I still remember that group assignment like it was yesterday. I was in senior secondary two, and our teacher our teacher had assigned us to teams for our end-of-term presentation, which was a huge portion of our grades—a whole 50%.
At first, I was excited; a group project meant sharing and reducing workload and brainstorming ideas together. But the project turned out to be a true recipe for disaster.
Our group consisted of four people: me, Ada, Jameson, and Sarah. We barely knew each other, but I figured we’d get along well enough to get the work done. After all, we were all aiming for a good grade. In our first meeting, we split the task this way: Ada, the self-appointed leader, was to coordinate everything; Jameson would put together the slides and visuals as he was the best at computer among us; I would put together the summary, and Sarah would handle the research. It was a good plan—what could go wrong?
The trouble started almost immediately. We had planned to meet once a week, but it became obvious that getting everyone together was easier said than done. Ada, who was supposed to be our coordinator, was also in charge of scheduling our meetings. But she was constantly missing our planning sessions, often giving last-minute excuses like. Without her there to lead, Sarah and Jameson argued over every small detail.
One day, Sarah looked at James with frustration. “Jameson, if we don’t include sources for each slide, we’ll lose points. Do you even care about the grade?”
Jameson frowned, rolling his eyes. “Sources, sources. Does anyone care about those? Half the class won’t even notice.”
“But the teacher will!” Sarah snapped back. She turned to me, angry and frustrated. “Can you believe this?”
I tried to play peacemaker. “Let’s just pick a few reliable sources, Jameson. It won’t take that long.”
Then there was the issue of contributions. Sarah insisted on doing everything “properly,” which meant she tried to control everyone else’s work. Jameson took this as an excuse to slack off, contributing the bare minimum and barely showing up for meetings. And without Ada to lead us consistently, there was no real accountability. Each week, we promised ourselves we’d catch up, but the deadlines came closer while our work lagged further behind.
One week before the presentation, Ada finally showed up for a meeting. She walked in, glancing around the table. “Wow, we’re way behind. What have you guys even been doing?”
Sarah flared up. “What have we been doing? Where have you been? We needed you to keep everyone on track!”
Ada frowned. “I thought you all could handle it. I’m not the babysitter here.” “Look, let’s just meet every night this week and pull it together, okay?”
When disaster really struck was During one of our meetings at night, as we were working on our shared document, Jameson accidentally deleted the entire file. One moment it was there, and the next, it was gone. We all froze, staring at the blank screen.
“What… did you just do?” Ada whispered, her voice trembling.
Jameson looked at the screen in horror. “I… I don’t know! I just hit backspace, and… everything’s gone. what do we do?”
Ada's face turned red. “You didn’t save a backup?! You didn’t think to save it?!”
“It was an accident!” Jameson replied, defensive. “Maybe if you weren’t breathing down my neck, I wouldn’t have messed up!”
I cut in, trying to diffuse things. “Okay, everyone, arguing isn’t going to bring the file back. We just… have to start over.”
We finally agreed to split up, each of us taking a different part of the project to redo on our own. We didn’t have time to argue anymore, so we decided to just throw everything together at the last minute and hope for the best. For the next few nights, we worked separately, each of us tackling our section and barely communicating. There was no sense of teamwork left—just individual efforts to get this disaster over with.
The day of the presentation arrived, and our project was, unsurprisingly, a mess. The slides clashed horribly because we weren't coordinated. Each section had a different style, and our information felt disjointed like four separate projects cobbled together at the last minute. During the presentation, we stumbled through awkward transitions, with long pauses where no one was sure who was supposed to speak next.
At one point, Ada whispered to me, “Skip to the next slide. Jameson forgot to put in the conclusion.”
Jameson, overhearing, gave her a look. “ I did my part! Not my fault if someone messed it up.”
Our professor’s expression said it all—this was, without a doubt, one of the worst presentations ever given. When we finally finished, we stood there in silence, embarrassed, as the class clapped politely. Walking out of that room, I could feel the tension easing, like we’d finally exhaled after holding our breath for weeks. We all knew we’d learned a valuable lesson about teamwork, communication, and maybe the importance of backups.
Looking back, I can see how the whole situation spiraled because we failed to work as a team. Everyone had their priorities and their ideas of how things should go. That group project was a true recipe for disaster, but I can’t say it was a total waste. It taught me that even the best plans can fall apart without communication and mutual respect. And it left me with a story to laugh about, although I barely managed to pass the subject.