955 resultados para Board group dynamics
Resumo:
A partir de los conceptos convergentes identidad, cultura, patrimonio y territorio, se plantea analizar la posibilidad de formular e implementar una estrategia de diferenciación para la actividad de agroturismo desarrollada por los establecimientos del grupo Cortaderas II (Cambio Rural, INTA), en el partido de Coronel Suárez (BA), provincia de Buenos Aires. Con este fin, se ha efectuado un diagnóstico mediante entrevistas directas y observaciones in situ de los emprendimientos participantes. Destacando aspectos propios de su ambiente rural, se procuró identificar valores culturales y productos con anclaje territorial que impongan un sello distintivo al servicio turístico que ofrecen. Complementariamente, se indagó en qué medida los integrantes están preparados para gestionar el negocio, reconociendo en ellos competencias gerenciales y características emprendedoras. Por último, se reflexiona acerca del grado de madurez alcanzado, tipificando la cultura empresarial individual y según el trabajo grupal, de modo de evaluar si la puesta en valor de sus recursos evoluciona desde un "carácter doméstico" hasta llegar a un "carácter comercial formal". Se observa la construcción de una identidad de índole socio-cultural-económica que hace viable una estrategia competitiva diferencial con anclaje en el territorio, así como condiciones para el desarrollo de una actividad turística más formalizada basada en la gestión de calidad
Resumo:
Comprender los problemas a los que se enfrenta la extensión rural en Uruguay y las concepciones con que los técnicos de terreno guían sus prácticas constituye un elemento de interés tanto para las políticas públicas de desarrollo rural como para el espacio más amplio del MERCOSUR. Se llevó adelante una investigación cuali-cuantitativa centrada en un cuestionario a 32 extensionistas uruguayos. Las respuestas fueron sometidas a análisis estadísticos y de contenido. Se concluye que existe una visión compleja de la extensión rural que articula lo técnico-productivo y lo social, la cual se asocia con una visión crítica y participativa de la práctica. No obstante, esto no quita la persistencia de una visión difusionista en algunos casos. Se destaca como principal problema las dificultades relacionadas con el manejo de grupos y asociaciones
Resumo:
A partir de los conceptos convergentes identidad, cultura, patrimonio y territorio, se plantea analizar la posibilidad de formular e implementar una estrategia de diferenciación para la actividad de agroturismo desarrollada por los establecimientos del grupo Cortaderas II (Cambio Rural, INTA), en el partido de Coronel Suárez (BA), provincia de Buenos Aires. Con este fin, se ha efectuado un diagnóstico mediante entrevistas directas y observaciones in situ de los emprendimientos participantes. Destacando aspectos propios de su ambiente rural, se procuró identificar valores culturales y productos con anclaje territorial que impongan un sello distintivo al servicio turístico que ofrecen. Complementariamente, se indagó en qué medida los integrantes están preparados para gestionar el negocio, reconociendo en ellos competencias gerenciales y características emprendedoras. Por último, se reflexiona acerca del grado de madurez alcanzado, tipificando la cultura empresarial individual y según el trabajo grupal, de modo de evaluar si la puesta en valor de sus recursos evoluciona desde un "carácter doméstico" hasta llegar a un "carácter comercial formal". Se observa la construcción de una identidad de índole socio-cultural-económica que hace viable una estrategia competitiva diferencial con anclaje en el territorio, así como condiciones para el desarrollo de una actividad turística más formalizada basada en la gestión de calidad
Resumo:
Comprender los problemas a los que se enfrenta la extensión rural en Uruguay y las concepciones con que los técnicos de terreno guían sus prácticas constituye un elemento de interés tanto para las políticas públicas de desarrollo rural como para el espacio más amplio del MERCOSUR. Se llevó adelante una investigación cuali-cuantitativa centrada en un cuestionario a 32 extensionistas uruguayos. Las respuestas fueron sometidas a análisis estadísticos y de contenido. Se concluye que existe una visión compleja de la extensión rural que articula lo técnico-productivo y lo social, la cual se asocia con una visión crítica y participativa de la práctica. No obstante, esto no quita la persistencia de una visión difusionista en algunos casos. Se destaca como principal problema las dificultades relacionadas con el manejo de grupos y asociaciones
Resumo:
El proceso de la maternidad, según Mercer, implica que la madre nazca psicológicamente, dando lugar a una nueva identidad en constante crecimiento y desarrollo. El modelo de esta autora puede servir a la enfermera para valorar, planificar, ejecutar y evaluar el cuidado enfermero de las madres y sus bebés en sus intervenciones. Este estudio cualitativo, de enfoque etnográfico, dirigido a grupos de madres con hijos menores de un año, utilizará la observación participante y el diario de campo para describir y relacionar los contenidos de las dinámicas grupales con el desarrollo del rol maternal. Se identifican 3 categorías y 50 códigos y se destaca que las enfermeras, como profesionales competentes en aspectos conceptuales y técnicos propios de su disciplina, utilizan los modelos de Mercer y Beck para acompañar a las madres coordinándose con otros profesionales.
Resumo:
Objetivos: Describir necesidades y experiencias de madres con hijos menores de un año, identificar los factores que dificultan la transición a la maternidad y orientar en el contenido de un programa de promoción de la salud a desarrollar en sesiones grupales de apoyo a la maternidad. Diseño: Estudio cualitativo con enfoque fenomenológico. Emplazamiento: Ocho centros de Atención Primaria de la provincia de Barcelona, entre julio de 2011 y julio de 2012. Participantes: Un total de 21 madres que participan en dinámicas grupales de apoyo a la maternidad. Método: Selección opinática de las participantes en las entrevistas semiestructuradas. Las transcripciones se analizaron en su estructura (análisis de contenido latente) y contenido (análisis de contenido manifiesto), obteniéndose diferentes categorías. Resultados: Las participantes en el estudio definen el constructo de la maternidad en torno a 3 categorías: los cambios en el estilo de vida, los sentimientos y las percepciones. Identifican como momentos más estresantes: «el nuevo rol», «los cambios en la relación de pareja», «sentimientos encontrados», «experiencias del embarazo y parto», «la idealización», «la falta de apoyo», «llantos», «cólicos», «interpretar las señales del niño», «baño», «descanso», «opiniones contradictorias», «aprendizaje» y «adquisición de nuevas habilidades». Destacan como temas principales para las dinámicas grupales: alimentación, desarrollo, relación afectiva, confianza materna, participación de los padres, papel de la familia, aspectos emocionales, descanso, masaje, baño, prevención de accidentes, cólicos, primeros auxilios, puericultura, recursos y vacunas. Conclusión: Las dinámicas grupales deben contextualizarse de acuerdo a las necesidades percibidas por las madres y permitir la participación de otras figuras familiares.
Resumo:
The purpose of the present study was to examine the relationship of harmonious and obsessive passion to perceptions of task and social cohesion in team sport athletes. Participants were 370 competitive (N=252) and recreational (N=118) athletes ranging from 18- to 28-years-old (Mage=20.20, SD=1.52) from a wide variety of team sports. Participants completed the Passion Scale (Vallerand et al., 2003) and the Group Environment Questionnaire (Carron et al., 1985). A MANOVA revealed that competitive athletes were more passionate and had higher perceptions of cohesion than did recreational athletes. Multiple regression analyses revealed a positive relationship between both harmonious and obsessive passion and both task (ATG-T, GI-T) and social (ATG-S, GI-S) cohesion. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed pertaining to the importance of harmonious and obsessive passion in athletes and perceptions of cohesion in competitive and recreational sport.
Resumo:
The primary purpose of the current study was to determine whether perceptions of cohesion mediated the relationship between social acceptance and individual commitment and enjoyment in children’s sport. A secondary purpose involved the assessment of the temporal nature of cohesion over the course of an athletic season. A total of 209 (Mage = 9.87 years; SD = 1.34) recreational soccer players completed questionnaires at three time points (T1 – social acceptance, cohesion; T2 – cohesion; T3 – commitment, enjoyment, cohesion) during an athletic season. Using structural equation modeling, the results indicated that task cohesion mediated the relationship between social acceptance and commitment and enjoyment, whereas social cohesion did not. In addition, individual perceptions of cohesion did not vary significantly over the course of the season. These results will be discussed in terms of their theoretical and practical implications. As one example, the relative stability in terms of perceptions of cohesion in this population could inform future intervention work aimed at enriching the social environment
Resumo:
Within cooperative societies, group members share in caring for offspring. Although division of labour among group members has been relatively well studied in insects, less is known about vertebrates. Most studies of avian helping focus solely on the extent to which helpers provision the offspring, however, helpers can participate in everything from nest building to predator defence. Bad provisioners may, for example, not be as 'uncooperative' as they appear. if they are good defenders. Thus, the distribution of helping tasks between group members should have important implications for our interpretation of group dynamics. Here, we compare two distinct forms of helping behaviour in the cooperatively breeding noisy miner (Manorina melanocephala): chick provisioning and mobbing nest predators. We show that the way in which individual helpers invest in these two helping behaviours varies enormously across individuals and among social groups. Good provisioners often contributed relatively little to mobbing and vice versa. Indeed, (18%) of helpers only mobbed, 22% just provisioned, whereas 60% of helpers performed both forms of helping. Across nests, provisioning was significantly negatively correlated with mobbing effort. We suggest that small differences in the costs or benefits of different aspects of helping (due to differences in age, relatedness or social status) have a big impact on the division of labour within a group. Consequently, social groups can be made up from individuals who often specialise in one helping behaviour, and/or helpers who perform a number of behaviours to differing degrees. Division of labour within social groups will, therefore, have important consequences for the maintenance of cooperatively breeding in vertebrates.
Resumo:
Successful graduates in today's competitive business environments must possess sound interpersonal skills and the ability to work effectively in team situations within, and across, disciplines. However, developing these skills within the higher education curriculum is fraught with organisational and pedagogical difficulties, with many teachers not having the skills, time or resources to facilitate productive group processes. Furthermore, many students find their teamwork experiences frustrating, demanding, conflict-ridden and unproductive. This paper brings together the perspectives and experiences of an engineer and a social scientist in a cross-disciplinary examination of the characteristics of effective teamwork skills and processes. A focus is the development and operation of 'TeamWorker', an innovative online system that helps students and staff manage their team activities and assessment. TeamWorker was created to enhance team teaching and learning processes and outcomes including team creation, administration, development and evaluation. Importantly, TeamWorker can facilitate the early identification of problematic group dynamics, thereby enabling early intervention.
Resumo:
Graduates worldwide are increasingly entering a global workplace which will require them to operate across national and cultural boundaries. This paper discusses the need to ensure that all students are equipped to work within this increasingly complex multi-cultural environment. It examines the issues which occur in preparing students within a UK Higher Education environment so that they are able to operate effectively within the international work situations in which they find themselves. This research builds on earlier research, which found that the effectiveness of an individual to work across cultural boundaries, in terms of work and communication, was increased by the number of international or intercultural experiences that a person has. Using this as a premise, an intervention was designed which aimed to increase students’ awareness of intercultural differences and their ability to function effectively in multicultural groups. This paper analyses the effectiveness of this highly innovative training intervention. It concludes that it was an effective way of making students aware of some of the issues around cultural competence is groups. In fact, the training was seen as most effective by students in addressing issues round group dynamics. The training obviously changed the outlook of a number students who took part it. There are, however, a number of issues which need to be addressed the re-running the training. These are notably, at what time in a student’s academic career such intervention is given, its integration into the curriculum and managing of student expectations.
Resumo:
The present study examines the structure of organizational citizenship behavior (OCB) and its relation to organizational commitment in Nepal. Four-hundred and fifty employees of five Nepalese organizations filled out standardized questionnaires. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses revealed two factors of OCB, altruism and compliance, replicating Western models of extra-role behavior. Structural equation analysis showed a positive relation between affective and normative commitment on the one hand and both citizenship factors on the other. Continuance commitment was negatively related to compliance and unrelated to altruism. The findings thus confirmed the structure and usefulness of the concepts in an under-researched geographical area. Findings of the research are discussed within the Nepalese sociocultural context. © Blackwell Publishing Ltd with the Asian Association of Social Psychology and the Japanese Group Dynamics Association 2005.
Resumo:
Collaborative working with the aid of computers is increasing rapidly due to the widespread use of computer networks, geographic mobility of people, and small powerful personal computers. For the past ten years research has been conducted into this use of computing technology from a wide variety of perspectives and for a wide range of uses. This thesis adds to that previous work by examining the area of collaborative writing amongst groups of people. The research brings together a number of disciplines, namely sociology for examining group dynamics, psychology for understanding individual writing and learning processes, and computer science for database, networking, and programming theory. The project initially looks at groups and how they form, communicate, and work together, progressing on to look at writing and the cognitive processes it entails for both composition and retrieval. The thesis then details a set of issues which need to be addressed in a collaborative writing system. These issues are then followed by developing a model for collaborative writing, detailing an iterative process of co-ordination, writing and annotation, consolidation, and negotiation, based on a structured but extensible document model. Implementation issues for a collaborative application are then described, along with various methods of overcoming them. Finally the design and implementation of a collaborative writing system, named Collaborwriter, is described in detail, which concludes with some preliminary results from initial user trials and testing.
Resumo:
This paper takes some of Melanie Klein’s ideas, which Bion (1961/1998) previously used to understand group dynamics, to analyse the discipline of management studies since its ‘birth’ in the United States in the late 19th century. Specifically, it focuses on the idealisation of work and play, and argues that at its inception, for idiosyncratic historical reasons, the discipline was rooted in a ‘paranoid-schizoid’ position in which work was idealised as good and play as bad. The paper maps out the peculiar set of factors and influences that brought this about. It then examines how and if, again following Klein, the discipline has evolved to the ‘depressive’ position, where the idealisations are replaced by a more ambiguous, holistic semantic frame. Seven different relationships between work and play are then described. The paper contends that the originary splitting and idealisation is foundational to the discipline, and provides an enduring basis for analysing management theory and practice. It concludes by using this splitting to map out five potential future trajectories for the discipline.
Resumo:
The system of small groups John Wesley established to promote a proper life of discipleship in early Methodist converts was, in many respects, the strength of the Methodist movement. Those who responded to Wesley’s initial invitation to “flee the wrath to come” were organized into large gatherings called “societies,” which were then subdivided into smaller bands, class meetings, select societies, and penitent bands. The smaller groups gave Wesley the opportunity, through a system of appointed leaders, to keep track of the spiritual progress of every member in his movement, which grew to tens of thousands by the time of his death in 1791. As Methodism shifted from renewal movement to institutional church in the nineteenth century, however, growth slowed, and participation in such groups declined rapidly. By the early twentieth century, classes and bands were virtually extinct in every sector of Methodism save the African-American tradition. In recent years, scholars in various sectors of the Wesleyan tradition, particularly David Lowes Watson and Kevin Watson, have called for a recovery of these small groups for purposes of renewal in the church. There is no consensus, however, concerning what exactly contributed to the vitality of these groups during Wesley’s ministry.
Over the last century, sociological studies of group dynamics have revealed three common traits that are crucial to highly functioning groups: interdependence created by the existence of a common goal, interaction among group members that is “promotive” or cooperative in nature, and high levels of feedback associated with personal responsibility and individual accountability. All three of these were prevalent in the early Methodist groups. Interdependence existed around a shared goal, which for Wesley and the Methodists was holiness. That interdependence was cooperative in nature; individuals experienced the empowering grace of God as they each pursued the goal in the company of fellow pilgrims. Finally, the groups existed for purposes of feedback and accountability as individuals took responsibility both for themselves and others as they progressed together toward the goal of holy living. Wesley seemed to instinctively understand the essential nature of each of these characteristics in maintaining the vitality of the movement when he spoke of the importance of preserving the “doctrine, spirit and discipline” of early Methodism. Analysis of some of the present-day attempts to restore Wesley’s groups reveals frequent neglect to one or more of these three components. Perhaps most critical to recovering the vitality of the early Methodist groups will be reclaiming the goal of sanctification and coming to a consensus on what its pursuit means in the present day.