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Time Trial #1: After being given cursory instructions
about this game, and paddling techniques, your 4 subgroups were given
an embarrassingly few minutes to immediately develop a strategy for
propelling three narrow and loosely-connected flat boats down a
waterway and back without tipping over, banging into water hazards,
or getting your paddles tangled. Since high-performance teams are
known to quickly overcome task ambiguity, you had an opportunity to
immediately fail or succeed. You picked the latter.
Each group scrambled to get organized, determine who would paddle
or fish, and select a flat boat configuration that matched your team's
temperament, confidence, and presumed boat handling skills. Within
the first few minutes your team's true colors started to appear.
People were positive, responsive, and assertive in establishing a
mutually acceptable strategy for configuring the team, the boat, and
even the paddles to be used for propelling the flat boats.
Leadership quickly emerged in each team; roles became differentiated,
and responsibilities were clarified. And teammates quickly dealt
with inherent problems presented by this game - like how to stay
upright, paddle hard, and steer at the same time.
For example, when 3 of your four teams decided to leave the boat
configuration as a connected raft, rather than a train of 3 separate
boats, you were also faced with the problem of having 1/3 of your
group not paddle. As you quickly surmised, there was a huge trade-off
in retaining the raft configuration, since it necessarily prevents
paddlers situated in the middle of the raft from being able to place
their oars in the water. If they couldn't paddle, how could they
contribute? Each team quickly came up with unique and different
strategies for using all of your talent to garner team points,
including teammates who elected to fish rather than paddle. There
was little apparent indication that teammates were left out of the
game, intentionally or otherwise.
On the initial time trial, only the GREEN team dared to reconfigure
the flat boats into a train rather than raft. Since a more streamline
train configuration is likely to go faster, in spite of its inherent
instability, the GREEN team placed speed over stability. This group
also had to deal with uncertainty by limiting the number of teammates
who could propel each potentially sinkable flat boat. The BLUE, WHITE,
AND RED teams all opted for the more stable raft configuration, in
hopes that you might win through increased stability, easier
coordination, and potentially faster turning. In the process of
quickly developing team strategies, each subgroup of 11 participants
did a terrific job of stating individual preferences, listening to
diverse ideas, negotiating differences, and buying into decisions once
made. There appeared to be no hesitation to come together with a
workable plan, even though most participants had little prior
experience with paddling or reconfiguring boats on the water.
On the Water: When it was time to go on the water,
the BLUE and the GREEN teams went first. The blue team appeared
careful, cautious, and nervous. People were quiet, pensive,
and resourceful. They appeared to be thinking and reacting,
rather than ìgoing for it.î The Green team was almost the
opposite. They quickly separated the boats to form a chain of
3 separate but tethered flat boats, each capable of propelling
themselves - and flipping over. However, their chain or train
approach also resulted in fewer paddlers and therefore fewer
team points. Neither boat hurried down the racecourse since
the first time trial did not count toward team victory in the
final race. Both boats successfully returned to the docks with
new information and insights about how to position talent on
the boats, better ways to steer, and a method for turning the
boat around at the halfway point in the race. The Green team
showed remarkable communication and coordination skills by
quickly and smoothly turning their tethered boat configuration.
In the second preliminary time trial, the RED and WHITE
teams donned flotation devices for action. Both teams appeared
tentative and cautious although these participants were much
more animated and synchronized than the first 2 groups. They
were loud and synchronized with team cheers and stroke counting
- the booming sound of ìstrokeî, ìstrokeî could be heard 3
blocks away. Neither of your teams appeared nervous about the
tasks, but definitely depended on teammates to hold your ships
together, especially during the mid-race turn.
Perhaps most interesting were the discussions that occurred
immediately following each of the initial time trials. Your
group members quickly huddled together. New ideas and
strategies were offered. Rather than buying expensive
consulting tips from the experts, each team relied on your own
resources and team wisdom to renegotiate configurations of
boats, paddlers, and equipment. In preparation for the ìreal
raceî participants cinched up boat tie lines, developed
creative techniques for spider crawling across the flatboats
in unison to minimize set-up time, and connected the half-paddle
kayak blades to form stronger and more efficient kayak paddles.
These strategies not only improved individual performance, but
steerage and turning for other teammates. Participants became
much more involved and animated about methods and strategies
for being successful. Attention quickly turned to metrics -
how could each team maximize points without putting themselves
at risk.
Was Effective Teamwork Demonstrated in Time Trial #1?
Absolutely, given the definition of teamwork offered by the
staff of Pull Together, which includes ìChoosing to work together
to manage resources and opportunities.î For each of the four
subgroups teammates did actively:
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