RemNote Community
Community

Study Guide

📖 Core Concepts Teamwork – collaborative effort of a group to reach a common goal efficiently. Shared Goal – the unifying objective that aligns every member’s actions. Interdependence – members rely on each other to complete tasks; fuels trust and risk‑taking. Bounded & Stable – a team has defined membership and persists long enough to build relationships. Roles – clearly defined responsibilities give each member a purpose and reduce overlap. Teamwork Processes – three categories: Transition (planning), Action (execution), Interpersonal (relationships). Tuckman Model – stages of team development: Forming → Storming → Norming → Performing. Leadership Balance – effective leaders are both task‑oriented and relationship‑oriented, model collaboration, and clarify roles. --- 📌 Must Remember Strong Cohesion → Higher Performance – cohesive teams outperform less‑cohesive ones. Open Communication = Less Conflict – transparent dialogue prevents interpersonal disputes. Social Loafing – tendency for individuals to reduce effort in a group; watch for uneven workload. Groupthink – harmony over critical thinking; counter by diversifying group and demanding alternatives. Transition Processes: task analysis, goal specification, strategy formulation, result‑oriented evaluation. Action Processes: progress monitoring, system monitoring, team monitoring (backup behavior), task coordination. Interpersonal Processes: conflict management, motivation/confidence building, affect management. Tuckman Stages – performance peaks at the Performing stage; low teamwork in Storming predicts failure. --- 🔄 Key Processes Transition Phase Task analysis → identify needed work. Goal specification → set clear, shared objectives. Strategy formulation → decide how to achieve goals. Result‑oriented evaluation → assess outcomes against goals. Action Phase (while working) Monitoring progress → track individual contributions. System monitoring → watch tools, resources, environment. Team monitoring & backup → step in when a teammate stalls. Coordination → synchronize tasks to avoid overlap. Interpersonal Phase (continuous) Conflict management → address disagreements early. Motivation & confidence building → reinforce effort, celebrate wins. Affect management → regulate emotions, maintain positive climate. --- 🔍 Key Comparisons Forming vs. Storming Forming: low risk, members “play it safe,” minimal conflict. Storming: high competition for power, frequent conflict, low teamwork. Transition vs. Action Processes Transition: planning, occurs between action periods. Action: execution, occurs during work on goals. Social Loafing vs. Healthy Competition Social Loafing: reduced effort, harms performance. Healthy Competition: motivates, raises overall output. Groupthink vs. Diverse Decision‑Making Groupthink: suppresses dissent, leads to poor decisions. Diverse groups + alternative‑suggestion rule: mitigates conformity pressure. --- ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “Teamwork = No Conflict.” Conflict is natural; effective teams manage it, not avoid it. “More members = Better performance.” Larger teams increase coordination cost and risk of social loafing. “Leaders only give orders.” Leaders must also model collaborative behavior and balance task/relationship focus. “Once a team reaches Performing, nothing changes.” Teams can regress (e.g., new members) and must sustain processes. --- 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “Gear‑train” model – think of each member as a gear; if one stalls, the whole machine slows. “Pipeline” view of processes – transition → action → interpersonal; each stage feeds the next like a production line. “Cohesion‑Performance Curve” – small increases in cohesion yield big jumps in performance up to a plateau. --- 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Highly autonomous experts may require less coordination but need strong shared goals to avoid duplication. Rapidly formed crisis teams skip early Tuckman stages; they rely heavily on strong leadership and clear roles. Cultural contexts where hierarchy is valued may limit open communication; adapt conflict‑management style accordingly. --- 📍 When to Use Which Choose Transition Processes when the team is starting a new project or re‑planning after a setback. Deploy Action Processes during steady‑state work to maintain momentum and catch deviations early. Activate Interpersonal Processes whenever tension rises, motivation dips, or morale suffers. Apply Tuckman Interventions: Forming: intensive role clarification, team‑building icebreakers. Storming: conflict‑resolution training, clear decision rules. Norming: reinforce norms, celebrate early wins. Performing: focus on continuous improvement, stretch goals. --- 👀 Patterns to Recognize “Drop in coordination → rise in conflict” – a quick cue that communication channels are breaking down. “High interdependence + low trust = risk‑taking hesitation.” – watch for stalled decisions. “Repeated social loafing signs → need for accountability mechanisms.” – e.g., task logs, peer reviews. “Groupthink emerges when dissent is absent and consensus is rushed.” – flag meetings with no objections. --- 🗂️ Exam Traps Distractor: “Team cohesion always harms creativity.” – False; cohesion supports performance but can limit dissent if unchecked. Distractor: “Forming stage has the highest teamwork level.” – Incorrect; performing stage is highest. Distractor: “Social loafing is a benefit of teamwork.” – Misleading; it is a drawback. Distractor: “Leaders only need to be task‑oriented.” – Wrong; relationship orientation is essential for trust and motivation. Distractor: “Transition processes happen during action.” – They occur between action periods. ---
or

Or, immediately create your own study flashcards:

Upload a PDF.
Master Study Materials.
Start learning in seconds
Drop your PDFs here or
or