Accordingly‚ I thought it was better to spend those ten minutes in listening to her to let it all out even though the issue was not connected to the one we were working on. After refocussing the client on the core issue‚ I used reflective listening to confirm and clarify the statements. While rephrasing‚ I managed to reinforce the statements that indicated the client was affirm about change. We explored together
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P3 BARRIERS TO EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION No matter how good the communication system in any organisation is barriers can occur. This may be caused by a number of factors which can usually be summarised as being due to physical barriers‚ system design faults or additional barriers. Physical barriers are often due to the nature of the environment‚ for example‚ the natural barrier which exists‚ if staff are located in different buildings or on different sites. Staff shortages are another factor
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Active Listening Hear What People are Really Saying Listening is one of the most important skills you can have. How well you listen has a major impact on your job effectiveness‚ and on the quality of your relationships with others. * We listen to obtain information. * We listen to understand. * We listen for enjoyment. * We listen to learn. Given all this listening we do‚ you would think we’d be good at it! In fact most of us are not‚ and research suggests that we remember between
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people share the information or message with an intension to create an understanding in the mind of others. BARRIERS TO EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION Obstructions or barriers impede the flow of communication. Barriers are classified into‚ 1. Semantic barriers 2. Emotional /Psychological barriers 3. Organizational barriers 4. Personal barriers. 1. Semantic Barriers They arise from limitations in the symbols with which we communicate. They are‚ a) Symbols with
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CULTURAL BARRIERS IN COMMUNICATION Introduction Differences in race‚ sex‚ religious beliefs‚ lifestyle and sexual orientation are among many cultural differences that may affect how people communicate in the workplace. Resolving communications problems caused by cultural differences requires patience‚ understanding and respect. A major mistake is forming opinions before even engaging in communications. Opinions reached before an opportunity to discuss the matter makes resolving conflict difficult
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Second Listening Assignment MUSC 220 Ludwig van Beethoven‚ 1770-1827. Classical Period Symphony No. 5 in C minor‚ Op. 67 This piece is relatively long compared to the music written in previous periods such as Medieval‚ Renaissance and Baroque. Beethoven is known to have stretched the musical forms of the Classical period‚ which were already different in nature and length to those in previous periods. This piece appears to be more distorted than other symphonies in the same period; even music
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BARRIERS • Sender-oriented • Receiver-oriented Sender oriented barriers: It can be either voluntary or involuntary. At any cost‚ efforts should be made on the part of the sender to identify and remove them. Some of the barriers that are sender oriented are: ? Badly expressed message: concrete ideas and well structures message ? Loss in transmission: correct choice of medium or channel ? Semantic problem: simple words and accurate understanding of intension ? Over/under communication: quantum
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Question # 1: Explain the psychological‚ Semantic & Physical barriers to Communication? Answer: Communication is a complete process and it requires all the possibilities that the loop between and sender and receiver flows freely. Flows freely means that the message that is encodes by sender and is un intrepidly transferred to the receiver and the similarly the relevant response from the receiver get back to the sender with no interference. Even one work hard to convey a proper message with all
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Types of listening Here are six types of listening‚ starting with basic discrimination of sounds and ending in deepcommunication. Discriminative listening Discriminative listening is the most basic type of listening‚ whereby the difference between difference soundsis identified. If you cannot hear differences‚ then you cannot make sense of the meaning that is expressed bysuch differences. We learn to discriminate between sounds within our own language early‚ and later areunable to discriminate
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There is an art to listening; and as Julia Wood states about listening‚ “We try to understand not just content but also the person speaking” (Wood 166). In essence‚ the goal of listening is to gasp the message‚ meaning and feelings of the person talking. Therefore‚ there are listening behaviors and listening styles that can either enhance or impede this process and flow of communication. To this point‚ observations have been made of two separate conversations in which listening behaviors and styles
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