Occupational Digest
 
October 10 , 2012
 
 
 
When does group conflict lead to better  performance? 
 


 
 
 
 
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Is disagreement in teams always a bad thing? Although  we don't always 
welcome it, we can probably agree that differences of opinion  can be healthy 
under the right conditions. But identifying these conditions has  been a 
challenge. There is now consensus that relational conflict, meaning  
disagreements of a personal flavour, are a hallmark of poor team performance:  
think of 
working with a team-mate who disliked you or had permanently low regard  for 
your contributions. Less understood is task conflict, meaning disagreements 
 about how to go about a piece of work. A 2003 meta-analysis by De Dreu &  
Weingart suggests that overall it also characterises more poorly performing  
teams. But 23% of those studies found it associated with better 
performance. So  recent research by Bret Bradley and colleagues intended to 
seek out 
the key  conditions that allow this kind of conflict to flip from disrupting 
to  enabling.

The study followed 117 teams, each composed of five students  working 
together over a semester. Their collaboration culminated in a team  project 
that 
was used as the indicator of final team performance, which was  expected to 
show variability alongside levels of task conflict measured by a  
mid-semester survey. What would lead conflict to help rather than hinder? The  
study 
hazarded it would be psychological safety: a group-level feature which is  
present when members perceive low risks and consequences for speaking freely.  
Bradley's team reckoned that under these conditions task conflict can 
remain  on-task, rather than triggering retribution and spirals of unproductive 
negative  emotion. This allows groups to reap the fruits of task conflict: 
more diversity  of ideas and deeper exploration.

The results of the study suggest that  this account is part, but not all, 
of the puzzle. After controlling for subject  matter knowledge using scores 
on an exam taken earlier in the semester, the  research team investigated the 
conflict-safety-performance relationship. As  predicted, teams that scored 
highly on the psychological safety measure taken  mid-semester showed a 
relationship between more task conflict and better  performance on the final 
project. But the researchers didn't find the expected  drop in performance when 
teams that were psychologically unsafe conflicted; at  least, the decrease 
didn't prove statistically significant. So in this study  psychological 
safety was shown to have benefits, but not to decisively shift  conflict from 
burden to benefit.

More research is needed to understand  harmful task conflict and what 
influences it. Given the benefits of  psychological safety, organisations may 
want to make efforts to facilitate it,  by giving permission to speak out; 
leaders can role model this, even showing  they are prepared to be fallible in 
public. It's noteworthy that a team may work  well and be cohesive without 
necessarily feeling psychologically safe, so it can  be worth evaluating 
exactly what the conditions are within a group, particularly  if groupthink and 
unexamined ideas would pose highly negative  consequences.



-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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