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Superteams Communication Ethics and Group Work Essay

Pages:3 (1126 words)

Sources:3

Subject:Communication

Topic:Group Dynamics

Document Type:Essay

Document:#32721088


group characteristics I have previously encountered include: a willingness to listen, an ability to define objectives, the ability to delegate work, a willingness to help others, a commitment to communication, the ability to stay on task, and respect for the other members of the group. The work group characteristics I have previously encountered include: a refusal to listen to others, arguing, failure to stay on task, and lack of respect for other group members. The most beneficial group skill I have encountered is the willingness to listen to other group members; this fundamental skill enables communication and makes it more likely that all group members will be able to contribute to the group dynamic (Lumsden et al., 2010). The willingness to listen is also related to the ability to ask additional questions for information gathering, which not only improves the transactional processes of the group, but also helps define the group's task and keep members on-task. On the flip-side, groups with members who are unwilling to listen to one another are, in my experience, the least constructive of all groups; even groups where members argue can be more productive than groups where people fail to listen. Employing active listening skills can always improve group processes. As a result, when forming groups in the future I will be very cognizant of what type of listening skills the potential members demonstrate prior to becoming group members.

Discussion Questions Unit Two

The ethical issues raised by the examples provided are significant, but manageable. For example, Karl and Tamara's desire to add additional money to the budget violate Clarissa's moral code, and her failure to discuss it means that she will almost certainly end up in a group that she feels is behaving in an immoral manner. However, had she engaged in the type of active listening I suggested in a prior discussion and questioned Karl and Tamara about that desire, she may have found that Karl and Tamara were not suggesting they engage in any type of subterfuge, but that they include an incidentals line-item on the proposed budget, which would eliminate the potential ethical conflict. It is difficult to determine whether there is an ethical issue surrounding Ron's silence. It the team members are behaving in a way that makes Ron feel as if they look down upon him, then a broader ethical issue, discrimination, may exist. However, Ron may believe they have those feelings without them actually feeling that way. Absent productive communication, it is not only impossible to tell if an ethical conflict exists, but also the nature of that conflict. Sarah's conflict may not be an ethical one; she could tell the group that they need additional information, why she believes that they need it, and ask them to delegate fact-finding responsibility to different members, which would turn the meeting into a productive use of time.

Discussion Questions Unit Three

The superteam model characteristics that seem most evident in the case study are that they are analytical, tenacious, and inventive (Lumsden et al., 2010). In fact, she emphasized the important role that analysis played in the group structure. The group was also a virtual group, which is compatible with the…


Sample Source(s) Used

References

BLT Research. (Unk). Crop circle science. Retrieved February 6, 2016 from BLT Research

website: http://www.bltresearch.com/

Lumsden, G., Lumsden, D., & Wiethoff, C. (2010). Communicating in groups and teams:

Sharing leadership. (5th ed.). Boston, MA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning.

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