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Looking Out/Looking In Fourteenth Edition 7 Listening CHAPTER TOPICS Listening Defined Elements in the Listening Process The Challenge of Listening Types.

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Presentation on theme: "Looking Out/Looking In Fourteenth Edition 7 Listening CHAPTER TOPICS Listening Defined Elements in the Listening Process The Challenge of Listening Types."— Presentation transcript:

1 Looking Out/Looking In Fourteenth Edition 7 Listening CHAPTER TOPICS Listening Defined Elements in the Listening Process The Challenge of Listening Types of Listening Responses

2 2 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Listening Defined Hearing Versus Listening Hearing The process in which sound waves strike the eardrum and cause vibrations that are transmitted to the brain Listening Occurs when the brain reconstructs these electrochemical impulses into a representation of the original sound and gives them meaning

3 3 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Listening Defined Mindless Listening Occurs when we react to others’ messages automatically and routinely Mindful Listening Involves giving careful and thoughtful attention to the messages we receive

4 4 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Elements in the Listening Process Five Elements of the Listening Process Hearing Attending Understanding Responding Remembering

5 5 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Elements in the Listening Process Hearing Hearing is the physiological dimension of listening Can be affected by auditory fatigue Loud party, concerts, large crowds Can be more difficult as a result of physiological problems

6 6 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Elements in the Listening Process Attending Is the psychological process of selection where we decide what gets through We would go crazy if we attempted to attend to all messages Attending also helps the message sender

7 7 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Elements in the Listening Process Understanding Occurs when we make sense of a message It is possible to hear and attend to a message without understanding it at all Listening Fidelity Describes the degree of congruence between what a listener understands and what the message sender is attempting to communicate

8 8 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Elements in the Listening Process Responding Giving observable feedback to the speaker Good listeners show they are attentive by nonverbal behaviors Verbal behavior also demonstrates attention Communication is a transactional process

9 9 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Elements in the Listening Process Remembering The ability to recall information Research suggests We remember 50% immediately after hearing it We remember 35% after eight hours We remember 25% after two months Residual message What we remember from the original message

10 10 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR The Challenge of Listening Types of Ineffective Listening Pseudo-listening The imitation of the listening process Can take more effort than simply tuning out Stage-Hogging Turn the conversation to themselves Sometimes called conversational narcissists

11 11 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR The Challenge of Listening Types of Ineffective Listening Selective Listening Only responds to the parts of your message that interest them Can be legitimate Insulated Listening Failing to acknowledge information the listener would rather not deal with

12 12 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR The Challenge of Listening Types of Ineffective Listening Defensive Listening Take others’ remarks as personal attacks Ambushing Listening carefully to collect information to use in an attack later Insensitive Listening Responding to the superficial content of the message and not the emotional tone

13 13 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR The Challenge of Listening Why We Don’t Listen Better Message Overload Preoccupation Rapid Thought We can comprehend up to 600 words per minute The average person speaks between 100 – 150 Effort Listening is hard work

14 14 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR The Challenge of Listening Why We Don’t Listen Better External Noise Faulty Assumptions We often believe we are listening when we’re not Lack of Apparent Advantages It often seems that there is more to gain by speaking Listening is reciprocal, so you get what you give

15 15 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR The Challenge of Listening Why We Don’t Listen Better Lack of Training Listening is hard work and requires practice The common belief is that listening is like breathing Hearing problems Sometimes a person suffers from a physiological hearing problem

16 16 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR The Challenge of Listening Meeting the Challenges of Listening Talk less Get rid of distractions Don’t judge prematurely Look for key ideas

17 17 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Prompting Using silences and brief statements of encouragement to draw others out Questioning Asking for information can help both parties Questions can also be a tool for the one who answers

18 18 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Sincere Questions Aimed at understanding others Counterfeit Questions Questions that trap a speaker Tag question Questions that make statements Questions that carry hidden agendas Questions that seek “correct” answers Questions based on assumptions

19 19 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Paraphrasing Statements that reword the listener's interpretation of a message Two levels at which you can paraphrase messages Factual information Personal information Can be tool for helping others Shows your involvement and concern

20 20 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Paraphrasing You can make your paraphrasing sound more natural by taking any of these approaches: Change the speaker’s wording Offer an example of what you think the speaker is talking about Reflect the underlying theme of the speaker’s remarks

21 21 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Paraphrasing Won’t always be accurate Gives the other person a chance to make a correction Factors to consider before you decide to paraphrase: Is the issue complex enough? Do you have the necessary time and concern? Can you withhold judgment? Is your paraphrasing in proportion to other responses?

22 22 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Supporting Reveals a listener’s solidarity with the speaker’s situation Several types of support: Empathizing Agreement Offers to help Praise Reassurance

23 23 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Supporting Cold comfort Deny others the right to their feelings Minimize the significance of the situation Focus on “then and there” rather than “here and now” Cast judgment Focus on yourself Defend yourself

24 24 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Supporting Guidelines for effective support: Recognize that you can support another person’s struggles without approving of her or his decisions Monitor the other person’s reaction to your support Realize that support may not always be welcome Make sure you’re ready for the consequences

25 25 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Analyzing Offering an interpretation of the speaker’s message Several guidelines to follow: Offer your interpretation as tentative rather than absolute fact Be sure that the other person will be receptive to your analysis Be sure the motive for offering an analysis is to truly help the other person

26 26 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Advising Offering help or potential solutions Several guidelines to follow: Is advice needed? Is advice wanted? Is the advice given in the right sequence? Is the advice coming from an expert? Is the advisor a close and trusted person? Is the advice offered in a sensitive, face-saving manner?

27 27 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Judging Responses that evaluate the sender’s thoughts or behaviors in some way Judgments have the best chance of being received when two conditions exist The person with the problem should have requested an evaluation from you The intent of your judgment should be genuinely constructive and not designed as a put-down

28 28 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Choosing the Best Listening Response Gender Women are more likely to give supportive responses when presented with another's problem and are likely to seek out similar responses Men are less skillful at providing emotional support and are more likely to respond by offering advice or by diverting the topic

29 29 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Types of Listening Responses Choosing the Best Listening Response The situation People are not always looking for advice Sometimes it is better to just listen The other person Always remember to whom you are speaking and adapt to the audience Your personal style Play to your strengths Be aware of your weaknesses

30 30 LISTENING: MORE THAN MEETS THE EAR Chapter Review Listening Defined Elements in the Listening Process The Challenge of Listening Types of Listening Responses


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