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Why People Join Groups

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Why People Join Groups They need to belong. They enjoy certain group activities. They are attracted to a certain type of people as a means to an end. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Why People Join Groups


1
Why People Join Groups
  • They need to belong.
  • They enjoy certain group activities.
  • They are attracted to a certain type of people as
    a means to an end.

Viewgraph 1
2
Member Vignette 1 Family
  • Private Brittingham was a new soldier who had
    recently joined the squad. I noticed that he
    acted down and didnt seem interested in
    talking with any of us whod been around for a
    while. One afternoon after training, I saw him
    in the bay, just staringnot really reading the
    letter in his hands. It looked as though he was
    very sad. I didnt want him to think I was being
    nosey, but I went up to him and said, Hello. He
    answered, but with his head down. I said, I see
    youre getting mail. It sure would be nice if I
    got a letter once in a while. My folks arent
    too good at writing, and I dont have a
    girlfriend right now.

3
Member Vignette 1 Family
  • Then Private Brittingham said, Im married and
    we have two children. My little girl, Sarah, is
    2 years old, and my wife, Annie, just had a baby
    boy three months ago. His name is John. Being
    here is really tough. Shes living with her
    folks, and theyre great, but she cries all the
    time. Annie says she needs me at home to help
    her, but she knows it isnt possible since I have
    to be here for training. I just dont know what
    to do. I cant seem to keep my mind on training.
    I feel like everybody is avoiding me. I dont
    feel like I fit in.

4
Member Vignette 2 Civic organization/Church
  • Sheila and Carin sang in their church choir of 40
    people. They were very good friends and enjoyed
    singing every Sunday morning during the service.
    But Carin didnt like practicing on Wednesday
    night every week. She thought that rehearsals
    were a waste of time. There were so many other
    people there. Nobody would miss her. Besides,
    she had a good voice. So Carin frequently did
    not go to rehearsals. One Sunday morning, the
    choir sang a new piece of music. The director
    had changed some dynamics of the music during the
    rehearsal that Carin missed. When one change
    called for Carins alto section to sing
    pianissimo (very softly), Carin sang an unplanned
    and unattractive solo-very loudly. She was
    embarrassed for herself and for ruining the music
    that everyone else had worked so hard to make
    beautiful

5
Member Vignette 3 School
  • Chuck, Johanna, Carolyn, and Ron were assigned to
    a group project in
  • Mrs. Lackeys 11th-grade astronomy class. Mrs.
    Lackey stressed she wanted the classmates to work
    in teams. She said that everyone could learn
    from each other by sharing information. There
    would be one grade for the whole group

6
Member Vignette 3 School
  • At their first meeting after school that day, the
    four agreed that the topic of their project would
    be the different classifications of stars or star
    clusters. Each of the four drew straws for a
    specific star from different constellations to
    research. Carolyn selected the cluster Pleiades
    (pronounced ple-ah-deez) in the constellation
    Taurus the Bull. Immediately, she began to
    complain that it wasnt fair. The other three
    only had one star, and she got stuck with a
    cluster that she translated to more work. But
    the others said that fair was fair, and that was
    her part of the project. Ron suggested that if
    Carolyn got into the research and it seemed like
    too much information to call him, that he would
    be happy to work with her. The others agreed to
    do the same.

7
Member Vignette 3 School
  • Three days later the group was scheduled to meet
    at the library to discuss the research findings.
    At the last minute, Carolyn told Ron she had
    forgotten a doctors appointment and couldnt be
    there. That night, Ron called to update her
    about the meeting. Their presentation of the
    project was to on Tuesday, giving them the
    weekend to finish the work. Carolyn promised him
    she would have her part ready for their final
    meeting on Monday afternoon.

8
Member Vignette 3 School
  • After school, the four met for the wrap-up.
    Chuck read his part, followed by Johanna, then
    Ron. When it was Carolyns turn, she only had
    information about the constellation. There was
    no information about the star cluster. When the
    others asked what had happened to the rest of the
    report, Carolyn said she thought shed done
    enough. Chuck, Johanna, and Ron were angry that
    their teammate had let them down. They had
    respected Carolyn enough to trust her loyalty to
    the team. So the three agreed to complete
    Carolyns part without her. Then all shed have
    to do is read it.

9
Member Vignette 3 School
  • In class the next day, the team made their
    presentation. At the conclusion, Mrs.. Lackey
    congratulated the team for doing an A project.
    She gave special praise to Carolyn because of the
    interesting information she had provided about
    the Pleiades. Carolyn not only accepted the
    praise, but actually bragged that it had been an
    interesting project, despite the extra work that
    she had done on it.

10
Member Vignette 4 Sports
  • Mike Singletary, all-pro linebacker for the
    Chicago Bears, NFL Man of the Year, and twice
    NFL Defensive Player of the Year is a man who
    has lived a life of teamwork. He refers to his
    football experiences as being on a team of
    eagles. He has spoken publicly about what it
    takes to be on a team of eagles, whether its
    on the football field or at home as a father.

11
Member Vignette 4 Sports
  • In a speech, Mike told the audience how the team
    members of the Bears all met, fresh out of
    college, and ready to play football. But they
    had some problems. Although they were eagles
    with many strengths and talents for different
    field positions, they had not yet learned how to
    share their abilities. They had to learn how to
    take criticism without getting mad. He said that
    they had to learn how to say negative things in a
    kind way. They had to communicate clearly. In
    other words, those eagles who thought they were
    pretty hot had to learn how to be a team.

12
Member Vignette 4 Sports
  • They also had to learn to trust each other. Each
    player had to learn his other teammates special
    abilities and to use his own to balance the
    weaknesses. This is an example of the weak
    link in the chain that I mentioned earlier.
    Mike emphasized the importance of good
    communication between team members. The Bears
    didnt become a team overnight. They worked
    hard. Finally, it paid off. The Bears won the
    Superbowl. They proved that they really were a
    team of eagles. But Mike said they became
    overly confident after the big win.

13
Member Vignette 4 Sports
  • They went back to their old ways of being
    individuals without thinking of the rest of their
    team. They forgot to respect each others
    special talents on the football field. They
    sacrificed the hard-earned loyalty that comes
    from trusting and respecting each other. The
    Bears lost the next Superbowl. Mike said the
    team never won a Superbowl again. He emphasized
    that being a team member, whether its on the
    football field or at home with the family, always
    takes conscious effort.

14
What Is a Team?
  • A group of people banded together for the purpose
    of accomplishing a common goal.

Viewgraph 2
15
Member Vignette 5 Antietam
  • The following is an excerpt from the US Army
    Quartermaster Center Schools Historical
    Vignettes. I want you to listen carefully to
    this historical account. Sergeant William
    McKinley came from civilian life directly into a
    world of war. He demonstrated team membership in
    the Union Army during battle in the Civil War.
    Although only the Army core value duty is
    mentioned, he also demonstrated personal courage
    and selfless service with his heroic efforts.
    See if you can pick out those values in this true
    story.

16
Member Vignette 5 Antietam
  • When the American Civil War broke out in the
    spring of 1861, boys on both sides of the
    Mason-Dixon Line, caught up in patriotic
    enthusiasm, rushed to join the Union and
    Confederate armies. In June of that year,
    18-year-old William McKinley quit his job as a
    postal clerk in Poland, Ohio and enlisted as a
    private in Company E of the 23rd Ohio Volunteer
    Infantrya unit destined to become one of the
    most famous in the war. It fought in 19 battles
    and lost a total of 2,095 members. Before his
    first year of service had ended, young McKinley
    was promoted to Commissary Sergeant. On 17
    September 1862, at the Battle of Antietamthe
    bloodiest day of the Civil War, in fact the
    bloodiest day in American military
    historySergeant McKinley was just to the rear of
    the battlefield watching over the brigades food
    and supplies. The men had eaten only a scanty
    breakfast, and he knew that as the day wore on
    the Buckeyes were growing weaker

17
Member Vignette 5 Antietam
  • After gathering up a handful of stragglers,
    Sergeant McKinley courageously led two mule teams
    with wagons of rations and hot coffee into the
    thick of battle. Working his way over rough
    ground, through a hailstorm of artillery and
    rifle fire, he ignored repeated warnings to
    retreatand continued on. He lost one team of
    mules to Confederate gunners but did not return
    to the rear of the brigade until his fellow
    soldiers had been properly fed under the most
    adverse conditions. He earned that day the
    undying gratitude and respect of his comrades.
    From Sergeant McKinleys hand, said the
    Commander afterwards, every man in the regiment
    was served with hot coffee and warm meats, a
    thing which had never occurred under similar
    circumstances in any army in the world.

18
Member Vignette 6 Vandalism
  • Private Atkinson was returning to the barracks
    after finishing KP. As he was walking by the
    telephone booth, he recognized his buddy, Private
    Holmes, who was talking to someone inside the
    booth. The very next morning, the drill sergeant
    told the soldiers that someone had vandalized the
    pay phone during an apparent attempt to steal
    money from it.

19
Unit Cohesion
  • The glue that brings soldiers and leaders
    together to make a team to accomplish the units
    mission.

Viewgraph 3
20
Factors Of Unit Cohesion (1 of 3)
The Armys description of cohesion includes this
element
  • Bonding
  • The development of strong interpersonal
    relationships among soldiers and between them and
    their leaders.

Viewgraph 4
21
Factors Of Unit Cohesion (2 of 3)
The Armys description of cohesion includes this
element
  • Commitment
  • Dedication not only to the unit and what it
    represents, but to the values and goals of the
    nation as well.

Viewgraph 5
22
Factors Of Unit Cohesion (3 of 3)
The Armys description of cohesion includes this
element
  • Resolve
  • The shared determination of soldiers and their
    leaders to work interdependently and accomplish
    the mission, and to sustain this capability over
    a long period of time.

Viewgraph 6
23
Member Vignette 7 Night March
  • Private Lockhart, the squad leader, was leading
    the squad on a night march through the swamp.
    Her squad lagged behind the rest of the platoon
    because a member of the squad had sprained his
    ankle and was being helped by other squad
    members. Private Lockhart sent a member of the
    squad forward to the platoon leader to report the
    situation. The platoon leader sent back a
    message that Private Lockhart should leave the
    injured member by a tree to be picked up on the
    way back.

24
Summary
  • What is a Team?
  • General Characteristics of Member
  • Responsibilities of an Army Team Member
  • Buddy
  • In the unit

Viewgraph 7
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