Difference between revisions of "Collaborative Working"
From Learning and training wiki
(New page: {{Term|COLLABORATIVE WORKING|Structured process where two or more people work together toward a common goal by sharing knowledge, learning and building consensus. Teams that work collabora...) |
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− | {{Term|COLLABORATIVE WORKING|Structured process where two or more people work together toward a common goal by sharing knowledge, learning and building consensus. Teams that work collaboratively can obtain greater resources, recognition and reward when facing competition for finite resources. It encourages introspection (self-observation reporting of conscious inner thoughts) of behavior and communication in which to increase the success of the teams as they engage in collaborative problem solving.<ref>[http://www.wikipedia.org Wikipedia](15 April 2008), [http://www.krii.com www.krii.com ](15 April 2008)</ref>}} | + | {{Term|COLLABORATIVE WORKING|Structured process where two or more people work together toward a common goal by sharing [[Knowledge|knowledge]], learning and building consensus. Teams that work collaboratively can obtain greater resources, recognition and reward when facing competition for finite resources. It encourages introspection (self-observation reporting of conscious inner thoughts) of behavior and communication in which to increase the success of the teams as they engage in collaborative problem solving.<ref>[http://www.wikipedia.org Wikipedia](15 April 2008), [http://www.krii.com www.krii.com ](15 April 2008)</ref>}} |
Latest revision as of 14:17, 18 July 2008
COLLABORATIVE WORKING |
Structured process where two or more people work together toward a common goal by sharing knowledge, learning and building consensus. Teams that work collaboratively can obtain greater resources, recognition and reward when facing competition for finite resources. It encourages introspection (self-observation reporting of conscious inner thoughts) of behavior and communication in which to increase the success of the teams as they engage in collaborative problem solving.[1] |
References
- ↑ Wikipedia(15 April 2008), www.krii.com (15 April 2008)