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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Meetings: Forums for Problem Solving 11 CHAPTER Chapter Objectives This Multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: Any public performance or display, including transmission of any image over a network; Preparation of any derivative work, including the extraction, in whole or in part, of any images; Any rental, lease, or lending of the program. 1.Evaluate how individual, group, and organizational goals influence a meeting. 2.Create an agenda and adapt to various meeting formats. 3.Use situational knowledge to prepare for a meeting. 4.Develop/employ critical thinking skills to improve communication during a meeting. 5.Choose appropriate problem-solving methods to achieve goals. 6.Engage in effective decision making. 7.Recognize what triggers anxiety in group situation and improves your handling of it. 8.Evaluate group performances objectively.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Goal Setting Agenda: Guide that specifies what is to be discussed, when, in what order, and for how long. Roll Call: Attendance check. Quorum: Number of members required to be present for a group to conduct business officially. Reading the Minutes: Summarization of what took place in previous group meetings.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Goal Setting, cont. Special Committees: Temporary subgroups created to look into short-term or specific problems. Standing Committees: Permanent subgroups that concentrate on long-term developments in broad areas. Unfinished Business/New Business: Topics that were not agreed on at earlier meetings.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Goals Organizational Goals: Set at upper levels of an organization’s hierarchy and describe pathways to excellence. Group Goals: Goals that serve the mission and purpose of the group itself. Process Goals: Goals that attempt to improve the working of the group itself. Individual Goals: Goals that group members have in addition to the group’s stated goals.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Situational Knowledge: Preparing for the Meeting
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon
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Situational Knowledge: Developing Critical Skills
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Analysis The process of tearing apart an issue and examining its component parts to see how they relate to the whole.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Reasoning Ability to pull various data together and draw sound conclusions from them. Deductive Reasoning: Moving from general truths to specific conclusions. Syllogism: 3-part argument containing a general truth, a related claim, and a conclusion. Inductive Reasoning: Moving from specific statements to general conclusions. Example Reasoning: Making conclusions based on collecting specific cases and then making a generalization based on them.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Reasoning, cont. Sign Reasoning: Drawing conclusions from simple observations. Hasty Generalization: Making conclusions based on small or nonrepresentative samples of data. Comparative Reasoning: Pulling together 2 examples and assuming that is true in the first case is also true in the second case. Causal Reasoning: Asserting that 1 factor is strong enough to produce an effect in another factor. Asking: “Why did that happen?”
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Interpretation & Evaluation Interpretation: An extension of causal reasoning. Asking “Why did that happen” + “What does that mean?” Evaluation: Making judgments about information or data.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Communication Competence: Problem Solving
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Problem Solving Defining a problem and generating solutions. 3 necessary qualities for competent problem solving: Variety: Providing differing perspectives of the problem. Simplicity: Arranging ideas logically and checking for repetition and relevance. Usefulness: Focusing energies on ideas that will most likely result in the right direction.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Reflective Thinking 5-step process whose success depends on each member’s willingness to participate. Introduce the Problem. Define and Analyze the Problem. Problem recognition Development of problem statement Exploration Internal Summary Establish Criteria. Overall strength Resources Ethics Generate Possible Solutions. Evaluate Possible Solutions.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Nominal Group Technique (NGT) Allows groups to discuss problems and solutions in a relatively structured setting. Preparation Silent generation of ideas Round-robin recording Discussion Voting
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon
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Delphi Technique Uses questionnaires to collect opinions and judgments from experts, who usually remain anonymous.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon
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Decision-Making Options Consensus: Unanimous agreement among group members concerning a particular decision. Voting: Imposing the will of the majority (in most cases). Risks having some members uncommitted to the decision hold a negative attitude toward the other members.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Anxiety Management During Meetings Potential Causes: Closed forum vs. open discussion. Do not know other participants. Diversity (different backgrounds and communication styles). When the objective is to resolve conflict or mediate serious arguments.
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Copyright © 2008 Allyn & Bacon Evaluation Group Evaluation: Evaluating the effectiveness of the group. Informational: Concerned with the task that the group is working on. Procedural: Looks at how well the group’s activities and communication are coordinated. Interpersonal: Emphasis is on how well the members of the group work with one another. Individual Evaluation: Evaluating the effectiveness of individual group members. Group Behavior Inventory: Identifies strengths and weaknesses of group behavior.
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