Friday, March 20, 2009
Decision Making
I didn't say much of anything, nor did I help with the decision process. I was the little asian girl in the corner of the room that screeched "SHUT UP!" when things got rowdy. I wouldn't consider this avoidance though. I thought it was neccessary for the majority of the group to be quiet and attentive at any one moment for decisions to happen. I was happy to help out by reminding the people that emerged as semi leaders to stewfoo [stfu] :). I wouldn't have gone about this any other way and feel that even after knowing the end result [which I think was excellent], I participated in my most helpful way.
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I would not say that I agree with you 100%, but for the most part, my feelings were similar. I also agree that I will not change my participation in the group because if too much people voice their opinion then it will be very difficult to finalize our result (which I totally agree that was excellent!!)
ReplyDeleteI also chose to not say anything. And I agree with you that the fact that some of the students were quiet and attentive, helped in the decision making process. May be in other situations this way wouldn't work out, but I think in our class decision making process it worked pretty well.
ReplyDeleteand what great we did being quiet!!!
ReplyDeleteMaybe the people who were quiet were happy with their grades but I kind of agree that being quiet actually helped the class decision making into a totally chaos.
ReplyDeleteLike I posted, taking the time to listen and not speak lets you catch when other people's thoughts are similar to your needs. So yeah, that works!
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