Within the "Shipka Spaces" individuals become groups of "Think Tanks." Nothing goo or bad, just a thing. It's social communications. The sketch illustrates that Gatton, Martin, and Sheikh are one think tank. Barskey, Norfolk, and Bowman compromise another think tank, but I only see these guys in the 324 class and the Writing Center because our schedules closely correlate. Chewning, Piccarillo, and Bauhaus (not shown) seem to make up yet another think tank. Masters (not shown) works alone. He thinks and processes internally.
I only show the four women in the sketch because these four did all the talking during the course of the two workshops. This was probably because they were the only ones who had definite ideas as to what they were going to propose and this is probably the most likely reason why the perceived monopoly.
I could have butted in but in the end the Proposal Communication Objective found its own space and I never really needed assistance. What I needed was exactly what I got: a bunch of ideas of what to look at.