Download - 7d3eeppts Sociometry
Amity Business School
1
Course objectives
This paper serves the budding entrepreneur how he can transform a SSI into a successful organization. In the process the entrepreneurs develop a teams and
lay the foundation of organizational culture.
Teams: An Overview Team Building
Team Leadership & Conflict Management
: Team & Sociometry
Team Design Features: team vs. groupEffective Team Mission and VisionLife Cycle of a Project TeamRationale of a Team, Goal Analysis and Team Roles
Patterns of Interaction in a TeamSociometry: Method of studying attractions and repulsions in groupsConstruction of sociogram for studying interpersonal relations in a Team
Types and Development of Team Building
Stages of team growthTeam performance
curveProfiling your Team:
Internal & External Dynamics
Team Strategies for organizational vision
Team communication
Leadership styles in organizationsSelf Authorized team leadershipCauses of team conflictConflict management strategiesStress and Coping in teams
Executing Teaching/Learning Strategy
Flow Gates
Session Plan
Course Coverage
MODULE I(2 sessions)
MODULE II( 2 sessions)
MODULE III(2 sessions)
MODULE IV(3 sessions)
20% 100%50% 70%
Behavioral Science
P1 Q1CT1
C2
C1
MODULE V(3 sessions)
Global Teams and Universal Values
Management by values Pragmatic spirituality in life and organizationBuilding global teams through universal human values Learning based on project work on Scriptures like Ramayana, Mahabharata, Gita etc.
Amity Business School
Patterns of interaction• Interactions that take place within a group
tend to follow a particular pattern.
Types of patterns of interaction:
• All-channel network
• Chain network
• Wheel network
2
Amity Business School
All- channel network
• Takes place if group members stay together and shared every piece of information with one another.
• Group members must be face-to-face
3
Amity Business School
A chain network• When interaction and communication
moves sequentially from one member to another
• Good for simple messages
• Tend to break down with more complex messages
4
Amity Business School
Wheel network
• All communication within the group goes through one person who is at the center of the groups operation
5
Amity Business SchoolCommunication networks
6
Amity Business School
Sociometry
The word sociometry comes from the Latin “socius,” meaning social and the Latin “metrum,” meaning measure
sociometry is a way of measuring the degree of relatedness among people.
Measurement of relatedness can be useful not only in the assessment of behavior within groups, but also for interventions to bring about positive change and for determining the extent of change.
Amity Business School
• For a work group, sociometry can be a powerful tool for reducing conflict and improving communication because it allows the group to see itself objectively and to analyze its own dynamics.
• It is also a powerful tool for assessing dynamics and development in groups devoted to therapy or training.
Amity Business School
• Jacob Levy Moreno coined the term sociometry
• Many more sociometric studies have been conducted since, by Moreno and others, in settings including other schools, the military, therapy groups, and business corporations.
• A useful working definition of sociometry is that it is a methodology for tracking the energy vectors of interpersonal relationships in a group.
Amity Business School
• SOCIOMETRIC CRITERIA
• Choices are always made on some basis or criterion. The criterion may be subjective, such as an intuitive feeling of liking or disliking a person on first impression. The criterion may be more objective and conscious, such as knowing that a person does or does not have certain skills needed for the group task.
Amity Business School
• Within a group, people are positive ("attracted" or moving towards) one another, or negative ("repulsed" or move away from) others (as in magnetic or chemical attractions and repulsions, e.g. oil and water) via a flow of feeling. This flow of feeling relates to behaviour.
11
Amity Business School
• The flow may be mutual and reciprocated, or non-mutual and therefore, conflicted. It is these flows of feeling, the socio-emotional, or psycho-social connections between people, that form informal networks of relationships.
12
Amity Business School
• Sociometry is a science which enables us to explore and display the informal relationships between people.
• A method of indicating the feelings of acceptance or rejection among group members
13
Amity Business School
• When members of a group are asked to choose others in the group based on a specific criteria, everyone in the group can make choices and describe why the choices were made. From these choices a description emerges of the networks inside the group. A drawing, like a map, of those networks is called a sociogram. The data for the sociogram may also be displayed as a table or matrix of each person’s choices. Such a table is called a sociomatrix
Amity Business School
Sociograms – • Depict the choices, preferences, likes or
dislikes, & interactions between individual members
• Display the structure of the group & record the observed frequency & / or duration of contacts among members
15
Amity Business School
16
Amity Business School
Why Sociometry• When relationship dynamics are hindering people producing business
results
• When you want to move your organisation(s) from isolated silos to collaborative networks
• When you want to strengthen teams working in demanding situations
• When you need ways to surface and sort out issues of group conflict, trust and identity
• When you want to understand and address the "soft" and unspoken aspects of everyday group life
• When you need to develop appropriate behaviours for your ideal work culture
• When its time to integrate thinking, feeling and action in business relationships
• When you want to release the informal leadership abilities within your organisation
17
Amity Business School
• “I trust this person to keep oral agreements and commitments, and not to undercut me or go behind my back.” We will use the symbols “+” to indicate “High Trust”, “O” to indicate “Moderate Trust”, and “-” to indicate “Distrust/Conflict”.
• After conducting all the interviews and obtaining ratings from everyone, the next step is to chart all the responses in the sociomatrix.
Amity Business School
• Here is the sociomatrix for our sample group:
Amity Business School
• This matrix already tells us a great deal about the group dynamics. With a little analysis the matrix becomes something like an x-ray or CAT scan of the group’s interpersonal relationships. Columns showing a large percentage of +’s can identify the informal leader(s) of the group. Columns showing -’s can identify those people the group may be close to rejecting. Rows showing all O’s or all +’s may highlight people who fear self-disclosure or people who are undifferentiated in social relationships.