Page 147 - Effective group discussion theory and practice by Adams, Katherine H. Brilhart, John K. Galanes, Gloria J
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130                 Chapter 5


                                    Recap: A Quick Review

                                         embers bring their various personal characteristics and attitudes into a group as
                                    Minputs and then begin to interact with one another; in so doing, they shape the
                                    group’s roles.
                                      1.  A role represents the clusters of behaviors a member performs in the group. Formal
                                       (positional) roles result from specific positions that members fill and typically are
                                       described in a group’s bylaws or operating procedures. Informal (behavioral) roles
                                       result from members’ behaviors and evolve from the group’s interactions.
                                     2.  A behavior is any action a member performs; a behavioral function is the effect of
                                       that behavior on the group. Telling a joke (the behavior) may be positive (e.g., if it
                                       relieves tension) or negative (e.g., if it makes fun of another member).
                                     3.  Informal roles emerge from the members’ interactions with one another. As a
                                       member acts, others reinforce (or not) that person’s actions. When the actions are
                                       reinforced, that member will continue to perform those functions. When the actions
                                       are not reinforced, the member will search for behaviors that will be more valued by
                                       the others.
                                     4.  Members’ behaviors can be classified into three categories: task functions, which
                                       primarily affect the group’s task; maintenance (or relationship-oriented) functions,
                                       which serve to strengthen relationships among members; and self-centered func-
                                       tions, which serve the individual member’s needs ahead of the group’s. Behaviors
                                       can have simultaneous effects in more than one category.
                                     5.  Members of actual groups readily acknowledge the contributions of task roles to
                                       the group’s work, but do not always recognize the value of maintenance roles and
                                       do not always perceive the negative effects of self-centered roles.
                                     6.  Members generally belong to more than one group simultaneously, which can
                                       create conflicts in expectations. In managing roles that compete for a member’s
                                       time and energy, talking about the importance of both sets of roles and demon-
                                       strating willingness to make sacrifices help a member balance competing role
                                       demands.





                                   separated, their theater roles from their work/family roles in two ways with respect to
                                   time. First, during the day, work and family roles took precedence, but at night, the
                                   theater role prevailed. Second, they put clear time boundaries around the theater roles
                                   by committing to them for a fixed—in this case, six weeks—time period, after which
                                   those roles would end. In the ad team, Marija became the president of her statewide
                                   Advertising Club, but she knew this role would last only one year. Members integrate
                                   their roles by functioning in multiple roles simultaneously. During the year Marija was
                                   Ad Club president, she traveled across the state, networked with many people, and
                                   learned several new ways of analyzing media markets—which directly related to her
                                   function as media buyer on the ad team. Thus, she was able to integrate both roles for
                                   a period of time.









          gal37018_ch05_109_134.indd   130                                                              3/28/18   12:35 PM
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