| History
In 1947, the National Training Laboratories Institute began in
Bethel, ME. They pioneered the use of T-groups (Laboratory Training) in
which the learners use here and now experience in the group, feedback
among participants and theory on human behavior to explore group
process and gain insights into themselves and others. The goal is to
offer people options for their behavior in groups. The
T-group was a great training innovation which provided the base for what
we now know about team building. This was a new method that would help
leaders and managers create a more humanistic, people serving system and
allow leaders and managers to see how their behavior actually affected
others. There was a strong value of concern for people and a
desire to create systems that took people's needs and feelings seriously.
Objectives of T-Group
Learning
The T-Group is intended to provide you
the opportunity to:
- Increase your understanding of
group development and dynamics.
- Gaining a better understanding
of the underlying social processes at work within a group
(looking under the tip of the iceberg)
- Increase your skill in facilitating
group effectiveness.
- Increase interpersonal skills
- Experiment with changes in your
behavior
- Increase your awareness of your
own feelings in the moment; and offer you the opportunity to
accept responsibility for your feelings.
- Increase your understanding of
the impact of your behavior on others.
- Increase your sensitivity to
others' feelings.
- Increase your ability to give
and receive feedback.
- Increase your ability to learn
from your own and a group's experience.
- Increase your ability to manage
and utilize conflict.
Success in these goals depends, to
a large extent, on the implied contract that each participant is
willing to disclose feelings that she or he may have, in the moment,
about others in the group, and to solicit feedback from the others
about herself or himself. The focus is upon individual learning;
some participants may learn a great deal in most of the above areas,
others learn relatively little.
Method
One way of describing what may happen for a participant is --
- Unfreezing habitual responses
to situations -- this is facilitated by the participant's own desire to
explore new ways of behaving and the trainer staying non-directive, silent,
and providing little structure
or task agenda
- Self generated and chosen
change by the
participant
- Experiment
with new behaviors -Practice
description not evaluation of
- Reinforce new behavior by
positive feedback, participants own assessment of whether what is
happening is closer to what she/he intends, supportive environment,
trust development
Sources of Change in Groups
- Self-observation - participants give more attention to their own
intentions, feelings, etc.
- Feedback - participants receive information on the impact they
have on others
- Insight - participants expand self-knowledge
- Self-disclosure - participants exposes more of themselves to
others
- Universality - participants experience that others share their
difficulties, concerns or hopes
- Group Cohesion - participants experience trust, acceptance &
understanding)
- Hope - participant see others learn, achieve their goals, improve,
and cope more effectively
- Vicarious Learning - participants pick up skills and attitudes
from others
- Catharsis - participants experience a sense of release or breakthrough
A Description
The T-group provides participants with an
opportunity to learn about themselves, their impact on others and
how to function more effectively in group and interpersonal situations.
It facilitates this learning by bringing together a small group of
people for the express purpose of studying their own behavior when they
interact within a small group.
A T-Group is not a group discussion or a
problem solving group.
The group's work is primarily process
rather than content oriented. The focus tends to be on the feelings and
the communication of feelings, rather than on the communication of
information, opinions, or concepts. This is accomplished by focusing on
the 'here and now' behavior in the group. Attention is paid to
particular behaviors of participants not on the "whole person",
feedback is non-evaluative and reports on the impact of the behavior on others.
The participant has the opportunity to become a more authentic self in
relation to others through self disclosure and receiving feedback from
others. The Johari Window is a model that looks at that
process.
The training is not structured in the
manner you might experience in an academic program or a meeting with an
agenda or a team with a task to accomplish. The lack of structure and
limited involvement of the trainers provides space for the participants
to decide what they want to talk about. No one tells them what they
ought to talk about. The lack of direction results in certain
characteristic responses; participants are silent or aggressive or struggle
to start discussions or attempt to structure the group.
In the beginning of a T-Group participants are
usually focused on what they experience as a need for structure, individual
emotional safety, predictability, and something to do in common. These needs are
what amount to the tip of the iceberg in most groups in their back home
situation. By not filling the group's time with answers to these needs, the
T-Group eventually begins to notice what is under the tip of the iceberg. It is
what is always there in any group but often unseen and not responsibly engaged .
So, participants experience anxiety about authority and power, being include and
accepted in the group, and intimacy.
Depending on forces, such as, the dynamics of the
group, the past experience and competence of participants, and the skill of the
trainers -- the group, to some extent, usually develops a sense of itself as a
group, with feelings of group loyalty. This can cause groups to resist learning
opportunities if they are seen as threatening to the group's self-image. It also
provides some of the climate of trust, support and permission needed for
individuals to try new behavior.
As an individual participant begins to experience
some degree of trust (in themselves, the group and the trainers) several things
become possible --
-
The participant may notice that his/her
feelings and judgments about the behavior of others is not always shared by
others. That what he/she found supportive or threatening was not experience
in that way by others in the group. That how one responded to authority,
acceptance and affection issues different from that of others (more related
to ones family of origin than to what is happening in the group). Individual
differences emerge in how experiences are understood.
-
The participant may begin to try on new behavior.
For example, someone who has always felt a need to fill silence with noise
and activity tries being quieter and still.
-
Participants begin to ask for feedback from
the group about how their behavior is impacting others.
-
Participants may find that they are really
rather independent and have a relatively low level of anxiety about what is happening
in the group. They will exhibit a broader range of behavior and emotions
during the life of the group. In fact their leadership is part of what helps
the group develop.
The role of the trainers
-
To help the group and individuals
analyze and learn from what is happening in the group. The trainer
may draw attention to events and behavior in the group and invite
the group to look at its experience. At times the trainer may
offer tentative interpretations.
-
To offer theory, a model or research
that seems related to what the group is looking at.
-
To encourage the group to follow
norms that tend to serve the learning process, e.g., focusing on
"here & now" rather than the "then &
there".
-
To offer training and coaching in
skills that tend to help the learning process, e.g., feedback
skills, EIAG, etc.
-
To not offer structure or an agenda.
To remain silent, allowing the group to experience its anxiety about
acceptance, influence, etc.
-
To be willing to disclose oneself, to
be open with the group. On occasion being willing to offer feedback
and challenge a participant
-
To avoid becoming too directive,
clinical, or personally involved.
Possible Problems
- T-Group methods usually encourage self-disclosure and openness, which
may be inappropriate or even punished in organizations. This was an
early learning. When managers thought they could take the T-group
method into the back home organization, they discovered that the
methods and the assumptions of a T-group did not fit. T-groups
consisted of participants who were strangers. They didn't have a
history or a future together and could more easily focus on
here and now behavior. Another issue was that in the organization
there were objectives, deadlines and schedules related to
accomplishing the work of the company or group. Groups with a task
to accomplish could not take the same time that would be used in a
T-Group. These difficulties helped lead to the development of
Organization Development and team building. What had been learned in
T-Groups was combined with other knowledge and these new disciplines
emerged as ways to address the values raised by the T-Group
experience.
- The T-Group experience can open up a web of questioning in a
participant. Ways of behaving that the person has used for many
years may be called into question by others in the group and
oneself. This has in some cases brought the participant to question
relationships in the family or at work. While this can be a very constructive
process that leads to the renewal of relationships, it has on occasion
lead to the breakdown of a relationship. While such a breakdown may
have, in time, come to the relationship without participation in a
T-Group, it remains a painful and possibly damaging experience.
- Participants being forced or pressured to attend, by an employer
or other person with influence, are on the whole less likely to have
a positive learning experience. Employers or others who want to
require the participation of others may enhance the chance of having
a productive outcome if -- they attend a lab themselves before
sending others; they speak with the lab coordinator before the event
to discuss what might realistically be expected and what the leader
could do to assist in the learning process when the participant
returns home.
- Very rarely there have been situations in which a participant has
a psychiatric problem. One report said "The possibility of negative
psychiatric effects of ST, and especially its role in inducing
psychiatric symptoms, is yet to be clarified." This reinforces
the value of participation based on intrinsic motivation; a norm
that discourages people in therapy from attending without the
approval of their therapist; and trainers staying focused on the
learning areas suited for T-Group experiences.
Copyright Robert A. Gallagher 2001
Agencies that offer
T-Group training and other lab training experience:
LTI
- Leadership Training Institute
NTL
- National Training Laboratories Institute
Additional background on
T-Groups and related issues
Kurt
Lewin: groups, experiential learning and action research
Working
with T-Groups? - A section of
"Working with Groups"
What is Kolb's model of experiential education, and
where does it come from? - By
Richard W. Shields, Dorothy Aaron,
and Shannon Wall
A
Social History of the T-Group
National
Society for Experiential Education
UA
Experiential Learning Cycle model
Touchy-Feely to Organization T-Group By Theme
(humor)
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