Deck 10: The Nature of Work Groups and Teams

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Question
Members of a group believe there is the potential for mutual goal accomplishment.
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Question
A company puts together a group to develop a sales plan. This is an example of an informal group.
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Command groups are built on the basic reporting relationships in organizations and are frequently represented on organizational charts as departments.
Question
The forming stage of group development has been completed once group members agree on standards to guide group behavior.
Question
Managers establish formal work groups to help the organization achieve its goals.
Question
Work groups may not pass through all development stages in order. Yet, all work groups will pass through the adjourning stage.
Question
A friendship group is a collection of organizational members who enjoy each other's company and socialize with each other (often both on and off the job).
Question
Whenever people work in a group, they are also working as a team.
Question
A command group is a collection of people who come together to accomplish a specific goal, and then usually disband once the goal has been accomplished.
Question
A group is a set of two or more people who interact with each other to achieve certain goals or meet certain needs.
Question
When groups are small, it is difficult to recognize individual contributions to the group.
Question
A task force is a collection of subordinates who report to the same supervisor.
Question
The group is ready to tackle tasks and work toward achieving its goals in the norming stage of group development.
Question
Informal work groups emerge naturally in organizations because members believe that working together in a group will help them achieve their goals or meet their needs.
Question
A group goal is one upon which all or most of a group can agree.
Question
An effective team draws on the abilities and experiences of its members to accomplish things that could not be achieved by individuals working separately.
Question
A team is a formal group of members who interact at a high level and work together intensely to achieve a common group goal.
Question
Members of a group must share identical goals.
Question
Interest groups are collections of organizational members who enjoy each other's company and socialize with each other.
Question
The storming stage of group development is characterized by considerable conflict.
Question
Group status is the implicitly agreed-upon, perceived importance of what a group does in an organization.
Question
One advantage of larger groups is that they have a greater number of resources at their disposal to accomplish their goals.
Question
When individuals are stimulated by the presence of other group members, their performance of well-learned tasks and repeated behaviors is enhanced.
Question
Co-action social facilitation is the effect of passive spectators on individual performance.
Question
Group function is the work that a group contributes to the accomplishment of organizational goals.
Question
Group efficacy is the sum total of each individual group member's beliefs about his or her own ability to perform effectively.
Question
Audience effects are the effects of passive spectators on individual performance.
Question
A potential advantage of heterogeneous groups is that the group makes good decisions because diverse points of view are represented.
Question
The lower level of interaction among members of larger groups makes sharing information difficult.
Question
To reap the advantages of heterogeneity, group members must understand each other's differences and points of view and use them to enable the group to perform at a high level and achieve its goals.
Question
Members of groups with high status are likely to be motivated to perform at a high level because they see their work as especially important for the success of the organization as a whole.
Question
An advantage of a smaller group size is a greater division of labor.
Question
Just as self-efficacy is an important determinant of individual accomplishments, group efficacy is an important determinant of group accomplishments.
Question
Homogeneous groups MOST OFTEN have fewer communication and coordination problems than heterogeneous groups.
Question
Members of a homogeneous group have many characteristics in common.
Question
Efficacy does not exist when a group is formed; rather, it is a shared belief that emerges over time as members work together.
Question
A group of men and women of diverse races and cultural origins who possess degrees from a variety of institutions and have different beliefs about the centrality of work in their lives is a homogeneous group.
Question
Social facilitation is the effect that the physical presence of others has on an individual's performance.
Question
An individual's performance of difficult, complex, or novel tasks is not affected by the presence of other group members.
Question
The function of a group does not affect the behavior of its members.
Question
Role responsibilities dictate the way members should interact with one another to perform their specific roles.
Question
Conformity to group norms is good in all situations.
Question
Role relationships may be formally specified in a written job description or emerge informally over time.
Question
A role is a set of behaviors or tasks a person is expected to perform, according to his or her position in a group or organization.
Question
Group norms are formal written rules of conduct.
Question
Effective groups influence and regulate the behavior of their members.
Question
Unlike formal roles and rules, group norms do not contribute to the achievement of group and organizational goals.
Question
When the membership in a group changes, rules help newcomers learn the right way to perform their roles.
Question
The term "role taking" describes the process of creating a role by assuming certain responsibilities that are not part of one's assigned role.
Question
Standard operating procedures specify in writing the best way to perform particular tasks.
Question
Idiosyncrasy credits provide group members with the freedom to violate group norms without being punished.
Question
Role taking is the common process of assuming a formal organizational role.
Question
Although it is important for a formal work group to control its members' behaviors, a lack of control over team members' behaviors is one thing that separates formal from informal work groups.
Question
Written rules are formal descriptions of actions and behaviors required by a group or organization.
Question
The division of labor that occurs in groups and organizations necessitates the development of roles.
Question
When individuals conform to group norms to attain rewards or avoid punishment, they are conforming on the basis of identification.
Question
One of the basis for conformity is internalization.
Question
The most widespread basis for conformity to group norms is compliance; that is, assenting to a norm in order to attain rewards or avoid punishment.
Question
Healthy groups generate rules in the early stages of their development, to which they remain committed despite pressures to change.
Question
Office furniture can be used to maximize the benefits and minimize the drawbacks of social facilitation and interaction.
Question
Sequential socialization tactics tend to lead to an individualized orientation.
Question
Fixed socialization tactics give newcomers precise knowledge about the timetable for completing each stage of the learning process.
Question
Group goals are always congruent with organizational goals.
Question
With divestiture socialization tactics, newcomers receive negative interpersonal treatment from other members of the group.
Question
Conformity ensures that a group can control members' behaviors to get tasks accomplished, and deviance forces group members to reexamine the appropriateness of norms.
Question
Role orientation is the characteristic way in which members of a group respond to various situations.
Question
When group members are rewarded for high performance, such performance becomes a group goal, and norms develop toward that end.
Question
When disjunctive socialization tactics are used, newcomers must figure out and develop their own way of behaving.
Question
Newcomers who have an institutionalized orientation are more likely to engage in role taking rather than role making.
Question
When group norms are inappropriate, deviance can spark a needed change within the group.
Question
When collective socialization tactics are used, newcomers go through a common learning experience designed to produce standardized or highly similar responses to different situations.
Question
When random tactics are used, the order in which socialization proceeds is based on the interests and needs of the individual newcomer.
Question
Variable socialization tactics tend to lead to an institutionalized orientation.
Question
In an individualized orientation, individuals are taught that it is acceptable and desirable to be creative and to experiment with changing how the group does things.
Question
Groups need conformity and must avoid deviance to accomplish their goals and perform at a high level.
Question
When a group's tasks require creativity, it is especially important that all views are expressed and heard, regardless of how outlandish or deviant they might seem.
Question
In an institutionalized role orientation, newcomers are taught to respond to situations according to the circumstances.
Question
If a group of assembly-line workers reprimands a "rate buster," group performance may be impeded because rate busters tend to lower their level of performance to fall more in line with the norms of the group.
Question
When informal socialization tactics are used, newcomers are segregated from existing group members during the learning process.
Question
Groups respond to deviance by ignoring the behavior.
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Deck 10: The Nature of Work Groups and Teams
1
Members of a group believe there is the potential for mutual goal accomplishment.
True
2
A company puts together a group to develop a sales plan. This is an example of an informal group.
False
Managers establish formal work groups to help the organization achieve its goals, such as developing sales plans.
3
Command groups are built on the basic reporting relationships in organizations and are frequently represented on organizational charts as departments.
True
4
The forming stage of group development has been completed once group members agree on standards to guide group behavior.
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5
Managers establish formal work groups to help the organization achieve its goals.
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6
Work groups may not pass through all development stages in order. Yet, all work groups will pass through the adjourning stage.
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7
A friendship group is a collection of organizational members who enjoy each other's company and socialize with each other (often both on and off the job).
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8
Whenever people work in a group, they are also working as a team.
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9
A command group is a collection of people who come together to accomplish a specific goal, and then usually disband once the goal has been accomplished.
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10
A group is a set of two or more people who interact with each other to achieve certain goals or meet certain needs.
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11
When groups are small, it is difficult to recognize individual contributions to the group.
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12
A task force is a collection of subordinates who report to the same supervisor.
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13
The group is ready to tackle tasks and work toward achieving its goals in the norming stage of group development.
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14
Informal work groups emerge naturally in organizations because members believe that working together in a group will help them achieve their goals or meet their needs.
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15
A group goal is one upon which all or most of a group can agree.
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16
An effective team draws on the abilities and experiences of its members to accomplish things that could not be achieved by individuals working separately.
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17
A team is a formal group of members who interact at a high level and work together intensely to achieve a common group goal.
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18
Members of a group must share identical goals.
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19
Interest groups are collections of organizational members who enjoy each other's company and socialize with each other.
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20
The storming stage of group development is characterized by considerable conflict.
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21
Group status is the implicitly agreed-upon, perceived importance of what a group does in an organization.
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22
One advantage of larger groups is that they have a greater number of resources at their disposal to accomplish their goals.
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23
When individuals are stimulated by the presence of other group members, their performance of well-learned tasks and repeated behaviors is enhanced.
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24
Co-action social facilitation is the effect of passive spectators on individual performance.
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25
Group function is the work that a group contributes to the accomplishment of organizational goals.
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26
Group efficacy is the sum total of each individual group member's beliefs about his or her own ability to perform effectively.
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27
Audience effects are the effects of passive spectators on individual performance.
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28
A potential advantage of heterogeneous groups is that the group makes good decisions because diverse points of view are represented.
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29
The lower level of interaction among members of larger groups makes sharing information difficult.
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30
To reap the advantages of heterogeneity, group members must understand each other's differences and points of view and use them to enable the group to perform at a high level and achieve its goals.
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31
Members of groups with high status are likely to be motivated to perform at a high level because they see their work as especially important for the success of the organization as a whole.
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32
An advantage of a smaller group size is a greater division of labor.
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33
Just as self-efficacy is an important determinant of individual accomplishments, group efficacy is an important determinant of group accomplishments.
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34
Homogeneous groups MOST OFTEN have fewer communication and coordination problems than heterogeneous groups.
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35
Members of a homogeneous group have many characteristics in common.
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36
Efficacy does not exist when a group is formed; rather, it is a shared belief that emerges over time as members work together.
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37
A group of men and women of diverse races and cultural origins who possess degrees from a variety of institutions and have different beliefs about the centrality of work in their lives is a homogeneous group.
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38
Social facilitation is the effect that the physical presence of others has on an individual's performance.
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39
An individual's performance of difficult, complex, or novel tasks is not affected by the presence of other group members.
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40
The function of a group does not affect the behavior of its members.
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41
Role responsibilities dictate the way members should interact with one another to perform their specific roles.
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42
Conformity to group norms is good in all situations.
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43
Role relationships may be formally specified in a written job description or emerge informally over time.
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44
A role is a set of behaviors or tasks a person is expected to perform, according to his or her position in a group or organization.
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45
Group norms are formal written rules of conduct.
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46
Effective groups influence and regulate the behavior of their members.
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47
Unlike formal roles and rules, group norms do not contribute to the achievement of group and organizational goals.
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48
When the membership in a group changes, rules help newcomers learn the right way to perform their roles.
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49
The term "role taking" describes the process of creating a role by assuming certain responsibilities that are not part of one's assigned role.
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50
Standard operating procedures specify in writing the best way to perform particular tasks.
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51
Idiosyncrasy credits provide group members with the freedom to violate group norms without being punished.
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52
Role taking is the common process of assuming a formal organizational role.
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53
Although it is important for a formal work group to control its members' behaviors, a lack of control over team members' behaviors is one thing that separates formal from informal work groups.
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54
Written rules are formal descriptions of actions and behaviors required by a group or organization.
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55
The division of labor that occurs in groups and organizations necessitates the development of roles.
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56
When individuals conform to group norms to attain rewards or avoid punishment, they are conforming on the basis of identification.
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57
One of the basis for conformity is internalization.
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58
The most widespread basis for conformity to group norms is compliance; that is, assenting to a norm in order to attain rewards or avoid punishment.
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59
Healthy groups generate rules in the early stages of their development, to which they remain committed despite pressures to change.
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60
Office furniture can be used to maximize the benefits and minimize the drawbacks of social facilitation and interaction.
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61
Sequential socialization tactics tend to lead to an individualized orientation.
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62
Fixed socialization tactics give newcomers precise knowledge about the timetable for completing each stage of the learning process.
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63
Group goals are always congruent with organizational goals.
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64
With divestiture socialization tactics, newcomers receive negative interpersonal treatment from other members of the group.
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65
Conformity ensures that a group can control members' behaviors to get tasks accomplished, and deviance forces group members to reexamine the appropriateness of norms.
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66
Role orientation is the characteristic way in which members of a group respond to various situations.
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67
When group members are rewarded for high performance, such performance becomes a group goal, and norms develop toward that end.
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68
When disjunctive socialization tactics are used, newcomers must figure out and develop their own way of behaving.
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69
Newcomers who have an institutionalized orientation are more likely to engage in role taking rather than role making.
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70
When group norms are inappropriate, deviance can spark a needed change within the group.
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71
When collective socialization tactics are used, newcomers go through a common learning experience designed to produce standardized or highly similar responses to different situations.
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72
When random tactics are used, the order in which socialization proceeds is based on the interests and needs of the individual newcomer.
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73
Variable socialization tactics tend to lead to an institutionalized orientation.
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74
In an individualized orientation, individuals are taught that it is acceptable and desirable to be creative and to experiment with changing how the group does things.
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75
Groups need conformity and must avoid deviance to accomplish their goals and perform at a high level.
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76
When a group's tasks require creativity, it is especially important that all views are expressed and heard, regardless of how outlandish or deviant they might seem.
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77
In an institutionalized role orientation, newcomers are taught to respond to situations according to the circumstances.
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78
If a group of assembly-line workers reprimands a "rate buster," group performance may be impeded because rate busters tend to lower their level of performance to fall more in line with the norms of the group.
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79
When informal socialization tactics are used, newcomers are segregated from existing group members during the learning process.
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80
Groups respond to deviance by ignoring the behavior.
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