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Groups vs. Teams
 
teamwork

Often groups of people work together to accomplish a task, but they are not necessarily functioning as a team. Groups of people working together who have not developed into a team typically have the following characteristics:

  • A leader who is appointed by an administrator or other outside source
  • An over-specific and limited task or mission with only short-term assignments
  • Particular members who regularly exit and re-enter the group
  • Members who bring their own information which they may not contribute
  • Members who have little or no concern about the group as a whole
  • Delegated tasks which are carried out very independently
  • Meetings that are only used to report on those individually performed tasks
  • Decision-making by several poorly-specified means which may or may not include consensus.

While the amount of time that group members spend on their task is not necessarily critical; and while group members do not have to be full time in order to perform as a team; effective teams typically do have the following characteristics:

  • They share responsibility and rotate leadership
  • Their members stay while tasks come and go
  • They develop over time, going through a series of predictable stages
  • Their members are concerned about the whole team and its functioning
  • They use meeting times to discuss, decide and do real work.
  • Consensus is valued and well utilized.
 
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This curriculum was funded by grant #H 133B001200 from the National Institute of Disability and Research, U.S. Department of Education
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