Home
Scholarly Works
Using Consensus as a Criterion for Groupness
Journal article

Using Consensus as a Criterion for Groupness

Abstract

The purpose of the study was to examine how the exclusion of teams failing to meet varying statistical criteria for consensus on cohesiveness influences the magnitude of the cohesion– team success relationship. The index of agreement was calculated for 78 teams (N = 1,000 athletes) that had completed the Group Environment Questionnaire. Results showed that excluding teams because they fail to satisfy various criteria for consensus leads to changes in the magnitude of the cohesion–team success relationship. The magnitude of the relationship between team success and the individual attractions to group-task manifestation of cohesion showed progressive decreases as criteria required to demonstrate consensus became more stringent. Conversely, the magnitude of the relationship between team success and the group integration–task and group integration–social manifestations of cohesion showed progressive increases as criteria required to demonstrate consensus became more stringent. The results are discussed in terms of their relationship to group dynamics theory and practice.

Authors

Carron AV; Brawley LR; Bray SR; Eys MA; Dorsch KD; Estabrooks PA; Hall CR; Hardy J; Hausenblas H; Madison R

Journal

Small Group Research, Vol. 35, No. 4, pp. 466–491

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Publication Date

August 1, 2004

DOI

10.1177/1046496404263923

ISSN

1046-4964

Contact the Experts team