Thursday, January 27, 2011

Tennis Ball Team Building Activity

The challenge was to pass a tennis ball between every member of our team so everyone touched it once and so that it didn’t end up with the person who started with it.
Our team all held one hand out to form a circle of all of our hands, while one person picked up the ball and touched it to each person’s hand and then dropped it in the last person’s hand.
We ended up being the fastest team out of the three.
I think if we did it again, we would do everything the same and nothing differently.
We all just started trying out different approaches until we found a fast one that we liked. We were all just throwing out ideas and that seemed to work pretty well.
The nature of the game didn’t really evolve; we used the same approach even as it became more competitive.
Some constraints I would add are that the ball must be thrown, and that only one person at a time can be touching the ball.
I don’t know if our team won or lost, we didn’t really keep track of the score.

Lost At Sea

Our assignment was to prioritize a list of items that we would have in a hypothetical situation where we were lost at sea. We first prioritized the items individually, and then as a team. After that, we compared our rankings to the coast guard’s rankings.

My Rankings:

1.       A 25 liter container of water
2.       A case of army rations
3.       A shaving mirror
4.       A sextant
5.       A fishing kit
6.       20 square feet of opaque plastic sheeting
7.       15 ft of nylon rope
8.       A quantity of mosquito netting
9.       A 10 liter can of oil/petrol mixture
10.   Maps of the pacific ocean
11.   A floating seat cushion
12.   A quantity of mosquito netting
13.   2 boxes of chocolate bars
14.   A can of shark repellent
15.   A small transistor radio

I did have a tough time choosing some but I rationalized and came up with good arguments for each one and then chose based on those reasons. I chose food and water as the highest because that is what you need to survive and that is a priority. I chose the radio as last because you couldn’t talk to anyone with it, and you won’t be able to pick up an AM/FM signal and if you could what would you use it for?

As a team, our lists were fairly close. Some items had a great differential in rankings, but we acknowledged each other’s reasons and compromised. Something that we all agreed on was that water should come first followed by food. We worked together well in my opinion. One thing we disagreed on was that the shaving mirror would be important. I thought it should be number 3 and they thought it should be number 12.

The biggest surprise when we saw the expert list was that water was lower than we thought it should be. Other than that, our lists were pretty close to the experts list. I think experiential data would be more valid, because it comes from the combined experience and judgment of peers.