Communication,%20Power,%20and%20Conflict - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Communication,%20Power,%20and%20Conflict

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Chapter 7 Communication, Power, and Conflict – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Communication,%20Power,%20and%20Conflict


1
Chapter 7
  • Communication, Power, and Conflict

2
Student to read to class
  • examines communication chapter skills and seven
    patterns, developing marriage, nonverbal and
    self-disclosure resolving conflict it intimate
    communication also power communication on focuses
    role the of and relationships, within of
    conflicts and of them types ways

3
  • Was the message sent? Was the message received?
    Was the message understood?

4
Student to read to class
  • Chapter seven examines communication patterns and
    marriage, nonverbal communication, developing
    communication skills and self-disclosure. It also
    focuses on the role of power and conflict within
    intimate relationships, types of conflicts and
    ways of resolving them.

5
  • Was the message sent? Was the message received?
    Was the message understood?

6
Communication
DEFINITION Communication is a two part
process used to exchange information. First the
message must be sent. then received and
understood.
7
Communication is a complex skill which seems
deceptively easy.
  • Wondering, assuming and guessing what others feel
    or think, makes disaster.
  • In order to have meaningful relationships (dates,
    friends, family, employment) it is essential to
    have effective communication.

Your thoughts about this statement It is
impossible not to communicate.
8
Verbal expresses the basic content of the
message.Nonverbal expresses the relationship
part of the message.
Communication
9
Functions of Nonverbal communication
  1. Convey interpersonal attitudes.
  2. Express emotions.
  3. Handle the ongoing interaction.
  4. For communication to be clear, verbal and
    nonverbal messages must agree.

10
The importance of Nonverbal Communication
  • John Gottmans five horsemen of the apocalypse
  • 1. contempt
  • 2. criticism
  • 3. defensiveness
  • 4. stonewalling or avoiding
  • 5. belligerence
  • All can be warning signs of serious risk of
    eventual divorce.
  • Your thoughts How can the above be expressed
    nonverbally?

11
Nonverbal Communication
  • Proximity, eye contact, and touch are important
    forms of nonverbal communication.

12
Gender Differences in Communication
  • Women
  • Smile more.
  • Are more emotional.
  • Claim less space.
  • Have more eye contact.
  • Use more qualifiers (dont you think?),
    intensifiers (awfully).

13
Gender Differences in Communication
  • Women
  • Wives send clearer messages to husbands, are
    more sensitive responsive, husbands may not
    reply at all or withdraw. Usually wives want
    change husbands withdraw with the most to gain
    by doing so.
  • Wives set the emotional tone in a family.

14
Gender Differences in Communication
  • Men
  • Disclose less personal information.
  • Safer topics like sports or work.
  • More profanity harsh words.
  • More dominating of conversation.
  • Traditional roles inhibit expressing feelings.

15
Cohabitation and Communication
  • Reasons why cohabitation leads to poorer marital
    communication
  • Backgrounds predispose to poorer communication
    abilities
  • More accepting of divorce and less committed to
    marriage
  • Association with factors such as alcohol use,
    infidelity and lower marital satisfaction.

16
Communication Marital Satisfaction
  • Your thoughts
  • How well a couple communicates before marriage
    can predict later marital satisfaction.
  • Self-disclosure prior to marriage is related to
    relationship satisfaction later.
  • Whether a couples premarital interactions are
    negative or positive can predict later marital
    satisfaction.
  • What is the honeymoon effect?
  • What is the demand-withdraw-communication?

17
Happily Married Couples
  • Are willing to engage in conflict in
    nondestructive ways.
  • Have less frequent conflict and spend less time
    in conflict.
  • Disclose private feelings to partners.
  • Express equal levels of affection.
  • Spend more time together.
  • Accurately encode and decode messages.

18
Effective communication is a skill.
Effective conflict resolution is a skill.
19
A look at Problems
  • Some topics are more difficult to talk about.
  • Childrearing issues
  • Finances
  • Lack of listening
  • Household tasks
  • Not showing sufficient appreciation

Interesting enough it isnt the topic, but skill
that counts.
20
Miscommunication
  • Interrupting breaking into the conversation,
    not giving the other a chance to finish.
  • Endless fighting bring up things from the past
    never resolving things.
  • Character assassination name calling,
    belittling, insulting remarks.
  • Calling in reinforcements involve outsiders to
    support you.
  • Withdrawal leave, indifference, silent
    treatment.
  • Need to be right refusal to admit their part in
    the problem.

Act out skit 7.3 and point out all the roadblocks
they use.
Activity
21
Feelings and Lack of Effective Communication
  • Traditional Male gender role work again the idea
    of expressing feelings. Men talk about things.
  • Strong feelings of inadequacy
  • Ashamed or guilty about their feelings
  • Feel vulnerable
  • Frightened of their feelings
  • Fearful that their feelings and desires will
    create conflict
  • We must first know how we feel.

22
Communication and Feelings
  • Suppress unacceptable feelings such as hurt,
    anger, or jealousy which leads to unconscious
    experience. We deny. We project.
  • We stay closed and dont self-disclose or share.
  • We dont exercise tact.
  • We dont trust.

23
Constructive Feedback
  • Focuses on
  • I statements.
  • behavior rather than the person.
  • observations rather than judgments.
  • the observed incidence of behavior.
  • sharing ideas rather than giving advice.
  • its value to the recipient.
  • the amount the recipient can process.
  • an appropriate time and place.

You message handout
24
POWER
  • The ability to influence another person or group.
  • Traditionally, legal as well as de facto power
    rested in the hands of the husband.
  • Recently, wives have been gaining more actual
    power in relationships, although the power
    distribution still remains unequal.

25
Power and Intimacy
  • Power imbalances and the blatant use of power
    creates a negative effect on intimacy.
  • Genuine intimacy appears to require equality in
    power relationships.
  • Decision making in the happiest marriages is
    based on caring, mutuality and respect for each
    other, not in coercion or tit for tat.
  • Women have considerable power in marriage
    although they often feel that they have less than
    they actually do.

26
Power versus Intimacy
  • To the extent that power is the prevailing force
    in the relationshipwhether between husband and
    wife or parent and child, between friends or
    between colleaguesto that extent love is
    diminished.

27
Questions?
  • What is the relative love and need theory?
  • What is the principle of least interest?
  • What is the Resource Theory of Power?

28
Intimacy Conflict
The more intimate two people become, the more
likely they may be to experience conflict. It is
not conflict that is dangerous, but the manner in
which conflict is handled.
29
Anger
  • Differences anger fights tension division
    distrust fear
  • Ways to handle anger
  • Suppress resentment
  • Venting destroys intimacy and distance occurs
  • Violence destruction
  • Symptom that something needs to be changed
    finding its source and eliminating the problem

30
General Gender Differences
  • Women
  • Initiate discussions of contested relationship
    issues
  • Pursue conversation or conflict
  • More aware of emotional quality of and the events
    that occur in the relationship
  • Emotionally expressive

31
General Gender Differences
  • Men
  • Do not generally initiate relationship issues
  • Tend to withdraw from negative marital
    interactions
  • Take on instrumental role of problem-solving

32
Importance of Topic
  • When it matters most
  • That person will demand and the other person will
    withdraw.
  • This happens in both men and women.

33
Communication patterns of happily married couples
  • Summarizing
  • Paraphrasing
  • Validating
  • Clarifying

34
Communication Patterns of Unhappily Married
Couples
  • Confrontation
  • Confrontation and defensiveness
  • Complaining and defensiveness
  • More negative and fewer positive statements.
  • Hostile conflict, difficult to change

35
Conflict Resolutions Skills
  • Learned by our family of origin either for better
    or worse
  • Attachment style will influence the way conflict
    is expressed in relationships
  • Secure self-confident and socially confident,
    others as trustworthy and dependable, want to
    maintain relationship
  • Insecure (ambiguous or avoidant) more demanding
    of support and attention, more dependent on
    others for self-validation and more
    self-deprecating and emotionally hypersensitive,
    dont want to compromise, but will give in.

36
Conflict Management
  • Independent dimensions of behavior
  • Assertiveness which refers to attempts to satisfy
    our own concerns
  • Cooperativeness which refers to attempts to
    satisfy concerns of others.

37
Five Conflict Management Styles
  • 1.Competing assertive and uncooperative. I win.
    You lose.
  • 2.Collaborating assertive and cooperative. Both
    totally win. Collaborative conflict management
    requires relationships that are relatively equal
    in power and high in trust.

38
Five Conflict Management Styles
  • 3.Compromising intermediate position in terms of
    both assertive and cooperativeness. We both win
    a little.
  • 4.Avoiding Unassertive and uncooperative
    withdrawal and refuse to take a position in
    disagreements. I lose. You win a little.
  • 5.Accommodating This style is unassertive and
    cooperative. One person attempts to soothe the
    other person and restore harmony. I lose. You win.

39
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40
Five Styles of Conflict Management
Five styles Competing Collaborating Compromising
Avoiding Accommodating
  • Which offers the highest level of marital
    satisfaction for males and females?
  • Which comes in second for satisfaction?
  • Which produces lowest marital satisfaction?
  • What happens in a competitive relationship?
  • What happens in a nonassertive relationship?

41
Common Conflict Areas
  • Communication
  • Children
  • Sex
  • Money
  • Personality differences
  • How to spend leisure time
  • In-laws
  • Infidelity
  • housekeeping

42
Children and Parent Conflict
  • Children react to parental conflict in a variety
    of ways, depending on how the parents handle
    themselves.
  • Children can be hurt by constant arguments and
    witnessing violence.
  • Healthy conflict management is very beneficial
    for children to witness.

43
Resolving Conflicts
  • Common poor techniques
  • Coercion (threats, blame, and sarcasm)
  • Manipulation (attempting to make your partner
    feel guilty or emotionally hurt when you dont
    get your way)
  • Avoidance

44
Resolving Conflicts
  • Common positive techniques
  • Support (active listening, compromise, or
    agreement
  • Assertion (clearly stating your position and
    keeping the conversation on topic
  • Reason (use of rational argument and the
    consideration of alternatives
  • Negotiation (working toward a mutually acceptable
    agreement)

45
Conflicts and Negotiation
  • Agreement as a gift different from giving in,
    because then you do something you dont want to
    do. Shows love, given freely without resentment.
    Tends to lead to reciprocation.
  • Bargaining process of making compromises, both
    strive for the most equitable deal for each other
  • Coexistence when differences simply cant be
    resolved, you live with them.

46
Forgiveness
  • Attitude of good will toward someone who has done
    us harm
  • Showing compassion and forgoing resentment
  • Long term physical and mental health benefits for
    the person forgiving
  • Is a crucial element of married life.

47
Forgiveness
  • Helps to restore trust and relationship harmony
    after a transgression
  • Shown to resolve existing difficulties and
    prevent future ones.
  • Is associated with
  • enhanced self-esteem
  • positive feelings toward the transgressor
  • reduced levels of negative emotions such as
    anger, grief, revenge and depression

48
Forgiving People are
  • More accommodating within their relationships.
  • More securely attached.
  • Positive models of self and others.
  • More likely to be forgiving toward partners.

49
If we fail to communicate we are likely to turn
our relationships into empty facades with each
person acting a role rather than revealing his or
her deepest self.
50
  • If we have learned how not to communicate
    effectively, we can learn how to communicate.
  • Communication will allow us to maintain and
    expand ourselves and our relationships.
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