Deck 8: Team Dynamics

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Question
Teams are groups of two or more people who have equal influence over each other regarding the team's goals and means of achieving those goals.
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Question
Under stressful or dangerous conditions, people are more likely to stay together than disperse, even when the other people are strangers.
Question
Employees are more motivated in teams because they are accountable to fellow team members who also monitor their performance.
Question
All teams exist to fulfill some purpose, either for the organization or for its members.
Question
Social loafing is more common among people with collectivist values.
Question
Social loafing is least common in situations where team members work alone towards a common output.
Question
Team members are held together by their interdependence and need for collaboration to achieve common goals.
Question
Organizational behavior scholars have concluded that employees always work better in teams than alone.
Question
Process losses are the resources expended to develop and maintain an effective team.
Question
Teams typically provide better customer service.
Question
Our desire for informal groups is mostly influenced by our drive to defend.
Question
Task forces are temporary groups that typically investigate a particular problem and disband when the decision is made.
Question
All teams are groups, but some types of groups are not teams.
Question
All groups are teams, but some types of teams are not groups.
Question
Some informal groups exist primarily to satisfy the drive to bond.
Question
Employees in a department are considered a team only when they directly interact and coordinate work activities with each other.
Question
Brooks' Law states that, "Whatever can go wrong in groups will, so one should be prepared for it."
Question
Teams are groups with some degree of task interdependence and a common objective.
Question
Informal groups exist primarily to complete tasks for the organization that management doesn't know about.
Question
Social identity theory partly explains why people join informal groups.
Question
Team effectiveness refers to how well a team accomplishes its objectives for the organization, even if this undermines the team's ability to survive for future tasks.
Question
Companies with the best team dynamics are more likely to have team-based rewards and encourage interaction among team members.
Question
Teams develop their first real sense of cohesion during the norming stage of team development.
Question
A team's effectiveness is partly measured by how well its members' needs are fulfilled.
Question
Reciprocal interdependence is the highest level of task interdependence in organizations.
Question
The five most frequently mentioned characteristics of effective team members are communicating, comforting, conflict resolution, coordinating, and cooperating.
Question
Diverse teams have faultlines that may split the team into subgroups along gender, ethnic or other dimensions.
Question
The optimal team size exists when the team is as small as possible, yet has enough people to accomplish the task.
Question
The longer team members work together, the better they develop common mental models to help them complete the work together.
Question
In effective teams, each member must possess the full set of competencies to perform the team's entire task alone.
Question
Communicating, comforting and conflict resolution are task related characteristics of effective team members.
Question
Team members typically hold one or more formal roles in the team as well as roles that they informally fulfill at various times.
Question
Students experience pooled interdependence when they are lined up at the laser printers trying to get their assignments done just before a class deadline.
Question
The norming stage of team development is marked by interpersonal conflict as team members compete for leadership and other positions on the team.
Question
Teams are generally more effective when the task is complex and lacks definition.
Question
During the adjourning stage of team development, team members shift their attention away from relationships and instead focus mainly on completing the task.
Question
Teams are well suited when complex work can be divided into more specialized roles.
Question
Teams are best suited for tasks with low interdependence among team members.
Question
Diverse teams take longer to work through the stages of team development than do heterogeneous teams.
Question
Forming, storming, and norming are the three main levels of task interdependence.
Question
Team cohesiveness decreases with increased interaction because there are more chances for conflicts to emerge.
Question
Cohesiveness tends to be higher in teams where the office design facilitates communication among team members.
Question
When highly cohesive teams have norms that conflict with organizational goals, team performance is reduced.
Question
Team members rarely conform to team norms unless other team members apply reinforcement or punishment.
Question
Knowledge-based trust is based on the belief that the other party will deliver its promises because punishments would be applied if they fail to deliver those promises.
Question
The only way to alter team norms is to disband the group.
Question
Identification-based trust is the most robust or sturdy form of trust in work relationships.
Question
Team roles are typically negotiated among team members.
Question
Trust occurs when we have positive expectations about another party's intentions and actions toward us in situations involving vulnerability.
Question
Calculus-based trust is based on the belief that the other party will deliver its promises because punishments would be applied if they fail to deliver those promises.
Question
One way to change team norms in existing teams is to explicitly discuss the counterproductive norms with team members using persuasive communication strategies.
Question
Highly cohesive teams invariably perform organizational objectives better than teams with moderate or low cohesiveness.
Question
Team building interventions often fail because many times they are offered as a three-day jump-start rather than an ongoing process.
Question
One advantage of team building activities is that they can be used as general solutions to general team problems.
Question
Some team-building interventions clarify the team's performance goals and increase the team's motivation to accomplish these goals.
Question
Knowledge-based trust develops over time.
Question
Diversity among team members tends to undermine cohesion.
Question
When people join teams, they usually begin with a very low level of trust in the other team members.
Question
To maximize cohesiveness, the team should be as small as possible without jeopardizing its ability to accomplish the task.
Question
Norms are the informal rules and standards established by a team to regulate the behavior of its members.
Question
Departments are considered teams only when:

A)they operate without any supervisor.
B)everyone in the department has the same set of skills.
C)employees directly interact with each other and coordinate work activities.
D)all employees are located in the same physical area.
E)all of the above conditions exist.
Question
Evaluation apprehension is most common in meetings attended by people with different levels of status or expertise.
Question
Production blocking occurs when employees are unable to complete their tasks because they spend too much time in meetings.
Question
Which of the following statements about teams and groups is FALSE?

A)Some teams exist without any goal or purpose.
B)A team can have dozens of members.
C)Departments are teams when employees interact with each other.
D)All members of a work group have influence, although some may have more influence than others.
E)A group always requires some form of communication among its members.
Question
In most self-directed work teams, the supervisor assigns tasks that individual team members perform.
Question
The nominal group technique involves a three-stage process.
Question
Electronic brainstorming significantly reduces the problem of production blocking.
Question
Teams have which of the following features?

A)Two or more people
B)Perceive themselves as a social entity
C)Exist to fulfill some purpose
D)All of the above
E)Only 'A' and 'C'
Question
One of the rules of brainstorming is that no one is allowed to piggyback or build on the ideas of other team members.
Question
The nominal group technique tends to produce more and better ideas than do traditional interacting groups.
Question
The trust that new team members feel towards their teammates is fragile and easily weakened.
Question
The nominal group technique is essentially a variation of brainstorming.
Question
The nominal group technique removes the problems of evaluation apprehension and production blocking.
Question
Constructive conflict occurs when team members hold different opinions or assumptions and debate the issues through an open, healthy dialogue.
Question
Virtual teams are usually permanent functional groups that communicate mainly through weekly face-to-face meetings.
Question
Having groupthink and evaluation apprehension are two characteristics of effective decision-making teams.
Question
Self-directed work teams plan, organize, and control activities with little or no direct involvement of supervisors.
Question
An important rule in brainstorming is that no one is allowed to evaluate or criticize another team member's ideas.
Question
Members of self-directed work teams have enriched and enlarged jobs.
Question
One symptom of groupthink is that the team feels comfortable with risky decisions because possible weaknesses are suppressed or glossed over.
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Deck 8: Team Dynamics
1
Teams are groups of two or more people who have equal influence over each other regarding the team's goals and means of achieving those goals.
False
2
Under stressful or dangerous conditions, people are more likely to stay together than disperse, even when the other people are strangers.
True
3
Employees are more motivated in teams because they are accountable to fellow team members who also monitor their performance.
True
4
All teams exist to fulfill some purpose, either for the organization or for its members.
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k this deck
5
Social loafing is more common among people with collectivist values.
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k this deck
6
Social loafing is least common in situations where team members work alone towards a common output.
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7
Team members are held together by their interdependence and need for collaboration to achieve common goals.
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8
Organizational behavior scholars have concluded that employees always work better in teams than alone.
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k this deck
9
Process losses are the resources expended to develop and maintain an effective team.
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10
Teams typically provide better customer service.
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11
Our desire for informal groups is mostly influenced by our drive to defend.
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12
Task forces are temporary groups that typically investigate a particular problem and disband when the decision is made.
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k this deck
13
All teams are groups, but some types of groups are not teams.
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k this deck
14
All groups are teams, but some types of teams are not groups.
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k this deck
15
Some informal groups exist primarily to satisfy the drive to bond.
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16
Employees in a department are considered a team only when they directly interact and coordinate work activities with each other.
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k this deck
17
Brooks' Law states that, "Whatever can go wrong in groups will, so one should be prepared for it."
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k this deck
18
Teams are groups with some degree of task interdependence and a common objective.
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k this deck
19
Informal groups exist primarily to complete tasks for the organization that management doesn't know about.
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k this deck
20
Social identity theory partly explains why people join informal groups.
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k this deck
21
Team effectiveness refers to how well a team accomplishes its objectives for the organization, even if this undermines the team's ability to survive for future tasks.
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Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
22
Companies with the best team dynamics are more likely to have team-based rewards and encourage interaction among team members.
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k this deck
23
Teams develop their first real sense of cohesion during the norming stage of team development.
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k this deck
24
A team's effectiveness is partly measured by how well its members' needs are fulfilled.
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k this deck
25
Reciprocal interdependence is the highest level of task interdependence in organizations.
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k this deck
26
The five most frequently mentioned characteristics of effective team members are communicating, comforting, conflict resolution, coordinating, and cooperating.
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k this deck
27
Diverse teams have faultlines that may split the team into subgroups along gender, ethnic or other dimensions.
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k this deck
28
The optimal team size exists when the team is as small as possible, yet has enough people to accomplish the task.
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k this deck
29
The longer team members work together, the better they develop common mental models to help them complete the work together.
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k this deck
30
In effective teams, each member must possess the full set of competencies to perform the team's entire task alone.
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31
Communicating, comforting and conflict resolution are task related characteristics of effective team members.
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32
Team members typically hold one or more formal roles in the team as well as roles that they informally fulfill at various times.
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33
Students experience pooled interdependence when they are lined up at the laser printers trying to get their assignments done just before a class deadline.
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34
The norming stage of team development is marked by interpersonal conflict as team members compete for leadership and other positions on the team.
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k this deck
35
Teams are generally more effective when the task is complex and lacks definition.
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k this deck
36
During the adjourning stage of team development, team members shift their attention away from relationships and instead focus mainly on completing the task.
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k this deck
37
Teams are well suited when complex work can be divided into more specialized roles.
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k this deck
38
Teams are best suited for tasks with low interdependence among team members.
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k this deck
39
Diverse teams take longer to work through the stages of team development than do heterogeneous teams.
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k this deck
40
Forming, storming, and norming are the three main levels of task interdependence.
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k this deck
41
Team cohesiveness decreases with increased interaction because there are more chances for conflicts to emerge.
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k this deck
42
Cohesiveness tends to be higher in teams where the office design facilitates communication among team members.
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k this deck
43
When highly cohesive teams have norms that conflict with organizational goals, team performance is reduced.
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k this deck
44
Team members rarely conform to team norms unless other team members apply reinforcement or punishment.
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k this deck
45
Knowledge-based trust is based on the belief that the other party will deliver its promises because punishments would be applied if they fail to deliver those promises.
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k this deck
46
The only way to alter team norms is to disband the group.
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k this deck
47
Identification-based trust is the most robust or sturdy form of trust in work relationships.
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k this deck
48
Team roles are typically negotiated among team members.
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k this deck
49
Trust occurs when we have positive expectations about another party's intentions and actions toward us in situations involving vulnerability.
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k this deck
50
Calculus-based trust is based on the belief that the other party will deliver its promises because punishments would be applied if they fail to deliver those promises.
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k this deck
51
One way to change team norms in existing teams is to explicitly discuss the counterproductive norms with team members using persuasive communication strategies.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
Highly cohesive teams invariably perform organizational objectives better than teams with moderate or low cohesiveness.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
Team building interventions often fail because many times they are offered as a three-day jump-start rather than an ongoing process.
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Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
One advantage of team building activities is that they can be used as general solutions to general team problems.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
Some team-building interventions clarify the team's performance goals and increase the team's motivation to accomplish these goals.
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Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
Knowledge-based trust develops over time.
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k this deck
57
Diversity among team members tends to undermine cohesion.
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k this deck
58
When people join teams, they usually begin with a very low level of trust in the other team members.
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k this deck
59
To maximize cohesiveness, the team should be as small as possible without jeopardizing its ability to accomplish the task.
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k this deck
60
Norms are the informal rules and standards established by a team to regulate the behavior of its members.
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k this deck
61
Departments are considered teams only when:

A)they operate without any supervisor.
B)everyone in the department has the same set of skills.
C)employees directly interact with each other and coordinate work activities.
D)all employees are located in the same physical area.
E)all of the above conditions exist.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
Evaluation apprehension is most common in meetings attended by people with different levels of status or expertise.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
Production blocking occurs when employees are unable to complete their tasks because they spend too much time in meetings.
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Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
Which of the following statements about teams and groups is FALSE?

A)Some teams exist without any goal or purpose.
B)A team can have dozens of members.
C)Departments are teams when employees interact with each other.
D)All members of a work group have influence, although some may have more influence than others.
E)A group always requires some form of communication among its members.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
In most self-directed work teams, the supervisor assigns tasks that individual team members perform.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
The nominal group technique involves a three-stage process.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
Electronic brainstorming significantly reduces the problem of production blocking.
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Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
68
Teams have which of the following features?

A)Two or more people
B)Perceive themselves as a social entity
C)Exist to fulfill some purpose
D)All of the above
E)Only 'A' and 'C'
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69
One of the rules of brainstorming is that no one is allowed to piggyback or build on the ideas of other team members.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
The nominal group technique tends to produce more and better ideas than do traditional interacting groups.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
The trust that new team members feel towards their teammates is fragile and easily weakened.
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k this deck
72
The nominal group technique is essentially a variation of brainstorming.
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k this deck
73
The nominal group technique removes the problems of evaluation apprehension and production blocking.
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Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
Constructive conflict occurs when team members hold different opinions or assumptions and debate the issues through an open, healthy dialogue.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
Virtual teams are usually permanent functional groups that communicate mainly through weekly face-to-face meetings.
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Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
Having groupthink and evaluation apprehension are two characteristics of effective decision-making teams.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
Self-directed work teams plan, organize, and control activities with little or no direct involvement of supervisors.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
An important rule in brainstorming is that no one is allowed to evaluate or criticize another team member's ideas.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 160 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
Members of self-directed work teams have enriched and enlarged jobs.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
One symptom of groupthink is that the team feels comfortable with risky decisions because possible weaknesses are suppressed or glossed over.
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k this deck
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