2. An Overview
An introduction
The project proposal
An evaluation of the project
The implementation
strategy for the project
A project timeline
Assessment of group skills
Organizational
development or structure
Decision-making strategies
Motivation
Leadership
Power use
Organizational culture
Conflict resolution
Summary of group behavior
and performance during
project
4. Proposal
One of the group’s members is heavily involved in
breast cancer awareness trainings. We collectively
decided that we would attempt to champion this cause,
despite the other members being not as well versed in
the subject. We recognized it as cause is timeless. Our
mission:
“We believe in consumer health autonomy by making resources and
information accessible in a grassroots forum to educate, inform, and
empower women and men on breast cancer and breast health
awareness." –Breast Cancer Awareness Group
5. The Evaluation &
Implementation
Virtual Team work is always challenging. In fact, this
dynamic generally streamlines the amount and type
of information shared. (Robbins and Judges, 2013).
Collaborative members are more likely to only share
information that they consider highly important.
(Robbins and Judges, 2013). However, overall, the
team regulated itself and was able to create a web
site with regular visits from users and surfers.
Hosted on the site is a poll, facts, a donation link, a
discourse forum, and resources regarding breast
cancer.
7. The Timeline
0 5 10
Week 2
Week 3
Week 4
Week 5
Communication
Research
Site Work based
on hours logged
8. The following is a copy
of the
rubric that we used to
gauge our team efficacy.
(Robbins and Judges,
2013)
file:///Users/mmdelaurier/Downloads/MyRubric-2.xls.html
9. 8 6 4 2
RESEARCH The workload is
divided and
shared equally by
all team
members.
The workload is
divided and
shared fairly by all
team members,
though workloads
may vary from
person to person.
The workload was
divided, but one
person in the
group is viewed
as not doing
his/her fair share
of the work.
The workload was
not divided OR
several people in
the group are
viewed as not
doing their fair
share of the work.
COMMUNICA-
TION
Covers topic in-
depth with details
and examples.
Subject
knowledge is
excellent.
Includes essential
knowledge about
the topic. Subject
knowledge
appears to be
good.
Includes essential
information about
the topic but there
are 1-2 factual
errors.
Content is
minimal OR there
are several
factual errors.
SITE WORK Content is well
organized using
headings or
bulleted lists to
group related
material.
Uses headings or
bulleted lists to
organize, but the
overall
organization of
topics appears
flawed.
Content is
logically
organized for the
most part.
There was no
clear or logical
organizational
structure, just lots
of facts.
10. Group Behavior
Our group was a work
team.
We were able to
generate a positive
synergy that we would
not have been able to
create as individuals
(Robbins and Judges,
2013).
We were hugely
collaborative and
complimentary
(Robbins and Judges,
2013).
11. Organizational development or structure
There are three women in
our organization.
We are members of
different ethnicities and
generations.
To help facilitate the
achievement of our
strategic goals we
immediately agreed to first
brainstorm and then
delegate different tasks.
Our strategic goal was
primarily dictated by
teacher directed
expectations.
Our medium was dictated
by the nature of the class
and our proximity to one
another.
12. Decision Making Strategies
Based on our
reflections: We utilized
the rational decision
making process:
Intelligence, Design,
Choice, & Evaluation
(Robbins and Judges, 2013).
13. Motivation
Due to the nature of the class,
this assignment is a microscopic
assessment of our motivation.
(Which we felt to have
maintained a very fluent level
throughout.) Motivation is
typically measured by a person’s
intensity, “how hare a person
tries”(Robbins and Judges,
2013), direction, effort and
consistency with relationship to
organizational goals, and
persistence, the extent of which
a person may maintain goals
(Robbins and Judges, 2013).
Our website as the capability to
be sustained for a very long
time. We encourage all of you to
visit periodically to make your
own assessments.
14. Leadership and Power
We each had an area
of expertise:
Camille-cancer broad
base
Brittney-research
Monique-technology
Because of this, we
were each able to
triangulate expert
information from varied
locations in Virginia.
15. Organizational Culture
Key Characteristics (as
it relates to this
assignment)-virtual
and cancer related.
Risk-takers-Stepping
outside of our
individual familiarity,
but able to produce as
a group team.
Wanted to be accurate
and aesthetically
pleasing.
Availability-Our
website helps us to
keep up with use and
our mission by
generating stats.
We feel as though the
site itself is very warm
and people friendly.
16. Conflict Resolution
While there may have
been conflict, it was
never overt or
debilitating. And
because we each
subscribe to the
interactionist
view(Robbins, Judges,
and Vohra, 2012), any
conflicts were
appreciated and
helped in generating
new ideas and action.
17. References
Robbins, Judges, and Vohra (2012). Organizational
Behavior Conflict and Resolution. Retrieved
from http://
www.slideshare.net/balajinages/conflict-and-
negotiation-14766538
Robbins, S. P., & Judge, T. (2013). Organizational
behavior. Upper Saddle River, N.J: Pearson/
Prentice Hall.