social activity, place is created, highlighting the importance of these subtle daily dialogues
Validating
the skill that legitimizes and accepts a speaker's opinion or feeling, without agreeing that the opinion is "correct."
Credibility
the trustworthiness of information. Must consider the source, bias, be watchful of authorities quoted outside of their field of expertise, and beware of implausible statistics.
How can we acknowledge shadows?
through a dialogical approach to community
Facilitator's Main Objective in Groan Zone
to help the group develop a shared framework of understanding
2 Most common sources of inferential error
under-representativeness (which distorts the facts) and correlation inferred as causation
Evaluating Information
use critical thinking when evaluating the information for its merit is essential to avoid truth decay
I-It Relationships (Buber)
view personal dynamics as a subject-object relationship
I-Thou Relationships
view the other as a co-subject
Facilitation Techniques in the Convergent Zone
The facilitator's listening becomes focused rather than open-ended, using skills like listening for the logic and summarizing.
Guards Out (SW)
are we awake, guarding focus, staying true to purpose?
Listening for common ground
A powerful intervention for when group members are polarized which validates areas of disagreement and focuses on areas of agreement.
Morality as motivated resistance
According to this hypothesis, people with stronger moral convictions are more resistant to group pressure than are people with weaker convictions.
Truth not turf
Designated roles reframe people's "turf" causing them to share perspective from their area, not defend their most natural turf
Sufficiency
Determining when you have enough information to support your claims.
Silencing Dissent at Mars Hill
Dissent was actively silenced at Mars Hiill through verbal abuse, termination, shunning, etc.
3 Component's of Kaner's Diamond Model of Decision Making
Divergent Zone, Groan Zone, and Convergent Zone
What does Fromm say about awakening love in community & hospitality work?
Love requires overcoming egocentricity and making the needs of the other as important as our own...a position of mutuality
South West
Medicine Singer Chiefs (purpose & direction)
When is mirroring a better alternative to paraphrasing?
(Low trust/slow speed) Sometimes paraphrasing can be viewed as passive criticism, in which case mirroring would be a more neutral solution (repeating their words verbatim). New groups that are unfamiliar would benefit from the trust building effects of mirroring. Mirroring also speeds up slow moving discussion. Generally, the more the facilitator feels the need to establish neutrality, the more they should mirror.
Powerful speech
(being direct, making declarations, commanding, etc.) which are often viewed as competent/confident, though not necessarily more correct
Powerless speech
(disclaimers, excessive politeness, hesitations, etc.) are more likely to be interrupted, viewed as submissive, weak, etc.
Truth Decay
(the deterioration of critical thinking practices amidst the eruption of false information perpetuated
4 Main Consequences of Information Overload
1. Critical thinking impairment: separating wheat from chaff 2. Indecisiveness: conclusion irresoltion 3. Inattention: Difficulty concentrating 4. Diminished Creativity
3 Steps to Combat Group Polarization
1. Encourage a wide range of views on issues to be discussed in the group 2. Act as a devil's advocate 3. Discuss issues openly before taking a firm position
4 Ways to increase participation (EMGE)
1. Encourage contributions from low participators 2. Make issues and problems for discussion relevant to the interests of low participators 3. Give low participators responsibility for certain tasks 4. Establish a cooperative group climate
Stages of Groupthink
1. High Group cohesiveness 2. Organizational & situational conditions increase probability for "excessive concurrence seeking" 3. Excessive concurrence seeking gives rise to symptoms of groupthink 4. Result is defective decision-making 5. Low probability for successful group outcome
Symptoms of Groupthink
1. Illusion of unanimity 2. Illusion of invulnerability 3. Collective rationalizations 4. Direct pressure on dissenters 5. Self-appointed mind guards 6. Self-censorship 7. Belief in inherent morality of group 8. Stereotyping of outgroups
4 Objectives of the Facilitator in the Convergent Zone
1. help the group develop inclusive alternatives, 2. to synthesize the alternatives into an approach that will work for everyone, 3. to strengthen and refine the practical logic of that approach, 4. to plan it and bring it to life
Antecedent Conditions of Groupthink
1. highly cohesive group 2. leader preference for a certain decision 3. insulation of the group from qualified outside opinions
Creative Problem Solving - Brainstorming
A creative problem solving technique that generates plentiful ideas and enthusiastic participation. Some rules include encouraging wild ideas, don't evaluate while brainstorming, & expand on ideas of other group members. Ideally brainstorming is individual, then group, then individual again
Linking
A listening skill that invites a speaker to explain the relevance of a statement they just made.
Groan Zone Overview
After a period of divergent thinking, most groups inevitably enter a groan zone. Sifting through and understanding divergent ideas is hard, tedious, frustrating, and a positive feedback loop.
Asch's & Andrew's Studies
Asch's studies showed that when confronted with a majority belief different from one's own, most people will conform to the majority even if it is obviously wrong. Andrew's research goes on to say that the biggest predictor of conformity/nonconformity is ego involvement. Highly ego-involved people are less likely to conform with the group. Low ego involvement and high self monitoring makes it more likely to conform to group opinion
Look for teaching (NW)
Attentive to meaning of each event/happening
How is placemaking a tool for resistance
Because by collectively belonging, you resist the belonging of others
Specific Facilitation Techniques for Facilitating through the Divergent Zone
Chart writing, drawing people out, and validating
How are world cafes, deliberations, a tribal decisions different?
Deliberations come with pre-determined solution-options where you weigh drawbacks and benefits of each progressively. World cafes offer questions rather that facilitate dialogue between people where there is I-thou conversational creation of shared meaning. Tribal Decisions on the other hand, while closer to deliberations, are more formal, ritualled, and force "chiefs" to share the perspective of their designated direction instead of arguing their individual opinion like world cafes or deliberations. However, the ultimate goal of all of them is the creation of shared meaning.
How are world cafes, deliberations, a tribal decisions similar?
Deliberations, Tribal Decisions, and World Cafes are all structured contexts that facilitate shared meaning for the purpose of finding solutions to complex problems
Consequences of power imbalances (Rothwell)
Include bias against women and ethnic minorities, Leadership gap, and workplace bullying/blatant aggression.
Collective Inferential Errors
Inferences are conclusions about the unknown based on what is known. But individuals make inferential errors and these become magnified in a group
Fundamental problem for groups (Rothwell)
Information overload - occurs when the rate of information flow into a system and/or the complexity of that information exceeds the system's processing capacity
Relevance
Information should logically support claims made. Illogical arguments are irrelevant. Helps avoid the ad populum fallacy (basing claims on a popular opinion alone)
Information Underload
Information underload refers to an insufficient amount of information available for group decision making purposes, often occurring because a group member doesn't share critical information, resulting in poor quality decision making. This creates need for more openness in lines of communication
Making space for a quiet person
Inviting noticeably quiet group members to join in and participate. Not forcing them, but creating room.
Groupthink symptoms present in the challenger case study
Invulnerability (NASA's spectacular history), Rationalizations (discounting the engineers data), Morality (leaders ignored the moral consequences of their position even when warned)
Tracking
Keeping track of the various lines of thought going on simultaneously in a single discussion.
North East
Law Dog Chiefs (Integrity & Vitality)
Four Attentions that counterbalance the shields
Let little child play, be present, look for teaching, guards out
Good decisions begin with listening
Listening is required in a council setting that produces shared understanding, not just debate
Specific facilitation techniques for the groan zone
Listening skills like paraphrasing, drawing people out, empathizing, validating differences, encouraging questions, etc. are indispensable. Creating structured activities can also be helpful
What does Freire say about awakening love in community & hospitality work?
Love as a foundation of dialogue - a love for world and humans
What does Westoby & Dowling say about awakening love in community & hospitality work?
Love is necessary in community work to not become shallow, exploitative, and technical and to become transformative
6 Rules of conducting effective group meetings (DCPURD)
Meetings are necessary for effective communication and decision making but often facilitated poorly. To conduct them effectively...(1) Don't call a meeting unless there is no good alternative, (2) Contact every participant with the purpose, logistics, and instructions, (3) Prepare a clear agenda and distribute it to all participants a few days in advance (absence of an agenda is a primary cause of failed meetings), (4) Use procedural communication to accomplish group goals, (5) Reserve a few minutes at the end to determine whether the objectives of the meeting were accomplished, (6) Distribute the minutes of the meeting as soon as possible. It's important to note though that effective leadership/meetings is a group process (not just individual).
What troubled TransAlta employees about the negative assessments?
More commonly, it was the public manner of the negative assessments that troubled the employees
How should you design a question session? (4 Key elements)
Name the distinctions, give permission for unpopular answers, avoid advice and replace it with curiosity, and ask lower risk questions first.
Alternative to Brainstorming
Nominal group technique - another idea generating method where individuals work by themselves to create a list of ideas for a problem and then convene to vote on the ideas.
Deindividuation
Occurs when being in a large group causes a person to feel more aroused and anonymous. Has been known to lead to acts of violence, and can be lessened by increasing a person's private self-awareness.
Stacking
Ordering participants in a facilitation
Love allows us to transition form __________________________ to __________________
Ordinary community work & hospitality to extraordinary work
Gathering information
Output of groups is likely no better than the input available to members, so information gathering (research) should be a focused group effort.
South East
Peace Chiefs (Present condition & appreciation)
Why do people find Landmark forum valuable?
People find the Landmark forum valuable because it creates intense emotional reactions and belonging, and puts you in a context where you can evaluate yourself under stress.
Collective Effort
People get lazy if they don't expect their efforts to lead to personally valued outcomes, or if they don't think their effort will be instrumental in obtaining those outcomes
Emphasize information, not advocacy
Perspective sharing, not arguing for one side
Why study power?
Power is inescapable in human transactions...to ignore power would be strikingly inadequate when exploring communication in groups and teams. There is no virtue in exercising little power, and no group can achieve its goals without exercising some power.
What makes a question with great power?
Powerful questions cause us to become co-creators of our world when answering them. Powerful questions are ambiguous, personal, and evokes anxiety.
Why are questions an essential tool?
Questions create space for something new to emerge. Powerful questions, in their answering, produce accountability and commitment. Powerful questions open up the possibility for an alternative future
(Group Conformity) Social Exchange Theory
States that conformity is a strategic social act that allows the individual to obtain things they value from the group. The group may provide a satisfying social environment, prestige, or a sense of worth for the individual, so they may put aside even their own true beliefs for the group
Who is Ramtha, the Cro-Magnon Warrior?
Relates to the narrative about the FAA receiving corporate consulting/training from J.Z. Knight, a former cable television news woman turned new age guru. She was an initiate of the New Age Ramtha School of Enlightenment (Ramtha is a 35,000 year old Cro Magnon Warrior). The training subjected the FAA workers to physical and verbal abuse
Resistance Strategies
Resistance (as opposed to defiance) is often safer because its indirect and covert. Resistance strategies include sluggish/minimal effort, strategic stupidity, Conscious clumsiness, intentional confusion, fake forgetfulness, tactical tardiness, and purposeful procrastination
Paraphrasing
Saying in your own words what you think the speaker said. Fundamental to active listening. Is non-judgemental and hence validating, and is particularly useful when someone's thoughts are confusing
4 Shields of Human Wholeness & Balance
Shield of Warrior(ess), Shield of Little Child, Shield of Magical Child, Shield of Nurturer
What situations lend themselves best to each of these engagements (world cafe/deliberation/tribal council)?
Situations where a solution is required would lend themselves more to deliberations or tribal decisions where the focus eventually comes back to decision making, and can happen within a reasonable amount of time. If the situation demands bridging divides within a community, a world cafe would be more inviting and facilitate shared meaning in a less formal way.
Social Loafing
Social loafing is when individuals exert less effort in a group than they would if they worked alone
How you could adapt the tribal model for non-tribe decisions
Some of the cultural rituals associated with tribal decisions are not necessarily needed for a non-tribe context. There are other ways to maintain the importance and formality. But forcing turn-taking, wisdom-sharing, and large amounts of designated time are all important and valuable even in a non-tribe context
How to increase your power and be more assertive
Speak up first, offer possible solutions to problems, using wild suggestions/questions/humor to get creative juices flowing, etc. Assertiveness requires consideration of the needs of the self and other. Expertise/knowledgeability also increases one's power.
Process of the tribal council
Starting in the East and proceeding clockwise passing the talking stick for turn-taking, each chief presents their designated perspective for up to 10 minutes. After all chiefs have gone and wisdom has been accumulated, there may be consensus. If there's not chiefs can either suspend the council and take another attempt later, or designate a chief to make a decision if its pressing
(Group conformity) Balance Theory
States that the individual strives for balance or consistency. If the individual believes the group has worth goals and is composed of people with good intentions & values, they may find it painful to recognize that their views differ. Rather than reject the group or realign perceptions of majority's wisdom, they may elect to go along with others. They may even convince themselves that the majority is correct to maintain internal balance
Free Ride Effect
Suggests that people try to benefit from the efforts of others when they can get away with it
What antecedent conditions and symptoms of groupthink existed with the Bay of Pigs case study?
Symptoms include illusion of invulnerability, direct pressure on dissenters, and collective rationalizations. There was significant inferential error due to misinformation as well as time constraints that created additional pressure leading to the group think.
Note taking & group memory
Taking visible notes of people's ideas provides participants with a group memory which strengthens full participation in numerous ways. First, it's validating. Second, having a group memory extends the limits of the human brain by keeping memory on paper, freeing the mind to continue to listen and think
How to avoid groupthink
Test assumptions about facts, values, and people. Aggressively seek outside information & resources. Critically evaluate team decisions & actions. Check up on transactional processes (norms for openness? Right to dissent?)
Elements of spiritual training in the TransAlta/BDA consulting?
The BDA trainers were distributing daily prayers to be read
The Krone Program at Pac Bell
The Krone program at pac bell was another new age cultish corporate employee training where they tried to replace employee vocabulary, excessively monitor and control conformity, etc. Has significant parallels to BDA at TransAlta
Caveat of Powerful vs. Powerless Speech Indicators
The caveat though is that context matters (there are cultural and gendered differences)
Transformation and restoration occur through power of language and how we speak and listen to each other - but that's abstract. How do we do this? (Block)
We do this through conversations within a restorative context where the generosity, gifts, and relationship with others is transformative in that of itself. Conversations of healing, accountability, and commitment are best produced by a value for questions over answers.
Which theorists discuss love in dialogue, peacemaking, & shadows?
Westoby & Dowling
Divergent Zone Overview
When a diverse group begins work on a complex problem, people's views aren't unified, but we need creativity to solve complicated problems. Ultimately, ideas are divergent.
Sucker Effect
When people don't want to get taken advantage of but also suspect others may be taking a free ride
West
Women Chiefs (Maintenance & Balance)
Helping people listen to each other
Working towards mutual understanding by asking questions that support people to interact with each other's ideas. Also increases group cohesion.
Summarize Vonneguts story of emplacement
a New York man has subtle daily social engagements highlighting how they play a role in emplacing that person in that space
"Stop running your racket" - (Marshall, Est in the Business)
a phrase used to demand unquestioned obedience, i.e. do what your told and don't make excuses.