Friday, February 13, 2009

Scheduling Teamwork: Hit or Miss?

One of the benefits of online learning is that you can complete assignments within your own schedule. If evenings are good for you, you can do the required work in the evenings. If weekends are your only free time, it's possible to catch up on assignments and do most of the work on weekends. This type of asynchronous environment enables all sorts of people to take classes and continue their education when it may not have otherwise been possible.

This is all well and good when the assignments are based on individual completion, but what happens when the team/group assignments come around? All of a sudden you have people with different schedules, preferences, and external demands that prohibit coming together at the same time to get work done. How can teams function in this situation? What happens when the "team" work becomes a conglomeration of "individual" work thrown together by one or more team members?

First, consensus is hard to gain - when a team tries to make a decision and members are at different stages of making the decision, or getting involved in the decision, one might plow ahead while another is left in the dust. Second, the project becomes heavily influenced by the ideas of one or two team members instead of having major contributions from all members of the group. While there is still opportunity for later contributors to add to the project, if they wait too long, there is not ample time to change the direction that the initial members started going.

One way a team member might deal with this situation is to edit out anything they don't like and replace with their own ideas, but this is not a good suggestion if they are looking to gain the respect and trust of their group. Another option is to assume the role of editor, as opposed to researcher or writer, contributing to the team project in a different way due to their schedule restraints. Is this a problem? Not necessarily, as long as each of the team members feel that everyone is pulling their weight in some way throughout the project - problems come when the "late comers" can't figure out what's going on and then leave the work to the ones that started it.

If you think about the real world, however, you may find that virtual work teams operate in much the same way. While they may find the time to get together on a conference call, most of the time is working on their own, as they are able. Some have more time than others, contribute more than others, or in different ways. The leader often does most of the work in guiding and forming the process, but may not always be the one to tie up the loose ends. At the end of the day, one might say that the most important part of a team is the result they produce, which is valuable, but have they increased or decreased their chance of working well together again? That is a question only the process (not the result) can answer.

1 comment:

  1. Jennifer,

    Insightful reflection! Yes, the product is important, but in this course the process and the learning about this process is even more important (considered in the point allocation of the final product, too).

    Would love to hear more on the specifics on how the group is going. ~ Datta Kaur

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