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Working in Subgroups


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Getting everybody to work with everyone else in subgroups is one of those tasks you think should be easy to arrange, but when you try to work out the groupings, the combinations never quite seem to work.

The composition of the subgroups should match the course objectives. Diverse groups allow people to learn about other departments, while homogeneous groups permit delegates to share knowledge and experience.

Be careful if you use race, age, gender, religion or nationality as criteria for creating diverse subgroups. You must have a good training reason for using these criteria. “Let’s split the girls up” is not a good reason. Giving people practice in managing diversity is a better reason. The safest selection criteria are experience, location, and the delegate’s job.

Mixing the sub-groups

A good way to have a nervous breakdown is to change the sub-group composition for each exercise. For an even better nervous breakdown, try arranging the groups so that every student has worked with every other student by the end of the course.

After a few hours of brain-bashing, you will come to the conclusion that only certain combinations of group and subgroup size provide a complete solution.

The number of subgroups required for a solution is:

N/n

(Where N is the size of the group, and n is the size of the subgroup.)

The number of sessions required to ensure that everyone meets everyone else is:

(N-1)/(n-1)

The main conditions for a perfect solution are:

When you have an imperfect solution:

Some example plans


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