College and Research Libraries SUSAN AKERSTROM TARR Effective Group Process for Libraries: A Focus on Committees One way of generating greater and more effective staff participation in library management is through the library committee. An investiga-- tion and reevaluation of the traditional library committee composi- tion, functions, and performance is made applying management principles and group interaction theory. INTRODUCTION SINCE THE ADVENT OF THE 1970s, when librarians started to look seriously at management theory, many laudatory ar- ticles about the use of participatory management in libraries have appeared in library literature. Considering the democratic nature of the faculty com- mittee structure, it is not surprising that some academic librarians have been quick to theoretically espouse this man- agement style. In fact, for a number of years now, professional academic librar- ians have been echoing-or, in some cases, anticipating-this cry of partici- pation in their bids for faculty rank and/ or status. Recently, supportive staffs as well have been adopting this management lingo to express a desire for their share of "participatory man- agement." In a few academic libraries, the strong pressures for participation have forced the retirement or dismissal of a few "old-style" chief librarians, in hopes of replacing them with McGreg- or-oriented managers. Despite the frequent discussions of Susan Akerstrom Tarr is a member of the staff of the Library of Congress, Washing- ton, D.C. 444/ possible staff participation, few writers have attempted to define how this par- ticipation by staff can be effectively im- plemented; there have been even fewer accounts of actual experiments in li- braries with such management princi- ples. Rather than asking, as does most of the literature, "Will participation work or won't it?" research should be directed toward asking "How can we make it work?" Knowledge of methods is impor- tant because some library staffs are on the verge of eruption and will settle for nothing less than that share in the deci- sion-making process that library litera- ture of the past few years seemed to be promising. Participation must go from the realm of theory into actual practice. According to Argyris, there are at least six characteristics of "organic organization," or the "participative group": ( 1) decision making widely done throughout the organization, (2) an emphasis on mutual depen- dence and cooperation based on trust, confidence, and high technical or pro- fessional competence, ( 3) a constant pressure to enlarge tasks and interrelate them so that the concern for the whole is emphasized, ( 4) the decentralization of responsi- bility for and use of information, re- wards and penalties, membership, ( 5) participants at all levels being re- sponsible for developing and maintain- ing loyalty and commitment at as high a level as possible, and ( 6) an emphasis on status through contribution to the whole and inter- group and interindividual cooperation.! This paper focuses on the first and fourth characteristics: the decentraliza- tion of decision making, and the decen- tralization of responsibility for deci- sions made, both as they are manifested in committee structure. The discussion, however, will necessarily overlap aspects of the other characteristics as well. Jane Flener, in her article "Staff Par- ticipation in Management in Large Uni- versity Libraries," recalls that commit- tees and group work on a small scale have long been a part of the internal organization of academic libraries.2 Al- though many librarians have probably participated in committee work eith- er within the library, during their years of formal education, or in a social setting, few know how to get the best possible results from commit- tee interaction. In order to expand the committee structure and make a whole- hearted attempt at participation, an un- derstanding is needed of ( 1) the effects of composition factors on committee work, ( 2) the "appropriate" functions of committees, and ( 3) the method of conducting a meeting which succeeds in drawing out the various resources that are the unique contribution of the com- mittee basis of management. Referral is made to social psychology literature on group dynamics and effectiveness in group decision making. GROUP COMPOSITION Status There are a number of patterns for committee composition in libraries, each serving a different purpose. First, there Focus on Committees I 445 is the departmental meeting, which fits well into the traditional, hierarchical framework. Similarly, but one step up in the hierarchy, there is the typical meeting of department heads with the upper level administrators of a library. These methods of traditional group- ing do not seem to decentralize the pow- er base. Collins and Guetzkow (after subsuming department heads and ad- ministration under a "high power-stat- us" category with their statement, "For- mal designation as a leader, supervisor, boss, etc., will be a source of power"3 ) propose that ''high power-status" per- sons will influence the committee pro- cess: 1. The power-status hierarchy will in- fluence the flow and content of communication within the- face-to- face group. 2. When there is an established pow- er-status hierarchy, all group mem- bers will direct more communica- tion to high power-status persons. 3. The content of communication from low to high power-status per- sons will depend on what the low- status person has learned is most likely to obtain reinforcement.4 Blau and Scotfs findings corroborate these propositions: I. Explicit status distinctions tend to reduce social interaction and social support. 2. Formally instituted status differ- ences tend to undermine the pro- cess of competition for respect. 3. Status differences distort the error- correcting function of social inter- action.5 Applying these propositions to the committee system with a traditional power structure, it would seem 'that sub- ordinates' ideas and contributions would be subject to the same judgments and constraints that those subordinates meet in their everyday work. If a department head, for example, does not choose to 446 'l College & Research -Libraries • November 1974 "pass on" a suggestion made by a person in the department, it will probably not be passed on, whether it was made on :the job or in a departmental meeting. David Kaser's criticism of pyramidal 'ad- ministrative structure holds as well for pyramidal committee structure: It is too · easy for weak unit heads to filter communications both up and · down the chain of command to the detriment of the enterprise. Such unit heads, it is said, report upward only those activities in their units that make them look good, and they are careful to hand downward no information that would enable members of their staff to threaten their positions or pow- er.6 Again, many ideas :may never even be expressed by the subordinate who feels constrained by his superior ( s) -whether inside or outside the committee room. One exception to this inhibition of subordinates by superiors is noted by Collins .and Guetzkow: "Low power per- .sons will be less deferential and less threatened when supported by their peers."7 Thus, in eruptive situations, subordinates might risk the censure of their superior to voice a complaint or demand that has the support of the group, particularly if peers were physi- . cally present for support. Still the high power-status person is ultimately in control of passing on or blocking the demand. The only way for an individual or group to contribute despite the departmental chairman is to go outside the given structure. The tra- ditional committee set-up offers no al- ternatives to an employee whose efforts have been frustrated on a day-to-day ba- sis. Although this typical committee .might serve a limited informational .function, it cannot greatly expand re- sponsibility for decision making; the psychological and social constraints op- erating -in the department also apply to . the :departmental meeting. For-this rea- son it is important that there be stand- ing and ad hoc committees across tradi- tional boundaries to complement rather than parallel the traditional structure. Heterogeneity The homogeneity of . the . traditional committee composition also tends to limit the quality of participation by subordinates. Some sociai psychologists have found that heterogeneous groups excel in solving problems · where many alternatives are possibly and va:ded re- sources . are . required;8 . Varied back- grounds and interests seem to produce a potential for a wide v~riety of solu- tions to a given problem and · also aid in evaluating the quality of those solu- tions. A problem affecting many depart- ments, for example, might best be han- dled by representatives from each con- cerned department through a joint meeting. On the other hand, if each de- partment discussed the problem in its own closed meeting, solutions would tend to be reinforced by homogeneous input. When vested interests must inter- act on a common committee and inter- personal problems can be alleviated or controlled, the counteraction of bias should allow for objectivity.9 Heterogeneous composition could also apply to those committees in which par- ticipation is exclusively a function of the library's professional staff. Academ- ic libraries often have an overeducated supportive staff, most with bachelor's de- grees or some college experience. Given the disparity between the educational levels of the supportive staff and the low order of their tasks Within the li- brary, many seek to direct their abilities through participation in managerial de- cision making. Where supportive staff work more closely with the patrons than do most professional librarians, an im- portant perspective is . missed if their participation · in library policy forma- tion is denied. Similarly, _ although many supportive employees might be transient members of the library staff, their job roles are relatively permanent, and these roles must be represented in personnel ~ecision making. Library assistants and clerical employees may by definition be barred from campus faculty commit- tees, but they should not be excluded from library governance. Size A Harvard Business Review survey of 1,658 committees records the average committee membership as eight.10 Yet, 79 percent of the respondents who an- swered a question on preferred size in- dicated that the ideal committee should have between four and five members. A. Paul Hare notes that The ability of the observing individual to perceive, keep track of, and judge each member separately in a social in- teraction situation may not extend much beyond the size of six or seven. If this is true, one would expect mem- bers of groups larger than that size to tend to think of other members in terms of subgroups, or "classes" of some kind, and to deal with members of subgroups other than their own by more stereotyped methods of re- sponse.ll Collins and Guetzkow show the im- portance of focusing on interpersonal problems to facilitate group productivi- ty.12 In order to deal on an interperson- al level, members should not be seen "in terms of subgroups" or stereotypes. In addition, as Gibb's study notes, an in- crease in group size steadily increases the proportion of group members reporting feelings of threat and less willingness to initiate contributions. 13 Not only are interpersonal problems more difficult to cope with in larger groups, they also tend to be more abundant. Other observations, however, made by Slater with groups of two, three, or four suggested that small group mem- bers are either too tense, passive, tact- ful, or constrained to work together sat- Focus on Committees I 447 isfactorily.14 Slater concludes that . Size· five emerged clearly ... as the size group which from the subjects' viewpoint was most effective in deal- ing with an intellectual task involving the collection and exchange of infor- mation about a situation, the coordi- nation analysis, and evaluation of this information, and a group decision re- garding the appropriate administra- tive action to be taken in the situa- tion.15 Although five may be the optimum number for interaction in a decision- making body, according to Filley, it is not clear that this size produces the best results on complex problems.16 Perhaps if the group's task is to present a num- ber of options in a consultative capaci- ty on a complex task, a group of eight to twelve would be the most productive. But if the task requires effective interac- tion and eventual consensus in a limited amount of time, a small group is prob- ably more appropriate. Personality Bither's comparison of group effec- tiveness on complex decision-making tasks (the MARKSIM marketing deci- sion game) with individual group mem- bers' personality traits (as scored on the Jackson Personality Research Form and Canon Social Intelligence Index) found positive relationships between: (I) the performance of the group and the traits of affiliation, exhibition, so- cial intelligence, and social rec~gni­ tion; ( 2) the performance of the group and the va!"iance on dominance; ( 3) a person's need-disposition traits and his tendency to take a leadership role in group interaction.17 Concerning the first correlations, Bither states The results of this research suggest that the greater the degree to which individuals in a task group involved in complex decision making possess 448 f College & Research Libraries • November 1974 skills that enable them to deal effec- tively with other group members, the greater will be the success of the group.18 The second significant correlation, be- tween group performance and group members· variance on dominance traits, indicates that group effectiveness is fa- cilitated when dominance traits are strongly concentrated only in a couple of individuals; or, conversely, group ef- fectiveness is handicapped when none or all of the members of the group are high in dominance traits. The third correlation was derived from a finding that persons voted as leaders by the members of a group were significantly higher on the trait scale scores of dominance, exhibition, social intelligence, and achievement than oth- er members of the group. Bither summarizes his study: These findings do not suggest that per- sonality is a substitute for ability. They do indicate that, when ability is either unknown or relatively equal among possible candidates for complex group task assignments, a consideration of the mix of personalities to be assigned to the group is likely to pay off in terms of increased group effective- ness.19 Although difficult to evaluate at this point, psychological factors constitute another important dimension to be con- sidered in the area of group dynamics. APPROPRIATE CoMMITTEE FUNcrroNs Traditional Functions The various operations of committees as gleaned from the literature can be divided into eight general functions. 1. The brain-storming function. This generally refers to the creativity and productivity stimulated by in- teraction of individuals in a group. 2. The evaluative function. Varied attitudes and presuppositions of group members force individual contributors to think out and jus- tify proposed solutions; also, the different perspectives of group members allow them to see ramifi- cations of solutions not identifi- able to a single individual. 3. The coordinating function. As quoted in the HBR survey: Committees are often the only way of coordinating all the func- tions of a business and bringing together minds that operate inde- pendently. By so doing each area can acquire an awareness of the others to balance the separate functions into a well-coordinated whole. 20 4. The communication function. This includes the information and fact- finding roles of committees. Not only do different people naturally provide a variety of knowledge re- sources for the elucidation of a problem (and often for · the en- lightenment of group members in- volved) but they also offer a means for the division of labor so that much information can be gathered and shared. 5. The training-future-executives function. Committee participation is said to allow a potential execu- tive exposure to "the problems, the requirements, and the contribu- tions of other areas of the busi- ness," while giving him or her op- portunity to develop a capacity for objectively analyzing and apprais- ing situations in which he or she is not regularly involved.21 6. The morale function. Employees apparently will be more content with their jobs if they have an op- portunity to participate in setting the directions and policies of the organization. 7. The consultative function. When a committee is limited to this func- tion, it may operate in the ways de- scribed above, but its conclusions serve only as input to someone else's decision. 8. The decision-making function. Elizabeth Stone's sixth point in her list of "values in relation to man and his work space" is that . . . Power is seen not as a set quantity, but like capital, is sus- ceptible to indefinite growth as it is shared. Participative manage- ment is emerging in which ad- ministrator and worker share powers of decision on the matters that directly affect the employee in his job situation, not only his welfare, but use of his talents.22 Of all these functions, only the deci- sion-making function requires the use of power. In order for participatory management to increase employees' com- mitment to managerial decisions, the findings of Lawrence and Smith, and Edith Bennett, indicate that group dis- cussion of a problem is no more induce- ment to future action than is a simple lecture on the topic.23· 24 However, deci- sion by a group regarding a future ac- tion effectively raises the possibility that such action will be executed. Expanded Functions 1. Committee of the whole. Kaser suggests that large library policy matters be decided by a "commit- tee of the whole," for long-range goals and objectives, performance and service stan- dards, and the monitoring of these standards would appear to be issues that any librarians' as- sembly would wish to reserve un- to itsel£.25 Although the setting of "long- range goals and objectives, per- formance and service standards" seems to be an appropriate group activity for all staff, the size of most academic library staffs would Focus on Committees I 449 produce an unwieldy committee. Division of labor could be applied so that small committees could be set up to study goals and report their findings to the general assem- bly of librarians. This structure closely resembles faculty organiza- tion, with the head librarian serv- ing an information function dur- ing deliberations and a review function after a decision has been reached. Although such a format would enlarge the power base of an orga- nization, it would be difficult to reach consensus; majority rule would probably have to be the adopted procedure. Time would have to be spent in the assembly in addition to time consumed in com- mittee deliberations. Also, the in- dividual commitment to and re- sponsibility for any decision made in that large a group would prob- ably be diminished. Finally, ac- cording to Gibb's findings, cited earlier, the amount of individual participation in such a large group would be minimized. The advantage of this committee of the whole, however, is that it may lead to an actual diffusion of power. If the subcommittees are carefully chosen to represent var- ied staff opinion and interests, the head librarian might still serve only as a reviewer of the commit- tees' decisions rather than the sole decision maker, thus delegating his authority and broadening the pow- er base of the organization. 2. Personnel management. An area likely to benefit from varied input and creative solutions is personnel management. Although it may be necessary for a library administra- tor to supervise staff members un- der institutional guidelines, most staff members have the knowledge 450 I College & Research Libraries • November 1974 and interest to make contributions in personnel management through group decision making. 3. Research group. Robert Haro rec- ommends group approach to study- ing and initially instituting major change in academic libraries. Such a "Research Group" would be com- prised of "representatives from academic teaching departments, a representative sample of manageri- al (preferably not "upper eche- lon" executives) and non-man- agerial librarians, and where ap- propriate or feasible, student rep- resentatives."26 Haro' s discussion of the functions of such a group .is easily related to our developing conception of an effective group. CoMMITTEE PERFORMANCE Modes of Interaction Internal operations, as welJ. as compo- sition and functions, bear on a commit- tee's effectiveness. A model for effective group interaction is provided by Van de Ven and Delbecq, who conclude that the optimal combination of processes for creative problem-solving is: (a) use of nominal group processes for fact-finding and idea generation in the first phase; (b) structured group in- teraction . . . followed by informal dis- cussions for clarification and evalua- tion of information, during the second phase; and (c) nominal group voting for final independent individual judg- ments in the final phase. 27 The authors present this structUred pro- cedure for meetings to eliminate the problem of time-consuming, purposeless discussions into which meetings often evolve. Also, in an attempt to prevent interpersonal conflicts, Van de V en and Delbecq curtail interaction as ·much as possible. Nominal group processes encourage members to think carefully on the prob- lems under discussion; but during final decision making, directed interaction must be the primary tactic of any group. Nominal group voting may make such interaction all but superfluous. A study made by Dean Barnlund com- pares the quality of decisions made by majority vote with those made by con- sensus of small committees comprised of people with similar abilities. The problems, drawn from the Bradley test of Formal Validity in Problem Solving, required that logical conclusions be se- lected for given arguments. He discov- ered that 1. Majority decisions, when deadlocks are evenly divided between right and wrong answers, are not significantly different from those made by the av- erage individual and are inferior to those of the best member of the group working alone. 2. Group decisions, reached through cooperative deliberation, are signifi- cantly superior to decisions made by individual members working alone and to majority rule.28 Overuse of nominal group process where members have similar abilities may thus diminish the quality of deci- sions made, although this might not nec- essarily apply to other types of groups. Leadership Harrison Elliott's standard work, How to Help Groups Make Decisions, lists six "useful qualifications in the chairman": 1. Know the steps in decision making. 2. Have a reasonably alert mind. 3. Be open-minded and fair, not a protagonist for a point of view. 4. Have poise and self-restraint. 5. Be sufficiently well informed re- garding the question under consid- eration to understand its main is- sues. 6. Be undisturbed by the expression of strong emotion in the group.29 Shull, Delbecq, and Cummings sug- gest dual functions for the leadership role: ( 1) task-instrumental, which in- cludes "the attainment of resources, the j application of these resources to the task, and the processes which underlie both"; and ( 2) social-emotional, "which are concerned with maintaining the group and integrating group members into a satisfying social relationship."30 Bither's findings that leaders tend to ex- ceed other group members in the traits scores on dominance, exhibition, achieve- ment ("task instrumental" properties), and social intelligence ("social-emotion- al") correspond to the dual function theory. Similarly, the leadership qualifi- cations proposed by Elliott can also be classified by the dual function scheme. In addition, Shull suggests that these dual functions are not always served by the same person or persons. And neither function need be served by the designat- ed leader as long as someone serves them. If the task function can be separated from the social function as presumed by the dual function theory of leader- ship, people could be trained to assume either task-instrumental or social-emo- tional roles within the committee. Lead- ership teams would provide one pattern of group organization. CoNCLUSIONS Participation by library staff can be Focus on Committees I 451 enhanced if alterations are made in the traditional library committee composi- tion, functions, and performance. The composition of the committee should reflect heterogeneity in status and by de- partment whenever possible. Committee size and individual personality traits are important considerations for effective decision making. Traditional committee functions must be expanded to allow staff to participate in reaching decisions as a whole, as well as to conduct research in smaller groups. In addition, all staff should be included in personnel management decisions. Performance within a committee can be more effective if the nominal process of . decision making is balanced against the interacting process. Leadership qual- ities, both task-oriented and social-emo- tionally oriented, could be assumed by staff properly trained for these roles; in this way, the leadership base could be expanded. Consideration and implementation of these suggested changes for the tradi- tional committee should not only meet some of the current staff demands for greater participation in library manage- ment but should also improve the qual- ity of those decisions made within the committee. REFERENCES 1. Cliris Argyris, Integrating the Individual and the Organization (New York: Wiley, 1964), p.185. 2. Jane G. Flener, "Staff Participation in Man- agement in Large University Libraries," College & Research Libraries 34:275 (July 1973). 3. Barry E. Collins and Harold ·Guetzkow, A Social Psychology of Group Processes for Decision-Making (New York: Wiley, 1964), p.151. 4. Ibid., p.187. 5. P. M. Blau and W. R. Scott, Formal Orga- nizations: A Comparative Approach (San Francisco: Chandler, 1962), p.122-23. 6. David E. Kaser, "Staff Role in Goal De- termination," in Papers Delivered at the Li- brary Dedication, Indiana University, Oc- tober 9-10, 1970 (Bloomington, Ind.: Indi- ana University Libraries, 1971), p.67. 7. Collins and Guetzkow, Social Psychology, p.165. 8. A. C. Filley, "Committee Management: Guidelines from Social Science Research," California Management Review 13:19 (Fall 1970). 9. Collins and Guetzkow, Social Psychology, p.101. 10. Rollie Tillman, Jr., "Problems in Review: Committees on Trial," Harvard Business Review 38:8, 11 (May- June 1960). 11. A. Paul Hare, Handbook of Small Group Research (New York: Free Press of Glen- coe, 1962), p.228. 12. Collins and Guetzkow, Social Psychology, p.88. 13. J. R. Gibb, "The Effects of Group Size and of Threat Reduction upon Creativity in a Problem-Solving Situation," American Psy- chologist 6:324 (1951). 452 I College & Research Libraries • November 1974 14. P. Slater, "Contrasting Correlates of Group Size," Sociometry 21:129-39 ( 1958). 15. Ibid., p.137-38. 16. Filley, "Committee Management," p.15. 17. Stewart W. Bither, Personality as a Factor in Management Team Decision Making (State College, Pa.: Center for Research of the College of Business Administration, Pennsylvania State University, 1971 ), p .37- 44. 18. Ibid., p.59 (See also Collins and Guetz- kow's discussion of interpersonal relations.) 19. Ibid., p.60. 20. Tillman, "Problems in Review," p.166. 21. Ibid., p.166. 22. Elizabeth Stone, "Personnel Development and Continuing Education in Libraries," Library Trends 20:5 {July 1971). 23. Lois C. Lawrence and Patricia C. Smith, "Group Decision and Employee Participa- tion," Journal of Applied Psychology 39: 334-37 ( 1955). 24. Edith B. Bennett, "Discussion, Decision, Commitment and Consensus in Group De- cision," Human Relations 8:251-73 ( 1955). 25. Kaser, "Staff Role in Goal Determination," p.66. 26. Robert P. Haro, "Change in Academic Li- braries," College & Research Libraries 33: 99 (March 1972). 27. Andrew Van de Ven and Andre L. Del- becq, "Nominal Versus Interacting Group Process for Committee Decision-Making Effectiveness," Academy of Management Journal14:211 (June 1971 ); 28. Dean C. Barnlund, "A Comparative Study of Individual, Majority, and Group Judg- ment," Journal of Abnormal and Social Psy- chology 58:59 {Jan. 1959). 29. Harrison Sacket Elliott, How to Help Groups Make Decisions; ed. by Grace Loucks Elliott (New York: Association Press, 1959), p.44. 30. Fremont A. Shull, Jr., Andre L. Delbecq, and L. L. Cummings, Organizational De- cision Making (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1970 ), p.137.