To achieve Step 12, individuals will show that they can reflect on the team’s progress and suggest improvements as a result.
In the previous steps, the focus was on how to work well with others, how to contribute to team decision-making, and then how to improve the team through managing unhelpful conflicts and building external professional relationships. This step focuses on how to influence the team to make it more effective.
The building blocks of this step are learning:
There are a few different dimensions that you could consider when reflecting on the progress of a team:
Morale and motivation are explored further in Leadership Step 12. In essence, motivation is the drive, commitment and energy that a team has to achieve particular goals. This can fluctuate at different times depending on the likelihood of success and the rewards that will be achieved (not just financial) if the task is completed successfully.
However, there is also a deeper psychological element where individual motivation will also fluctuate according to whether the team feel:
These are all areas where, as a team member, you can help to ensure the continued motivation of other members of your team.
Sometimes there are operational challenges as you implement a plan. Perhaps you were unable to secure the resources that you need, or tasks were completed incorrectly, or external factors have undermined your efforts.
It is important to recognise these challenges so that you can adapt your plans accordingly – securing additional resources, moving timelines and milestones, or changing some of the tasks you had planned. Reviewing progress regularly against milestones will help you to spot operational challenges early and make changes.
As a team member, you have particular insight into the areas that you are working on directly and improving operations there. You might also be able to reach out to others to support them directly, or find ways around problems.
At other times, you might experience a challenge around the impact of what you are doing. Perhaps you are delivering the operational plan, but it is not leading to the outcomes that you were expecting.
As a team member, you can support taking learning from the situation. What was it in the original model that was wrong? What were the logical assumptions that did not hold up? Are there hypotheses that were disproved unexpectedly?
This is likely to be an area which needs a wider team conversation, as it will involve revisiting some of our assumptions, improving them with what we see in reality, and then adjusting our strategic plan accordingly to get back on track for our impact goals.
It’s important as a team member, to keep scanning for unanticipated secondary effects. This might include talking to those individuals you are working with or looking at broader social and environmental effects of the work that you’re doing.
Once you have identified a secondary effect, you can analyse why that has happened, and what actions you might need to take as a team to take to mitigate that effect – or whether it means that you need to go back to the drawing board on the whole approach.
If you can’t enact an improvement yourself, you will have to think carefully about how to deliver the suggestion or the constructive criticism, including:
There is a lot more on how to influence people in Speaking Step 12, Step 13, Step 14 and Step 15.
If your team has a clear leader, then the dynamic between you and the leader will be critical if you are going to suggest improvements in a way that will encourage them to be taken on and used.
You can find out more about different leadership styles in Leadership Step 13, Step 14 and Step 15. Essentially, the style of leadership will affect the openness of the leader to take on board your reflections and make improvements as a result.
If your leader takes a democratic approach to decision-making, encourages change, and believes in coaching and developing the team, then you are in luck. They are likely to delegate considerable authority, or at least be open to taking on board the ideas of the team, and you are likely to get a positive reception. In a democratic structure, you are likely to need to bring the whole team along with you, so open conversation and debate is likely to be important.
On the other hand, if your leader takes an autocratic approach, prefers stability and consistency to change or takes a transactional approach to their team, then you will find it a lot tougher to get the change to be incorporated. In this case, you probably have a couple of options:
In school or college, the focus is on learning. The majority of the teams you area member of will have goals to enhance your learning even further, for example in seminar groups and discussion groups. To ensure your learning is of the highest quality, it is important to ensure that your team is functioning effectively and efficiently. It is therefore beneficial to your learning if you can master this step and communicate your feedback on progress and improvements to the team in a positive and constructive manner.
Every organisation aims to operate as effectively as possible so that productivity can be maximised, whether it be the number of customers served, pupils taught, products made or goods sold. Time spent in your team making decisions and putting plans into action must be used efficiently. If the processes within your team could be improved in any way then it is important to feed this back to the team, however, the manner of communicating your ideas for improvement should be positive and considered.
Meetings, teamwork and group discussions take time out of your day and in the wider world, time away from school, college or work is precious, it is for relaxing,enjoyment, hobbies and interests. Group activities and discussions therefore need to be efficient, viewed as time well spent. If you think things could be done better, differently or progress could be improved then considered, well managed feedback needs to be given. The team will be grateful if the outcome or process is better for everyone.
To best practise this step of Teamwork, apply what you have learnt to a real-life situation. Choose one or more of the activities below, remind yourself of the key points and strategies in the step, and have a go!
To teach this step:
This step can be reinforced whenever learners are working in a group. The teacher can pause the group and ask learners to think about how their group is working across the four dimensions shared above. Learners can reflect and then make changes.
At a more advanced stage, the teacher can ask them to reflect on this at the end of a task, which will be a better indication of whether they were able to both recognise where improvements could be made, and then actually make them.
This step is best assessed through an observation of an extended project or challenge, then coupled with a reflection. It should be clear to the teacher during the observation that the learner is proactive in identifying issues and then trying to influence their team to address them.
This observation can be complemented by a reflection which is either discussed, presented or written.
To build this step in the work environment, managers could:
Reflect with the individual on their previous experiences of working in teams, helping them to become more aware of sources of team improvement.
Demonstrate some options an individual can try to influence the team’s progress. To achieve this a manager might model different approaches an individual might try for the situation. A manager might show a diagram which demonstrates when conditions are favourable for different approaches. Approaches might include:
There are plenty of opportunities for building this skill in the workplace:
For those already employed, this step is best assessed through observing an individual over time and having reflective conversations with the individual. For instance:
During the recruitment process, this step could be assessed for by:
We work with a wide range of organisations, who use the Skills Builder approach in lots of different settings – from youth clubs, to STEM organisations, to careers and employability providers.
We have a lot of materials available to support you to use the Skills Builder Universal Framework with the individuals you work with, including:
We also do a lot of work with organisations who join the Skills Builder Partnership to build the Universal Framework into their work and impact measurement systems. You can find out a lot more using the links below.
At home, you can easily support your child to build their essential skills. The good news is that there
are lots of ways that you can have a big impact, including: