1 / 18

Communication

Communication. Why is effective communication between partners and family members important?. Why is it important to remember that communication is two-sided?. Causes or Barriers that lead to: Ineffective Communication. Not listening Allowing interruptions Not hearing message clearly

brinda
Download Presentation

Communication

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Communication

  2. Why is effective communication between partners and family members important? Why is it important to remember that communication is two-sided?

  3. Causes or Barriers that lead to: Ineffective Communication • Not listening • Allowing interruptions • Not hearing message clearly • Preconceived notions (ideas) • Clichés or automatic responses • Sending mixed messages • Having a closed mind • Having low self-esteem • Using specific and limited vocabulary • Assuming knowledge • Being prejudiced • Allowing emotions to affect communication • Falling back on teachings from childhood • Noise

  4. Purposes of Communication • Socialize • Build and strengthen relationships • Exchange information or knowledge • Persuade or motivate • Resolve problems • Share feelings

  5. Methods of Communication • Personal Contact • Telephone (Land line) • Cell Phone • E-mail • Fax • Video Messaging/Conferencing • Texting • Instant Messaging • Voice Mail • Written letter

  6. Factors Affecting Communication • Culture/Customs • Gender Roles • Gestures/Body Language • Protocol (code of conduct) • Tone/Pitch of Voice • Gender • Physical/Physiological Condition (of person) • Group Membership • Language • Nationality • Religion • Social Circumstances (Formal/Informal)

  7. Verbal Communication • Listening – tone of voice • Reading – checking work • Speaking – tone of voice • Writing – may be misunderstood; allows for reflection

  8. Non-Verbal Communication • Body language - gestures, nodding, handshake, eye contact • Personal space – may be too close for comfort • Silence – mainly means agreement but can mean disagreement

  9. Five Levels of Communication 1. Sharing Emotions = Peak Communication 2. Telling Feelings 3. Giving Opinions 4. Reporting Information 5. Casual Conversation

  10. Beware… • Angry or defensive listeners may read an unintended meaning into what is being said • “Close-minded” listeners may only hear what they want to hear and misinterpret the message

  11. I-Messages • Reflect on what the speaker feels or thinks • Give facts about the speaker • Give the speaker responsibility and control over what he/she is communicating • Use during confrontational topics to create positive responses • States how the speaker reacts to the actions of others • Are non-threatening • Requires practice in using them successfully

  12. We-Messages • Improve communication • Are non-threatening • Generate positive responses • Define a problem of mutual concern to all involved and give equal responsibility

  13. You-Messages • Blame, judge, or accuse another person of an action • Easy to use when you are mad or hurt • Give challenging or even threatening messages • Usually close communication channels

  14. Active Listening • Listening with a purpose • Show speaker your attention! (Nod, smile) • Don’t dominate conversation • Maintain eye contact • Encourage further communication • Show interest and respect • Stay focused on conversation topic • Provide feedback (Ask questions) • Don’t finish speaker’s sentence • Plan your response after the speaker’s remarks

  15. Passive Listening • Don’t listen • Offer NO feedback • Give impression you are uninterested • Discourage further communication • Show that you are more interested in your own thoughts

  16. Feedback Purposes • Clarify • Encourage speaker to continue • Evaluate or judge a person’s comment • Paraphrase what the other person has said • Gain more info.

  17. Improve Communication • Use I/We messages • Choose good time to communicate • Build trust • Use understandable language • Be attentive • Be interested • Be patient • Focus on message • Be aware of multiple meanings • Pay attention to tone • Be aware of body language • Be empathetic (put yourself in other’s shoes) • Accept that people have different opinions and/or ideas • Give feedback • Use repetition • Understand people communicate differently • Know when to drop it

  18. Communicating with Children • Get at child’s eye level • Use words they can understand • Keep it simple • Eliminate distracters • Listen • Respect their feelings

More Related