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Friday
Jun182010

Putting the fun in dys-fun-ctional

 

Can a group that doesn't have a function be dysfunctional? - the Blue Skunk

I noticed this year that the number of meetings I've been required to attend has gone down and the meetings themselves have grown shorter. The "informational" role meetings have played is being replaced by e-mail and a great deal of collaborative work is now done online. State-wide meetings are mostly held via computer, telephone or video teleconference.

A couple of groups of which I am a member seem to be struggling to find a purpose for continuing. One continues to meet primarly for the social value, I believe; the other simply from tradition. For some reason, a tremendous amount of attention has been paid in our district to groups developing "norms." A lovely buzz word - "norms." I had always considered group norms to be behaviors that developed spontaneously over time. But I guess "norms" sounds nicer than "rules," even if rules are what are actually being created.

Ironically, the less important a group's reason for being, the more stress placed on the group's process.  I don't care how many "norms" are created, unless there is a purpose for the group, its meetings are time-burners during which everyone just secretly checks their smartphones anyway.

A committee, group, task force, whatever. can have value if it provides a means for:

  • serious input into planning and problem-solving efforts - real give and take
  • the exchange information and points-of-view that easily get lost in translation via electronic communications - especially that which is highly value-laden
  • reporting that is taken more seriously due the public nature of the reporting venue (shame-avoidance is great motivator, and thus a good reason for meetings)
  • training that is complex, essential and time-critical

One important reason meetings are still held is that some members of any group would just "never get the memo" if all communication was done electronically. At a meeting one there is at least the illusion of having all members' eyes and ears. If those members attend. And they are not checking their smartphones.

So, what meetings do you attend that still have value - and why?

 

 

 

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Reader Comments (1)

I have had the very same thoughts about all the meetings required for those of us in the field of education. Many times, it seems we meet just for the sake of meeting. We had a meeting every month last year, so we need to do the same this year, regardless of whether or not it is needed. It seems that many in administration automatically think that we won't read the emails, and in their defense, apparently that is true. If all would take ownership of doing what is expected, then maybe we wouldn't have so many meetings, and administration could be confidant in getting information out via email, etc. Also, I agree with the fact that just because bodies are present in a meeting, doesn't mean minds are......sometimes in meetings I can't hear the speaker due to conversations going on in the audience. It's embarrassing when others are so inconsiderate.

June 23, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterJill N.

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