Chapter 10: Small Group Communication
Ethics + Improving Small Group Comm
-Comm authentically -Listen w/ an open mind -Focus on strengths of all group members -Encourage participation -Highlight commonalities Improving: -Cultivate a collectivist attitude -Strive for cohesion w/ group members -Build trust + cohesion -Acknowledge all group achievements -Remind the group of common interests + backgrounds -Notice when a member might be feeling unappreciated
Balancing Task/Relational Interaction
-Equal participation -Consensus decision-making style -Cooperative conflict style -Respectful communication style
The Importance of Small Group Communication
-Fact of life -Grouphate is common -Primary and secondary groups -Inevitability of groups -College performance -Career success -Personal life
Advantages of Small Group Work
-Higher quality decisions -Stimulates creativity -Social facilitation (work harder when others are around) -Promotes critical thinking
Leadership
-Leaders are made, not born -"An influence relationship among leaders and followers who intend real changes and outcomes that reflect their shared purposes" Theories: Trait, functional, style, transformational
Individual, Small Group + Society
-Power -Cultural Diversity + Small Groups (less likely to fall into group think) 1. Innovation 2. Performance (efficacy) 3. Group processes (who looks like a leader?) 4. Group enjoyment
Technology + Group Communication
-Tech can enhance positive comm -Types of group-oriented technology: Virtual Meetings Group Support Software Combinations
Disadvantages of Small Group Work
-Time consuming -Might result in premature decisions (just want to finish) -Silences divergent opinions -Not satisfying when group members dominate or withdraw
Use the Problem-Solving Agenda
1. Define/delineate the problem 2. Analyze the problem 3. Identify alternative solutions 4. Evaluate proposed solutions 5. Choose the best solution
Decision Making Phases
1. Orientation and Primary Tension 2. Conflict and Secondary Tension 3. Emergence 4. Reinforcement
Charismatic Leadership
A leadership style in which extremely self-confident leaders inspire unusual dedication to themselves by relying on their strong personalities and charm
Transformational Leadership
A leadership style that empowers group members to work independently from the leader by encouraging group cohesion
Servant Leadership
A leadership style that seeks to ensure that other people's highest priority needs are being served to increase teamwork and personal involvement
Groupthink
A negative, and potentially disastrous, group process characterized by "excessive concurrence thinking"
Trait Theory
A theory that assumes leaders are born, not made
Functional (situational) Theory
A theory that assumes leadership behaviors can be learned SHARED LEADERSHIP: a type of leadership style in which functional leadership is extended to an organizational level; all members are = and share responsibility
Small Group Communication
Communication among a small number of people who share a common purpose or goal, who feel connected to each other, and who coordinate their behavior -Can influence each other -(5-7) or (3-16)? -A group where everyone knows everyone else
Secondary Tension
Conflict or tension found in the second or conflict phase of the decision-making process
Secondary Groups
Groups that meet principally to solve problems (jury)
Primary Groups
Groups that provide members w/ a sense of belonging and affection (family)
Analysis Paralysis
Potential pitfall in small group interaction; occurs when excessive analysis prevents a group from moving toward a solution
Individual Roles
Role that focuses more on individual's own interests and needs than on those of the group -Dysfunctional to the group process
Task Role
Roles that are directly related to the accomplishment of group goals -Seeking, processing, and evaluating info
Relational Roles
Roles that help establish a group's social atmosphere
Grouphate
The distaste and aversion that people feel toward working in groups
Reinforcement Phase
The final phase of the decision making process when group members reach consensus, and members feel a sense of accomplishment
Group Processes
The methods, including communication, by which a group accomplishes a task
Group Roles
The shared expectations group members have regarding each individual's communication behavior in the group
Emergence Phase
The third phase of the decision making process; occurs when group members express a cooperative attitude
Primary Tension
The uncertainty commonly felt in the beginning phase of decision making
Style Theory
Theory that asserts that a leader's manner or style determines his or her success 1. Authoritarian: leader who takes charge, makes all the decisions, and dictates strategies and work tasks 2. Democratic: leader whose style is characterized by considerable input from group members 3. Laissez-faire: a leadership style characterized by complete freedom for the group in making decisions
Brainstorm
To generate as many ideas as possible w/ out critiquing them