31 research outputs found
The changing of the guard: groupwork with people who have intellectual disabilities
This paper considers the impact of service systems on group activities. It describes an inter-professional groupwork project facilitated by a social worker and a community nurse. The project provided an emancipatory experience for a group of adults who had intellectual disabilities. The group was charged with the task of reviewing and updating the recruitment and interview processes used by a 'Learning Disability Partnership Board', when employing new support workers.
The paper begins with a brief history of intellectual disability and provides a context to the underpinning philosophical belief that people should be encouraged and supported to inhabit valued social roles no matter what disability they may have. It then identifies the ways in which the sponsoring health, education and social care services impacted on the creation and development of a groupwork project. It might have been expected that the nature of the intellectual disability would have been the major influence on group process. However the paper reveals that organisational constraints had a significant impact on group functioning. Issues including, staffing budgets and transport contracts impacted on group process and function.
The results of the project show how, with adequate support, people with intellectual disability can make important decisions that have long-reaching impacts on the services
Meeting deadlines in work groups: Implicit and explicit mechanisms
Nous nous sommes demandĂ©s, dans cette Ă©tude, si les groupes Ă©taient mieux Ă mĂȘme de respecter les dĂ©lais quand leurs membres partageaient les mĂȘmes cognitions temporelles, câest-Ă -dire quand ils sâaccordaient sur les dimensions temporelles de leur tĂąche. Dans une Ă©tude longitudinale portant sur 31 groupes, nous avons Ă©tudiĂ© lâeffet des cognitions temporelles partagĂ©es sur le respect dâun dĂ©lai et explorĂ© deux antĂ©cĂ©dents des cognitions temporelles partagĂ©es: la cohĂ©rence des rythmes des membres du groupe et lâĂ©change des rappels concernant le temps. Nos rĂ©sultats montrent que ces deux facteurs ont un impact sur les cognitions temporelles partagĂ©es et cela Ă diffĂ©rentes Ă©tapes du travail collectif. De plus, il est apparu que les cognitions temporelles partagĂ©es pouvaient aussi bien faciliter que contrecarrer le respect des dĂ©lais: cela dĂ©pend des rythmes des membres du groupe. In this study, we examined whether groups were better able to meet deadlines when group members had shared temporal cognitions, that is, when they agreed on the temporal aspects of their task. In a longitudinal study involving 31 groups, we studied the effect of shared temporal cognitions on meeting a deadline and explored two antecedents of shared temporal cognitions: the similarity in group membersâ pacing styles and the exchange of temporal reminders. Our findings suggest that both antecedents are relevant to shared temporal cognitions, be it at different stages of group collaboration. Furthermore, we found that shared temporal cognitions may either facilitate or impede meeting a deadline, depending on the content of group membersâ pacing styles