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Published byClaud McCormick Modified over 9 years ago
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LISTENING Public Speaking Mr. McFadden
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LISTENING Listening is more than hearing. 1. Hearing- being able to detect sound 2. Listening- getting meaning from what is heard We quickly nearly all of what we hear- 75% of a ten minute speech is out of our head within 48 hours 45% of daily communication is time spent listening.
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5 WAYS TO LISTEN 1. Appreciative Listening: music, nature noises, etc. We listen because we enjoy the sound 2. Discriminative Listening- when we want to single out one noise in the environment. A friend’s voice in a crowded room 3. Comprehensive Listening- listening to understand, to get the big picture or the main idea.
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5 WAYS TO LISTEN 4. Therapeutic Listening- listening to encourage others to talk freely without embarrassment. Listening to a friend’s sob story. 5. Critical Listening- most active listening. Listening and judging what is said for coherence, believability, value- thinking carefully about what we hear.
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COMPREHENSIVE LISTENING What you should listening for: The speaker’s goal, the purpose for giving the speech. Main ideas Repetition Signal Words Supporting Details- examples, stats, facts, reasons Context- figure out meaning based on words that are said
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CRITICAL LISTENING Pay attention to logical fallacies aka an error of reasoning Testimonial: using celebrities to promote and idea or product False Comparison: comparing unlike things Jump on the Bandwagon: convincing one to do something because everyone else is Propaganda: passing opinions as truth to convince people to believe in something
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CRITICAL LISTENING Hasty Generalization: Conclusions or opinions that are drawn from very few observations that ignores exceptions. Ex: A student fails a test; he or she must not care and will never study. Begging the Question: assuming the truth of a statement before it is proven. Ex: “with my plan, this country’s ineffective health care can be remedied within a decade.” The speaker has not proven it is ineffective.
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CRITICAL LISTENING False Premise: a premise that is untrue or distorted. Ex: We are bound to have a winning team this year, 4 of our 5 starters are back. Irrelevant Evidence: information that has nothing to do with the argument being made. Ex: The student deserves an A on the project because he spent 20 hours on it. Plus, he made it out of woods.
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2 MORE THINGS TO LISTEN FOR Name Calling: labeling intended to arouse powerful negative feelings. Ex: liberal, conservative, jock, prep, snob Stereotyping: biased belief about a whole group of people based on insufficient or irrelevant evidence.
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ROAD BLOCKS TO LISTENING 1. We think of what we want to say next rather than listen. 2. Short attention spans- we anticipate conversations. 3. Tune out dull topics 4. Faking attention 5. Yielding to distractions 6. Criticizing delivery or physical appearance 7. Overreact to emotional words
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Tuning Out
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LISTENING Passive Listening: easily distracted, paying attention to how the speaker talks than to what is said and unresponsive to the speaker’s message. Active Listening: (this is what we want): being attentive and showing/giving positive feedback Contributions to speaker from listener: Provide Encouragement/feedback Ask for explanations to help speaker feel comfortable/clarify Paraphrasing the message Take notes
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