Digital Media Project (Building a High Performance Team)
Overview. For Digital Media Project Four (DMP4), you must work with two partners (no more than three people in your group/team) to develop, implement and evaluate a plan for how to build an effective, high performance team. The format for DMP4 is an original website with at least 5 pages that includes at least five visual elements (i.e., at least one visual element per web page) that you have created (photographs taken by someone outside the team are not acceptable, unless team members appear in the photo). (At least one of these visual elements should be a wordle or word cloud - see Appendix One for an example wordle and instructions on how to create one. Appendix One also includes some other examples of visual elements that would be acceptable. Please see Dr. Jude or your TA if you need assistance creating these visual elements).
As you may recall, early in the semester we asked you to select your group members. Those who did not join a group on their own were assigned to a group and will receive a 25 point deduction on their score for the final project. By the end of the semester, each group member must submit a peer evaluation in which you document your specific contributions to the project and evaluate the contributions of other members.
We strongly encourage you to create your website using the free website development tools from http://www.weebly.com. However, students in previous semesters have also used the free website development tools from http://www.wix.com and http://www.wordpress.com. While you are not required to use one of these free tools to create your website, you must make sure that you can generate a public URL so that everyone in the class can gain access to your site and provide feedback. You do not need to pay to have your site hosted on any of these websites - all you need to do is publish your site to the public and keep track of the URL to submit in the D2L DMP4 Discussion Forum and the Project Submission Survey.
Your website must contain at least five pages, which should make it fairly easy for you to divide up the labor among the two or three group/team members. We strongly encourage you to select one of the design templates that are available within the website development application and use that template on every page to give your website the sense of cohesiveness and unity required in the Presentation Zen approach. We strongly encourage to use the following structure for your website to ensure that you include all of the required elements (shown in the table below and on the next page).
Digital Media Project Four (DMP4) Guidelines
BUS ADM 330 – Organizations – Fall 2015
Building a High Performance Team
Overview. For Digital Media Project Four (DMP4), which is worth 150 points and represents 15% of
your final grade in the course, you must work with two partners (no more than three people in your
group/team) to develop, implement and evaluate a plan for how to build an effective, high performance
team. The format for DMP4 is an original website with at least 5 pages that includes at least five visual
elements (i.e., at least one visual element per web page) that you have created (photographs taken by
someone outside the team are not acceptable, unless team members appear in the photo). (At least one
of these visual elements should be a wordle or word cloud - see Appendix One for an example wordle
and instructions on how to create one. Appendix One also includes some other examples of visual
elements that would be acceptable. Please see Dr. Jude or your TA if you need assistance creating these
visual elements).
As you may recall, early in the semester we asked you to select your group members. Those who did
not join a group on their own were assigned to a group and will receive a 25 point deduction on their
score for the final project. By the end of the semester, each group member must submit a peer
evaluation in which you document your specific contributions to the project and evaluate the
contributions of other members.
We strongly encourage you to create your website using the free website development tools from
http://www.weebly.com. However, students in previous semesters have also used the free website
development tools from http://www.wix.com and http://www.wordpress.com. While you
are not required to use one of these free tools to create your website, you must make sure that you can
generate a public URL so that everyone in the class can gain access to your site and provide feedback.
You do not need to pay to have your site hosted on any of these websites - all you need to do is publish
your site to the public and keep track of the URL to submit in the D2L DMP4 Discussion Forum and the
Project Submission Survey.
Your website must contain at least five pages, which should make it fairly easy for you to divide up
the labor among the two or three group/team members. We strongly encourage you to select one of
the design templates that are available within the website development application and use that template
on every page to give your website the sense of cohesiveness and unity required in the
Presentation Zen approach. We strongly encourage to use the following structure for your website to
ensure that you include all of the required elements (shown in the table below and on the next page).
Web Site Pages Purpose Required Elements
Page 01 - Home, About Us or
Introduction
Welcome viewers to your site and
provide basic background
information about who you are and
what your project is about
Brief bio (175-200 words) for
each group/team member that
describes skills and abilities that
each person contributed to the
project; and either a group photo
or photos of each individual
member of the group/team
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Rationale and Objectives. All of us have had the experience of working with others on a team,
whether at school, in work or volunteer settings, or through participation in athletics or some other
team-based activity. Most of us have had a combination of positive and negative experiences when
working on a team, yet we typically do not step back and try to figure out how to improve the
experience and enhance the team’s performance. There are many concepts and theories in the field of
organizational behavior that can help us figure out how to develop teams that are effective and
performing tasks at a high level. In this project we would like you to use concepts and theories from the
OB textbook, as well as the three articles you select from those posted in D2L, to reflect on your past
experiences as a team member. Armed with these insights, we would like you to develop a plan for how
to build an effective team in the future. We hope that this type of critical reflection will help you develop
some strategies to make your participation in teams more satisfying and rewarding in the future.
For this project we would like you to read at least three articles that have been published in academic
journals, primarily those geared towards practicing managers, and integrate the perspectives in those
Page 02 - Description of topic,
theoretical perspective and
reference list
Provide an overview of your topic
and the theoretical perspective or
model that you will use to guide
the development of the rest of
your website; Provide list of
sources that were used to create
your project
Overview essay and model
(1750-2000 words) of the
theoretical perspective that
incorporates info from the OB text
and your three articles; and a
model or diagram that
illustrates the theoretical
perspective you will use to frame
the rest of your website;
Reference list that includes
information about the sources you
used, including articles, websites,
images, etc. formatted in APA style.
Page 03 - Personal application #1 Share one group/team member’s
personal application of the model
or theoretical perspective that was
provided in your executive
summary
Essay (700-750 words) in which
group member #1 discusses his/her
personal application of the
theoretical perspective or model
described on page 2; and at least
one visual element that was
created by group member #1
Page 04 - Personal application #2 Share one group/team member’s
personal application of the model
or theoretical perspective that was
provided in your executive
summary
Essay (700-750 words) in which
group member #2 discusses his/her
personal application of the
theoretical perspective or model
described on page 2; and at least
one visual element that was
created by group member #2
Page 05 - Personal application #3 Share one group/team member’s
personal application of the model
or theoretical perspective that was
provided in your executive
summary
Essay (700-750 words) in which
group member #3 discusses his/her
personal application of the
theoretical perspective or model
described on page 2; and at least
one visual element that was
created by group member #3
Web Site Pages Purpose Required Elements
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articles with the coverage of team characteristics, team processes and team performance that is
presented in our textbook. We hope that this brief exposure to practitioner oriented journals will help
you further develop your ability to synthesize multiple perspectives and use them to make sense of
actual team experiences. And finally, we hope that this project will help you to experience first-hand,
how the concepts and theories of organizational behavior can be used to improve performance of
individuals, teams and organizations.
DMP4 Deliverables. There will be two deliverables for this project:
1) Your final DMP4 project - an original website with at least 5 pages (URL submitted to D2L
Discussion Forum labeled DMP4 - Website URL). Please make sure you name your subject heading
using this format: LastNamePerson#1_ LastNamePerson#2_
LastNamePerson#3_DMP4. If your last names are too long to use this naming format, feel
free to abbreviate each person’s last name by using the first FIVE letters of the last name. Your
DMP4 URL must be submitted in D2L to the appropriate discussion forum by 11:59pm CST
on Wednesday December 9, 2015. You must also indicate the first and last names of your
group members in your discussion post. Everyone who correctly posts their DMP4 URL to the
appropriate discussion forum by 11:59pm CST on Monday December 7, 2015 will earn a
ten point early submission bonus. You must upload your URL as an active link to
your website in order to get credit and/or qualify for the early submission
bonus.
2) In order to get credit for your project, each person must also complete the DMP4 Final
Project Survey which is available at this link https://milwaukee.qualtrics.com/SE/?
SID=SV_3gWyswbRMQFc7tj by 11:59pm CST on Wednesday December 9, 2015. This
survey asks you to submit the URL for your group’s website, along with a project
contribution report in which you document your specific contributions to the project and
indicate how your group members added value to the project.
Integrating Sources into Your Project
In addition to our textbook, which is the first resource on the list, you must incorporate content from
at least three of these sources1 (see list for your chosen topic) in a meaningful way into your DMP4.
In order to make it easy for us to see how you have integrated information from your resources into
your project, you need to include at least 15 citations throughout your project. We would like you
to highlight each citation and make the type appear as bold to emphasize the OB
concept you are including from the cited sources, so that it is easy for you/us to spot all of the places
that you have incorporated information from your sources. All of the articles we have selected are
available in the Content Area of D2L under DMP4 Resources. You need to make it very clear how
you have integrated content from the sources you select and you should properly cite the sources using
either APA or MLA rules. For more information about how to properly cite your sources, please use the
resources at http://owl.english.purdue.edu/.
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1Approved Resources for DMP4
Achor, S. (2012). Positive intelligence. Harvard Business Review, 90(1, 2).
Colquitt, J. A. , Lepine, J. A., & Wesson, M. J. (2010). Organizational Behavior: Improving Performance and
Commitment in the Workplace, 2nd Ed. Burr Ridge, IL: McGraw-Hill, Inc. (This is our OB text book)
Cross, R. , Ehrlich, K. , Dawson, R. , & Helferich, J. (2008). Managing collaboration: Improving team
effectiveness through a network perspective. California Management Review, 74.
Davis, R. (2009). What makes high-performance teams excel? Research-Technology Management, 52(4),
40-45.
Dubin, H. (2005). Building high-performance teams. Chief Learning Officer, 4(7), 46-49.
Dutta, S. (2010). What's your personal social media strategy?. Harvard Business Review, 88(11), 127-130.
Dutton, J. , Roberts, L. , & Bednar, J. (2010). Pathways for positive identity construction at work: Four
types of positive identity and the building of social resources. Academy of Management. the Academy of
Management Review, 35(2), 265-293.
Fox, J. (2012). The economics of well-being. Harvard Business Review, 90(1, 2),
Gardner, H. (2012). Coming through when it matters most. Harvard Business Review, 90(4), 82-91.
George, B., Sims, P., McLean, A. N., & Mayer, D. (2007). Discovering Your Authentic Leadership. Harvard
Business Review, 85(2), 129-138.
Goleman, D. (2004). What Makes a Leader?. Harvard Business Review, 82(1), 82-91.
Goleman, D., Boyatzis, R., & McKee, A. (2001). Primal Leadership: The Hidden Driver of Great
Performance. Harvard Business Review, 79(11), 42-51.
Goleman, D. (2000). Leadership That Gets Results. Harvard Business Review, 78(2), 78-90.
Gratton, L. , Voigt, A. , & Erickson, T. (2007). Bridging faultlines in diverse teams. MIT Sloan Management
Review,48(4), 22.
Hill, L. A. (2007). Becoming the BOSS. (cover story). Harvard Business Review, 85(1), 48-56.
Hill, L. A., & Lineback, K. (2011). Are You A Good Boss--Or a Great One?. Harvard Business Review,
89(1/2), 124-131.
Hillmann, M. , Hillmann, M. , Dongier, P. , Murgallis, R. , Khosh, M. , et al. (2005). When failure isn't an
option. Harvard Business Review, 83(7/8), 41-42.
Ibarra, H., & Hunter, M. (2007). How Leaders Create and Use Networks. Harvard Business Review, 85(1),
40-47.
Johnson, W. (2012). Disrupt yourself. Harvard Business Review, 90(7/8), 147-150.
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Kanter, R. (2011). How great companies think differently. Harvard Business Review, 89(11), 66-78.
Kirby, J. (2005). Toward a Theory of High Performance. Harvard Business Review, 83(7/8), 30-39.
Kotter, J. P. (2001). What Leaders Really Do. Harvard Business Review, 79(11), 85-96.
Laszlo, A. , Laszlo, A. , Laszlo, K. , & Johnsen, C. (2009). From high-performance teams to evolutionary
learning communities: New pathways in organizational development. Journal of Organisational
Transformation & Social Change, 6(1), 29-48.
Maak, T. , & Pless, N. (2006). Responsible leadership in a stakeholder society: A relational perspective.
Journal of Business Ethics, 66(1), 99-115.
Martin, R. (2007). How Successful Leaders Think. (cover story). Harvard Business Review, 85(6), 60-67.
Mathieu, J. , Maynard, M. , Rapp, T. , & Gilson, L. (2008). Team effectiveness 1997-2007: A review of recent
advancements and a glimpse into the future. Journal of Management, 34(3), 410-476.
Mealiea, L. , & Baltazar, R. (2005). A strategic guide for building effective teams. Public Personnel
Management, 34(2), 141.
Molinsky, A. , Davenport, T. , & Davidson, C. (2012). Three skills every 21st-century manager needs.
Harvard Business Review, 90(1, 2).
Morieux, Y. (2011). Smart rules: Six ways to get people to solve problems without you. Harvard Business
Review, 89(9), 78-86.
Morriss, A., Ely, R. J., & Frei, F. X. (2011). Stop Holding Yourself Back. Harvard Business Review, 89(1/2),
160-163.
Morse, G. (2012). The science behind the smile. Harvard Business Review, 90(1/2), 84-90.
Pentland, A. (2012). The New Science of Building Great Teams. Harvard Business Review, 90(4), 60-70.
Pless, N. (2007). Understanding responsible leadership: Role identity and motivational drivers. Journal of
Business Ethics, 74(4), 437-456.
Sinoway, E. (2012). No, you can't have it all. Harvard Business Review, 90(10), 111-114.
Spradlin, D. (2012). Are you solving the right problem?. Harvard Business Review, 90(9), 84-93.
Spreitzer, G. , & Porath, C. (2012). Creating sustainable performance. Harvard Business Review, 90(1, 2).
Spreitzer, G. , Sutcliffe, K. , Dutton, J. , Sonenshein, S. , & Grant, A. (2005). A socially embedded model of
thriving at work. Organization Science, 16(5), 537-549.
Sull, D. , & Eisenhardt, K. (2012). Simple rules for a complex world. Harvard Business Review, 90(9), 68-74.
Vlachoutsicos, C. A. (2011). How to Cultivate Engaged Employees. Harvard Business Review, 89(9),
123-126.
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Zenger, J. H., Folkman, J. R., & Edinger, S. K. (2011). Making Yourself Indispensable. Harvard Business
Review, 89(10), 84-92.
1 You are welcome to select resources from this list, the resources on teams or leadership, or find at
least three resources of your own, however you must show the resources you have found to your TA or
Dr. Jude for approval before using them in your project.
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APPENDIX ONE - Examples of Visual Elements
Example One - Wordle or Word Cloud. A word cloud is a visual representation of key words associated
with a topic, such as team building. The example below shows a wordle that Dr. Jude created to highlight some of
the important aspects of her career as an educator. You should include at least 20 concepts in your word list in
order to create your leadership or team building wordle. (Dr. Jude’s Career Wordle included 35 concepts.)
In order to create the wordle shown above, Dr. Jude typed up her list of words/phrases and indicated what size
they should be by inserting a colon after the phrase and entering a number to indicate the size (the larger the
number, the larger the type). She then copied the list and pasted it into the dialog box that appears at this URL
http://www.wordle.net/advanced. She used the controls on the website to select the font (Coolveltica), the layout
(horizontal with rounder edges), and the color scheme (organic carrot). She then used a screen capture utility
called GRAB and took a picture of the wordle, saved it as an image file and copied it into this document. Now it’s
your turn to create your own leadership or team building wordle. See the instructions below.
Make a difference: 150
Inspire curiosity: 140
Create: 130
Build connections: 120
Cultivate compassion: 110
Be the change: 105
Be generous: 75
Invest wisely: 50
Enable others to act: 50
Model the way: 75
Practice kindness: 70
Be authentic: 60
Use photography: 45
Writer: 70
Use innovative technologies: 45
Overcome fear: 50
Live as though nothing is impossible: 45
Empower others: 125
Believe in myself: 110
Communicate effectively: 105
Be a life long learner: 100
Inspire excellence: 130
Live with integrity: 115
Be fair: 100
Construct knowledge together: 100
Celebrate differences: 90
Show appreciation: 130
Cultivate strong relationships: 120
Encourage the heart: 95
Innovate: 120
Be the change you wish to see: 70
Be independent: 45
Celebrate accomplishments: 60
Listen to others: 80
Take risks: 55
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Figure 1.1 - Dr. Jude’s Career Wordle
Instructions for creating your “Wordle” exporting it as an image
• Create your list of preliminary ideas about characteristics of an effective team.
• Decide which phrases you want to appear as larger type or smaller type – indicate those choices by including
the phrase followed by a colon and a number – numbers above 100 will create larger type.
• You should go to the wordle website at http://www.wordle.net/advanced .
• Cut and paste your list of phrases into the window and hit GO.
• You can play around with the layout and colors by using the controls on the website.
• When you are satisfied with your wordle, you will have to figure out what screen or image capture software is
available within your operating system (search the help files for your operating system with the keywords
“screen capture” and follow the instructions).
• Once you have captured the image, you should save the file and make note of where you put it - I usually put
the image on my desktop so it is easy to find.
• Now you are ready to copy and paste the image of your wordle into DMP4.
Example Two - Smart Art in PowerPoint. Another way to create an original visual element is to use the
Smart Art feature within PowerPoint. Dr. Jude created the example by opening up a blank slide in PowerPoint and
clicking on the SMART ART tool in the tool bar. She selected the smart art format from the “process” category
and added the text to the bulleted list. She then clicked on the “Colors” tool to pick the color scheme for the
smart art graphic and then changed the font to Gill Sans and font color to black. She saved the slide as a “Picture”
in the Save menu and then copied and pasted the picture into this document. Now it’s your turn to use the Smart
Art feature to create your own original visual element.
Obviously these are only two of the hundreds of possibilities for creating your own visual elements. The only
requirement is that you create the visual elements yourself and you must include a Wordle and
two other visual artifacts that are not photographs. Please note that scanning in a copy of a diagram
from the textbook is not acceptable - if you use a diagram, you must create the diagram yourself. Please see Dr.
Jude or your TA if you need any assistance with this aspect of DMP4.
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Figure 1.2 - Wordle Creation Process
APPENDIX TWO - Explanation of Theoretical Model Requirement
Throughout the Colquitt, LePine and Wesson text, the authors use diagrams of theoretical models to illustrate how
various concepts are related to each other. In my analysis of the Foxconn article, I used the theoretical model
known as value percept theory (shown below) to analyze the steps taken by Foxconn to try to motivate and
increase the satisfaction of employees.
For DMP4 you must develop your own theoretical model that helps to explain how to create an effective high
performance team. Your model should incorporate elements from our OB textbook, as well as concepts from the
three articles you have selected to use in your project (the list of acceptable articles is posted in D2L). You should
select no more than ten and no fewer than five concepts for your theoretical model. You need to draw a diagram
that shows how your concepts are connected to each other and how they influence or impact Team Performance.
I hope this clarifies the “theoretical model” component of DMP4. Please contact me via email at [email protected]
or stop by during office hours, if you have further questions.
Dr. Jude Rathburn
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Theoretical Model: Value Percept Theory Theoretical Model: Job Characteristics Theory