Teambuilding traffic jam problem solving challenge solved

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024
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Комментарии • 4

  • @amankaur7005
    @amankaur7005 7 лет назад +1

    thanks for adding helped me for school project

  • @duraisamivijayanand1291
    @duraisamivijayanand1291 3 года назад +1

    Can you explain the rules clearly in text

    • @GabrielleGabrielli
      @GabrielleGabrielli  3 года назад

      What Is The Traffic Jam Game?
      Traffic Jam is a great team building and problem solving exercise that requires a lot thinking and communication. This challenge is very similar to a human chess game. The group is split into two, with both sides working together to complete the challenge. Cooperation and planning are essential to complete this task.
      1. To begin, one group stands on the places to the left of the middle square, the other group stands to the right. Both groups face the middle unoccupied square.
      2. Using the following moves, people on the left side must end up in the places on the right side and vice versa.
      3. Illegal Moves:
      • Any move backwards. Your car does not have a reverse gear.
      • Any move around someone facing the same way you are.
      • Any move which involves two persons moving at once.
      4. Legal Moves:
      • A person may move into an empty space in front of him/her.
      • A person may move around a person who is facing him into an empty space.
      5. This continues until . . .
      • They reach a “traffic jam” ( two people facing back to back) or
      • They successfully accomplish the task.
      6. Every time the group reaches a “traffic jam”, the two people who were in the “1’ and “A” spot move to the back of the line and two new people start it all over.
      Modifications:
      • Only let the two people in the beginning spots talk. Everyone else must be mute.
      • Have everyone be mute. NO TALKING!
      • Change the shape from a straight line into a “V” so everyone can see what’s going on.
      • Once they’ve gotten it, ask them to do it again. If they talked to first time, have
      them do it without talking the second time.
      Processing Questions:
      • Was this a difficult challenge for you? Why?
      • What frustrations did you run into? How did you deal with those frustrations?