Lesson Notes
| Site: | khisaesther167878.gnomio.com |
| Course: | Conflict resolution management |
| Book: | Lesson Notes |
| Printed by: | Guest user |
| Date: | Sunday, 5 April 2026, 1:24 AM |
Description
1. Lesson Notes
A. The Two Dimensions of Conflict Behavior According to the Thomas-Kilmann model, an individual’s behavior in a conflict situation is described along two basic dimensions:
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Assertiveness: The extent to which the person attempts to satisfy their own concerns.
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Cooperativeness: The extent to which the person attempts to satisfy the other person’s concerns.
B. The Five Conflict-Handling Modes By plotting these dimensions, we identify five specific ways to handle disputes:
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Competing (Power-Oriented): High assertiveness and low cooperativeness. You pursue your own concerns at the other person’s expense.
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When to use: During emergencies or when vital, unpopular actions need implementation.
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Accommodating (Self-Sacrificing): Low assertiveness and high cooperativeness. You neglect your own concerns to satisfy the other person.
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When to use: When you realize you are wrong or when the issue is much more important to the other person.
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Avoiding (Sidestepping): Low assertiveness and low cooperativeness. You do not address the conflict; you postpone it or withdraw.
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When to use: When the issue is trivial or when the potential damage of a confrontation outweighs the benefits.
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Collaborating (Problem-Solving): High assertiveness and high cooperativeness. You work with the other person to find a "Win-Win" solution that fully satisfies both parties.
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When to use: When both sets of concerns are too important to be compromised.
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Compromising (Sharing): Intermediate in both assertiveness and cooperativeness. You look for an expedient, mutually acceptable solution that partially satisfies both parties.
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When to use: To achieve temporary settlements to complex issues under time pressure.
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