Module Basic 2 LO3
Module Basic 2 LO3
Assessment Criteria
Resources
Writing materials
References
Manuals
Reference
Managing Teams, Robert Heller, Dorling Kindersley Limited, London, Copyright @ 1998.
LEARNING OUTCOME NO. 3: Work as a team member.
1. Define and give examples of Using the teams in the previous session,
Procedures have the students list some possible
Practices procedures, practices and conditions in
Conditions the workplace.
in the workplace
The students should be able to identify
procedures, practices and conditions in
the work place.
2. Discuss with students how may one List some behaviors that will ensure
work effectively in within the team in a working effectively with others in the
workplace team and workplace.
Maximizing Performance
Awarding Responsibility
The first duty of any person working in a team is to attend to their own job. To
make a team work together successfully, however, responsibility must to beyond
the individual. Award your team total responsibility for achieving its own goals.
Create a sense of responsibility in each individual so that they are happy to fulfill
their allotted tasks to the best of their ability. Do this by delegating tasks efficiently
and monitoring each member’s performance as well as that of the team as a
whole. In this way, you will promote the sharing of responsibility among each
member, and encourage individuals to assist colleagues and enhance the overall
performance of the team.
Sharing Responsibility
Drawing up common aims and agreeing individual roles when a team is set up is
only the beginning of a process that has to last as long as the team does. A team
must be responsible for implementing their policies, monitoring progress and
responding creatively and constructively where action is falling sort of objectives.
It is also the responsibility of the team as a whole to ensure that there is a free
flow of communication among members – everybody needs to be kept fully
informed about the progress and changes in policy.
Ensuring Peak Performance
As team leader, your role is to facilitate, your team’s efficiency. You can do this by
taking responsibility for a number of different functions:
Ensuring that all the members of your team are aware of their re-
sponsibilities and are challenged by their work;
Encouraging team members to contribute their best to both the team
and the task in hand;
Overseeing the team’s work practices to ensure that individual mem-
bers work towards a common end;
Assessing and setting team goals at the correct level to inspire contin-
ued motivation; and
Making sure that any overlap between team and individual responsi-
bilities does not result in duplicated tasks.
Being Flexible
Any team demands much of its members. While each member of the team has
their role and responsibility, they should remain flexible and willing to adapt to
change. Some manufacturing groups require members to be able to fulfill every
aspect of their team’s work. Show flexibility by sharing aspects of your leadership
role, and help team members by providing an assistant to share or take over some
of their duties. As the team develops and progresses, look at individual roles, and
modify them as and when the task requires it.
Points to Remember
Each team member should be able to cover the role of at least one
other member;
People should be given the responsibility to act on their own initia-
tive within a team;
A large task will be better handled if the entire project is handed
over to a team;
People need to be aware of where their own responsibilities to be
encouraged to find their own best method of working.
Teams are properly effective only when everyone learns to pull together. You must
understand team dynamics in order to ensure the success of your team.
Good team leaders make the most of the human assets at their disposal. To do
this, you need to understand each group member, how their behavior changes
within the team, and how individual responses vary at different stages in the
team’s development.
Encouraging Teamwork
A team grows and changes markedly during its lifetime. The process of
development has been described as having four stages: forming, storming,
norming and performing. All team pass through the initial stage of being brought
together as a group. This is a tentative period that can easily develop into a
“storming’ phase in which people are unsure of each other and confused, and may
become aggressive at times. With strong leadership, methods of working can be
fully agreed in the “norming’ stage before the team goes on to perform at its best
for the duration of its project.
Points to Remember
Source:
Heller, Robert. Managing Teams. Dorling Kindersley, London. C.1998 p. 26-27; 32-
33
SELF CHECK
After the undergoing the learning activities, the following checklist may be used. Put
a checkmark on the space corresponding to your response:
Some-
Action Never Often Always
times
FEEDBACK
Comments and suggestions from teacher and other trainees may be used as feedback to self-
check.
PERFORMANCE CRITERIA
Criterion Yes No
1. within 6. least
2. comfortable 7. responsibility
3. earliest 8. a team
4. Insecurity 9. maximize
5. trouble 10. Information