Monday, October 27, 2008

Chaos into order

During our decision making “activity” I noticed that the process of attaining unanimous agreement among the class went through several “stages” of development. From the beginning there were disagreements among classmates, some disagreements were over minor details of what to propose to the professor and some were fundamentally different in every major aspect. Each different stage of the activity brought with it a different complexion; a different climate of negotiation. Through the entire activity I was primarily interested in coming to an agreement that would mitigate—or erase—the harmful effects that the outcome of the first midterm would have on my overall grade. During each stage, my approach to handling the conflict changed in accordance with the negotiating climate of the class as a whole.

Initially, when I heard ideas that came into conflict with my own, I sought to persuade others to see things my way. This approach—“compete to win”-- met with failed results (as I had suspected, but I figured I would try) so I soon abandoned this method. As time kept passing I noticed that the class as a whole was actually getting FARTHER away from unanimous agreement. For this reason I thought it would be best to try to do whatever I could to integrate peoples’ ideas and bring them together towards some sort of agreement; chances were that agreement on something would probably help us more than agreement on nothing.

As time kept passing and a group-- which appeared to be composed of representatives from each “district” of the class—formed into a cluster in the middle of the class and began to deliberate over what would be best, I thought to myself: “they think they are getting somewhere by holding a private conference but in doing so they are isolating those who are not involved.” For this reason I went to the marker board because I knew that the entire class had to be involved AT THE SAME TIME. If the entire class could see what was up for consideration, then the entire class could at least be on the same page--a good starting point. This was the “collaborative” approach. This idea was working well for the first five minutes, however, people then began to crowd around the marker board and it was again sending the message that only a few people were in charge of making the decision. Then, once someone grabbed the marker out of my hand, I concluded that it was hopeless; how would the group get anywhere if everyone was trying to take control and be heard without some sort of relative order?

Because of this, my approach—again—shifted to a more indifferent nature. This “withdrawal” , or avoidance method, was the result of feeling powerless to make a difference. As people continued to have private conversations--even when we actually managed to have one speaker stating the proposals--while we were taking votes on proposals, I just couldn't see how we would achieve unanimous agreement. As a result, I remained withdrawn for the rest of the time.

With the presidential election just over 1 week away, I figured I would ask the class: has anyone ever fallen into “withdrawal” mode regarding our nation’s politics? Do you avoid participation in our political process (a right which is ours only due to those who died fighting for that right, and those who struggled for women’s suffrage, and those who fought through the civil rights movement) because you feel you can’t make a difference?

3 comments:

Wen Liu said...

It was still a good try that you actually took the step of "compete to win." In the beginning, I turned to my group and we discussed about our decisions, and I thought forming a smaller group was effective in a way to bring forth each opinion and let the ideas be heard. However, in this decision making stage, we could not just form groups, we had to bring the whole class together. I thought that if we had less people, collaborating as whole class class might have worked well. However, seeing 80 and more people in the classroom, some were arguing, and some were trying to persuade others, to me it just seemed like it would be an impossible mission to bring everyone together. So I withdrew from the class discussion and carefully listened to the ideas being generated and just voted on the idea that i thought would be better for us. At the same time, i thought that it wouldn't be so bad to withdraw from the class, because IF EVERYONE did participate, I don't think we had enough time to do that. That was just a matter of time.

And as to your election question, I actually know some people who kind of withdraw from it because they didn't know who they should vote for. They do have a standpoint on which party they favor more, but they are afraid of the outcome, and whether the future president can really fulfill those promises.

My Tytle said...

First off, I commend you for taking that first step of going up to the marker board and attempting to bring some form of order to the chaos that was going on in the class. I agree, full involvement of the entire class was key in attaining a unanimous vote – and it was desperately needed. Unfortunately you were overtaken by someone who didn't necessarily do such a great job as being the class moderator. Still yet, I guess in all fairness, that person also deserves some credit for stepping up to the plate. However the manner in which he claimed his position (i.e.: grabbing the marker from you) gets a thumbs down in my book – totally uncalled for. I still don't think you should’ve withdrawn for that reason. There were other ways you could’ve gotten your point across. Perhaps you could’ve tried collaborating more effectively. This is something that I also realized, after the fact, that I too could’ve improved on. I guarantee though, that if YOU really felt at the time that you could lead the class through a constructive decision making process, there was no way anyone could’ve taken that away from you. Next time, have a little more faith in yourself and you’ll be amazed at how far it will take you.
As for your politics question, the answer is NO - I wouldn’t avoid participation in our political process because I wouldn’t feel that I can’t make a difference. Would You?

Objectivous Independecus said...

For the record, I've since decided to participate in our political process. I already cast my absentee ballot for the presidential election. Also, I vote in primary elections, and I also call my congressman's office when I have a complaint or a comment (I called to tell his office that I strongly disapprove of the bailout bill...which was eventually passed anyway).