Alejandro Perez SPC1017 Group 1 Reflection 1
Reflection 1
By Alejandro Perez
Introduction
Last week
our class wrapped up a series of chapter presentations for SPC1017. Each group
was assigned a different section from the textbook, so no one got to cherry
pick a favorite topic. That random assignment turned out to be a blessing
because it forced us to dig into material we might have skimmed otherwise.
Hearing classmates explain ideas in their own words made the content stick
better than any lecture.
Intercultural Communication, Chapter 3, my group
My team was handed Chapter 3 on intercultural communication, and I curiosity got the better of me and I decided to become a project manager. I don’t know if to thank or spite my curiosity, leading was stressful and also pretty interesting. At times it felt like running a small newsroom on deadline, juggling messages, formatting, encouraging comments, doom comments, and a few little joke comments, all while keeping the vibe positive. I enjoy history and spend a lot of nights watching documentaries about empires and revolutions, so digging into how cultures connect without marching armies felt refreshing.
We started
by splitting the topics. Everyone claimed a section, then I set soft and hard
deadlines and reminded people in the group chat. Most followed the plan. Slides
rolled in on race, ethnicity, gender, and deep dives into cultural values like
individualism versus collectivism. My favorite was time monochronic vs. polychronic.
I grew up in Santo Domingo where time is more a suggestion than a rule. I
explained to the class how one friend will show up ten minutes early while
another strolls in an hour later without a text warning, and everyone just
shrugs.
There was one hiccup. A teammate never finished his slides. Reminders went out, silence came back. In the end I filled the gap and moved on. Apparently some puzzles arrive from the factory with a piece missing, so you draw the last piece yourself and keep playing.
Communicating in Groups, Chapter 9, group 2
Group two covered communicating in groups and opened with good energy. They asked why group work matters, then showed how families, support circles, and work teams all rely on clear communication. Their slide on healthy traits hit home. It made me think about our own group and how we mostly had those things. Mostly. There was this one guy who didn’t do his slides even when given couple of chances and then didn’t show up to the presentation itself, but again, not gonna keep ranting about that. When they
talked about modern group norms they mentioned that Gen Z uses emojis during
meetings to soften the mood or signal a quick pause. I still think typing
emoticons the old school way is better, a simple colon and parenthesis, is
cooler and adds a personal touch.
They also
explained conflict styles and how a quick check in can stop tension before it
grows. Their use of sports teams and study groups we all know kept things
relatable and memorable.
Also Jesus Christ was their presentation long and in-depth.
Leadership and Problem Solving, Chapter 10, group 3
Group
three tackled leadership and problem solving, and their slides looked ready for
a company retreat. They listed leadership styles in a neat table: autocratic,
democratic, laissez faire, transformational, servant. Autocracy is the best
leadership style! (For legal reasons this is a joke. Please don’t sue me.)
They
walked us through a six step problem solving model. Define the issue, gather
information, set criteria, brainstorm options, choose the best solution,
implement and review. Hearing those steps laid out so cleanly made me realize how
theoretically easy would it be to fix the problems of the world if we actually
sat and conversed. Also they should have added the alternative step of going to sleep and hope it goes away in the morning.
My group
works pretty well, I think, maybe, everyone is independent, so I mostly point
them toward the target and they take off. That freedom keeps morale high and
makes my job easier. Even so, I saw how a simple checklist could save us time
whenever confusion starts to bubble up.
Overall Thoughts
Our group
was a colorful mix of fonts, layouts, and photos, probably the most chaotic
deck in the room, and somehow also the deepest. Each slide looked unique, yet
together they painted a fuller picture, just like how cultures keep their
identity yet create something new when they mix. Good ideas turn great when
they bounce off contrasting perspectives.
This
project was my first time steering a class group of this size and it forced me
to learn fast. I practiced setting expectations, sending polite nudges, and
stepping in quietly when needed. Being the leader felt like holding the
steering wheel of a bus full of creative passengers, slightly scary but
exhilarating. I will keep the leader hat until the semester ends unless there
is a coup-de-état, in which case I will hand over the hat and take notes and hope
to not get executed.
I was
going to line up all the fonts and fix every style issue, but I never got
around to it. Instead, I decided the mix of fonts, backgrounds, and colors was
a perfect visual for how many different cultures have their own ways of doing
things. That explanation sounded good enough to me, so I kept the slides
exactly as they were.
Group two
also mentioned virtual teams that rely on video calls and shared documents.
They pointed out that turning on cameras can build trust, and that setting a
five minute social buffer at the start of a meeting helps people warm up. That
was a better more advanced solution than just talking through the group chat.
The biggest lesson is that communication is a layered skill. Words matter, but so do timing, silence, context, and body language. Whether you are giving directions, planning a fundraiser, or studying for finals, the ability to adjust and listen makes all the difference. Our class proved that different approaches can still meet in the middle and produce something worth sharing. Next time I see a group forming, I might even volunteer to lead again, though I will double check the puzzle pieces first.
Well your group puzzle was great. Excellent writing!
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