Managing Group Development using the Johari Window

From apppm
Revision as of 11:18, 11 September 2016 by S152191 (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

The Johari Window is a psychological model for effective group development and self-awareness and plants its roots in the human behavioral phenomenon. Failing to manage group development can result in ineffective group communication, and hence be the source of various downfalls of project execution, streaming from prevention of information sharing to decreased performance and unproductiveness. In order to prevent these circumstances, it is important for each project member to embrace self-awareness, enable dynamics and create effective group development.

In this article the Johari Window will be discussed as a means to prevent ineffective group development and increase effective communication. A valuable insight into the framework and purpose of the Johari Window will be given in which the four quadrants will be described thoroughly. Additionally, the Shannon-Weaver model of communication and Tuckman's stages of group development will briefly be touched upon along with the importance of feedback, to stress the necessity of managing group development, and simultaneously create a link between the models. This article draws upon psychological and managerial theories to enrich the findings, and will end with a critical view point of the Johari Window in which the limitations will be discussed.


Contents

Overview

(.....)

The Johari Window and its purpose

(.....)

The Window

Communication channels

Group Development

Application

(.....)

Limitations

(.....)

Annotated Bibliography

References

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox