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in a team work like family or class room/office
we find it difficult to accept the participation of others
as we dont know this -

2007-03-12 15:24:00 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Psychology

5 answers

Interference: Butting into something which is none of your business. Example: Husband/wife argument. Mother-in-law giving opinion; that's interference.

Involvement: Means you are a part of something. You are the husband or wife. Say you're getting divorced and have children. The children are involved as they are part of the family. Mother-in-law still not involved.

If something doesn't directly involve you then you are interfering if not asked for an opinion.

2007-03-12 21:21:51 · answer #1 · answered by Judith 6 · 0 0

Well in my views, a person is involved in the work, when we want him/her to help us in doing the job. If we like his/her suggestions/ contributions etc.it becomes involvement. No matter how stale/outdated his/her ideas are.

Opposite to it is interference.....when we don't like any person and he tries to contribute in the work, it become interference for us. No matter how efficient his/her ideas are.

So its just our state of mind. We can think big and involove everyone or think small and make everyone interfere in our job.

2007-03-13 03:18:04 · answer #2 · answered by San 2 · 0 0

i suppose the difference is that involvement is when one becomes engaged within the team and interference is when they hinder the productivity of the team

2007-03-12 22:30:04 · answer #3 · answered by freshup 1 · 0 0

Involvement : Which you want the person to do. team work

Interference : Which you do not want the person to do. Nose poking

2007-03-12 22:29:42 · answer #4 · answered by dancingdoll 3 · 0 0

motivation

2007-03-12 22:27:42 · answer #5 · answered by howdigethere 5 · 0 0

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