Page 128 - Effective group discussion theory and practice by Adams, Katherine H. Brilhart, John K. Galanes, Gloria J
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The Members and Their Roles              111













                            ©Frank Gaertner/Shutterstock                                  As groups get larger, they

                                                                                          are harder to coordinate,
                                                                                          have less equal
                                                                                          participation rates, and are
                                                                                          less satisfying than smaller
                                                                                          groups.



                     Thelen’s principle of least-sized groups: A group should be as small as possible, so   Least-Sized Group
                     long as it has all the expertise and diverse points of view necessary to complete the   The principle that the
                     task well. 4                                                         ideal group contains
                        Somehow, we must strike a balance between diversity and size. A tiny group of   as few members as
                     only three members may feel constrained and tense,  but a large group may feel   possible so long as
                                                                 5
                     chaotic because it is much more complex. Larger groups have more uneven partic-  all necessary
                                                                       6
                     ipation, with a tendency for one person to do more talking.  In addition, leader-  perspectives and
                     ship becomes more centralized and formal, with leaders having to focus on keeping   skills are
                     order. Member satisfaction  and cohesiveness  decrease, but  competitiveness,   represented.
                     aggression, withdrawal, and fragmentation of work increase.  These negative
                                                                          7
                     effects can be overcome with a teambuilding program,  which we discuss in
                                                                     8
                     Chapter 8.
                        Other factors being equal, a group of three to seven members is best for partici-
                     pant satisfaction and cohesiveness, with some advantage for smaller groups.  Groups
                                                                                 9
                     of three to seven were much more productive and advanced as a team than groups of
                     nine or more members, but smaller groups of three or four members were the most
                     productive and advanced with five being the ideal number. This size is small enough
                     for informal interaction, gives everyone a chance to speak up, keeps down social loaf-
                     ing (nonparticipation), and makes consensus easier to achieve, yet provides the diverse
                     information and points of view needed for quality decisions. In practice, many groups
                     are larger for reasons that have little to do with efficiency or effectiveness (such as for
                     political reasons). Our advertising group was the perfect size for effective group work.


                     Personal Traits
                     A small group’s most important resource is its members. Your personal traits are
                     major factors that help determine whether a group succeeds or fails. Hirokawa and his
                     colleagues analyzed stories group members told to explain why groups succeed or









          gal37018_ch05_109_134.indd   111                                                              3/28/18   12:35 PM
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