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Communication and Problem Solving in the Family

Communication and Problem Solving in the Family. Marriage and Family Interaction HPER F258 Kathleen R. Gilbert, Ph.D. The Importance of Communication for Families. Positive relationship between marital satisfaction and couple’s ability to communicate

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Communication and Problem Solving in the Family

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  1. Communication and Problem Solving in the Family Marriage and Family Interaction HPER F258 Kathleen R. Gilbert, Ph.D.

  2. The Importance of Communication for Families • Positive relationship between marital satisfaction and couple’s ability to communicate • Not lack of communication, per se, but the quality of communication • Problem if destructive (put-downs, negative messages) • “Quality not quantity”

  3. Honesty, the best policy? • In your small groups, discuss the following: • What are your thoughts on these two statements: • “It is important to be completely honest in a relationship.” • “Sometimes, it’s better to ‘skirt the truth’ than to be completely honest.” • Is there ever a time when it’s better to be dishonest in a relationship? • How does the relationship recover when a dishonesty is discovered?

  4. Exchange of Information

  5. Message • Ideas, feelings shared with another person • Sent through both channels • Consistent vs. mixed messages • Are channels consistent? • Can become a power thing (“what do you mean I’m not clear. You’re always saying that!”)

  6. Sender • Person who constructs message and attempts to send it • Generally what we think of as someone communicating • May be intentional or unintentional • Arguing with spouse is intentional; children hearing argument may be unintentional

  7. Receiver • Person who receives the message sent by the sender • Listener (but more active than that) • May be intentional or unintentional receiver • If unintentional, may be no way of clarifying what was meant

  8. Encoding the Message • In order to send message, must first organize thoughts/gestures/phrasing so that they can be understood by the receiver

  9. Decoding the Message • Receiver makes sense of message by decoding it into feelings, intentions, and thoughts that mean something to him or her • May be difficult because decoder (listener) filters message through own perceptions and must cope with the filters of the sender and the environment

  10. Communication is an Exchange of Information • Two basic forms of information • Cognitive Information • “thinking part” • Affective Information • “feeling part”

  11. Article Facilitation • In your small groups discuss article #10, “ New Technologies” What are your thoughts on the use of the internet as a tool for finding dating and mating partners? What might be communication strengths and weaknesses of the internet for this purpose?

  12. Differences in Emphasis in Communication • Gender differences • Males tend to focus on cognitive elements • “Report talk” • Focus is on problem solving and on end result • More likely to use communication for competition • Females tend to focus on affective elements • “Rapport talk” • Focus is on the process rather than an outcome • More likely to use communication as a tool for communication or for advancing the relationship

  13. Differences in Emphasis in Communication • Generational/age differences • Power differential is at issue • Differences in ability to communicate • May speak different first language • Developmental ability to communicate • Normal for children—but remember that elderly may have had stroke or other communication problems • Content – what is communicated • Style – how it is communicated • Different colloquial language (slang) • Used to create and maintain the separateness • Secret language • Can be used to maintain a separation from others

  14. We Communicate Using Two Basic Channels • Verbal communication (digital) • Think of a digital clock • Spoken words • Can break it into communication “bits” • Words, phrases • What you would see in a transcript of a conversation • What is communicated, not how it is communicated • Only makes up 35% of message (at best)(Satir)

  15. Two Basic Channels • Non-verbal communication (analogic) • Think of an analogue (face) clock • body language – the messages you communicate using your body • Paralanguage – tone, phrasing • We can only guess at some of this, much is implied and approximate • It is impossible to not communicate • Even silence communicates a message • Most affective communication is done through non-verbal means • Because it is non-verbal, it is subject to misinterpretation • How it is communicated, not what is communicated

  16. Dysfunctional Communication Patterns (Satir) • Placater -- pleases, apologizes, never disagrees, no matter what • Blamer – fault-finder, dictator, boss who acts superior to others • Computer - very correct, very reasonable, shows no semblance of feelings • Distracter - does or says irrelevant things to whatever anyone else is saying or doing

  17. Functional Communication Pattern • Leveler - straight-forward communication, no games, verbal and non-verbal communication is in congruence

  18. Discussion • Discuss the form of communication you saw as you were growing up. • Thinking back to your childhood family, do you recognize any of the functional or dysfunctional communication patterns? • Are there other ways of communicating that you recognize that are not included in Satir’s categories?

  19. Warning Signs of Relationship Problems (Gottman) – Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse • Four horsemen don’t indicate the end of the relationship but are warnings

  20. Criticism • Attacking someone’s personality or character rather than a specific behavior, usually with blame • Often starts with complaining (which can make marriages stronger) bad when it becomes overriding focus of communication or won’t let go of past transgressions (“gunnysacking”)

  21. Contempt • Intention to insult and psychologically abuse partner, verbal and nonverbal messages are contemptuous. • Includes negative thoughts about partner. • Focal point of the relationship becomes abuse (insults and name calling, hostile humor, mockery, body language)

  22. Defensiveness • Both feel victimized by other and neither willing to take responsibility for setting things right. • Both feel innocent, denying responsibility, making excuses, disagreeing with negative mind-reading, “cross-complaining,” repeating themselves

  23. Stonewalling • Go from poor communication to shutting down • Conveys a message of disapproval, distance and smugness • Very upsetting for speaker (especially if stonewaller is a male)

  24. The 5-to-1 Ratio for Healthy Relationships • In order to compensate for their disproportionate effect, it is necessary to have a ratio of 5 good interaction elements to compensate for 1 negative one • Includes verbal and nonverbal elements • E.g., positive expressions, conciliatory gestures, really listening • If it lowers below 5 to 1, there are problems

  25. Final Thoughts on Lecture Material • Hand in to your discussion leader: • Identify one point that you found helpful in this lecture. • Identify any point that was unclear.

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