Title: Listening
1 7 Inter-Act, 13th Edition
Listening
2We have two ears and one mouth so that we can
listen twice as much as we speak. Epictetus
(55 AD 135 AD)
3Listening makes up 42-60 of our communication.
Speaking
Reading
Writing
Listening
4Listening Styles
- Content-oriented prefer to focus on facts and
evidence - People-oriented prefer to focus on
conversational partners and their feelings - Action-oriented prefer to focus on point speaker
is trying to make - Time-oriented prefer brief and swift
conversations
5Listening Apprehension
- Fear of misinterpretation
- Fear of the psychological affect of the message
6Dual Processes in Listening
- Listening vs. Hearing
- Passive listening effortless, thoughtless, and
habitual process - Active listening skillful, intentional,
deliberate, and conscious process
7Listening
The process of receiving, constructing meaning
from, and responding to spoken and/or nonverbal
messages
- Attending
- Understanding
- Remembering
- Critically Evaluating
- Responding
Slides with definitions to follow.
8Attending
- The process of willfully striving to perceive
selected sounds that are being heard - Get physically and mentally ready to listen.
- Make the shift from speaker to listener a
complete one. - Resist tuning out.
- Avoid interrupting.
9Acknowledging the Speaker
10Understanding
- Process of accurately decoding a message so that
you share its meaning with the speaker - Identify the speakers purpose and key points.
- Observe nonverbal cues.
- Ask clarifying questions.
- Paraphrase what you heard.
11Reflecting Back and Paraphrasing
12Paraphrase the following statements to reflect
both the thoughts and feelings of the person
speaking
- I really like communication, but what could I do
with a major in this field? - I dont know if Pat and I are getting too
serious too fast. - You can borrow my car, if you really need to,
but please be careful with it. I cant afford any
repairs and if you have an accident, I wont be
able to drive to D.C. this weekend.
13Remembering
Process of moving information from short-term
memory to long-term memory
- Reasons we fail to remember
- Using repetition to remember
- We filter out messages
- We listen anxiously or passively
- We remember easy or desirable messages
- We forget the middle
- Primacy effect
- Recency effect
- Repeat two, three, four times
- Create mnemonics
- Take notes
14Mnemonics
n?-mänik
- Any artificial technique used as a memory aid
- For example take the first letter of a list you
are trying to remember and create a word
HOMES (the five Great Lakes) Huron, Ontario,
Michigan, Erie, Superior
15Some Types of Mnemonics
- Create a word/acronym HOMES, AWOL, RSVP
- Create a memorable sentence with the first
letter of each word Rhythm Helps Your Two Hips
Move - Create a rhyme I before E except after C
- Create a song/poem 30 Days Hath September,
April June and November... - Create a visual representation (next slide)
16Create a Visual Representation
George Vales
17Create a Visual Representation
George Vales
Vales Whales
18A Bad Mnemonic Device
19Note Taking
- Take notes when you
- are listening to
- complex
- information.
- Brief outline
- Overall idea
- Main points
- Key developmental material
20Critically Evaluating Information
- Separate facts from inferences
- Fact a verifiable statement
- Inference a conclusion drawn from facts
- Probe for information
21Responding
- Process of providing feedback to your partners
message - Back-channel cues verbal and nonverbal signals
demonstrating listener response to the speaker - Reply when message is complete
- Respond to the previous message before changing
the subject
22Digital Communication Literacy
23Digital Communication Literacy
- Extra effort is required to understand digital
messages. - Critically evaluate social media messages to
separate facts from inferences. - Recognize underlying motives, values, ideologies.
- Digital messages should not completely replace
face-to-face communication.