
From the moment the teams were assigned students needs to begin to establish a sense of teamwork and bond as a group. It has been my experience that teams that meet regularly in the beginning of the semester communicate much more effectively during the entire semester and have fewer problems.
I realize that you each have busy schedules, however I urge you to meet in person, or in an online chat room once a week. As the semester progresses you may need to meet less and use email more as you become more cohesive as a team.
First Team Meeting Agenda
When you meet in class today I would like you to cover the following issues
I have posted teamwork guidelines which may prove helpful. Please review it.
Team Stages
Teams usually go through stages as they develop into a cohesive
unit. Not every team goes through every stage. Some stages
may be passed through quickly, others not. Each team is
different. Here is a brief description of four stages you
might expect as you move from individuals on a team to a
team of individuals.
Stage 1
Excitement and anxiety. Excitement
about the project and being on the team. Anxiety about whether
and how you will fit into or contribute to the team.
Defining the task and acceptable group behavior. Defining why the team exists, what its purpose is. Defining
what is acceptable behavior in this group, the rules of
conduct.
Discussing things not considered relevant. This happens
because the team members are still trying to get to know
each other and are struggling with defining the team's purpose
and rules.
Stage 2
Realizing the full scope of the task
and beginning to feel overwhelmed. Team members now
know just what they've taken on, how big the project is.
At this point it looks like it's too big or there's too
much to accomplish before the deadline.
Disunity. Individuals feel that others are doing
too much or not doing enough or have all of the "easy" or
"fun stuff" to do.
Arguing with each other even though there is basic
agreement on real issues.
When this phase hits, please take a deep breath, remain calm, and remember that each team member is trying as hard as they can.
Stage 3
Acceptance of others' strengths and weaknesses. Each
team member knows what the other members can or can't do,
are good at or don't do well. The team capitalizes on each
member's strengths and minimizes members' weaknesses.
Loyalty to team. Team members support each other
and defend the team from any outside attacks, both real
or perceived. Team members also talk about the team and
its members with pride.
Lots of work starts getting done. This is how you
can tell you've reached Stage 4. Enthusiasm is high, tasks
get accomplished, and visible progress is being made. Being
on the team is fun!
How does a team get to Stage 4?
It takes time and effort. Some "teams" never make it, but
most do. Reaching Stage 4 does not mean that all members
like each other or are friends. What it does mean is that
the individual members have worked through a number of issues
and have concluded that the team's goal is worth accomplishing
and that being on this team is the way to do it.
The following is a checklist of sorts to help you have a
successful team experience. Doing all the things on the
list can't guarantee success, but not doing them will almost
certainly ensure failure. The list is not exhaustive, so
feel free to add your own items.