presentation‚ our topic is comprehensive listening. We have six persons in a group‚ which is Chong yee ling‚ Naresh‚ Eaw sin yee‚ Chu pei tai‚ Loh yean chi and Wong sue yeng and the first person is group leader.The purpose of this report is to provide a model for students to understand what is the meaning of comprehensive listening‚this presentation contains five major sections. The first concerns goal of comprehensive listening. Here‚ comprehensive listening is listening to the understanding ‚learn‚remember
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Listening Skills Careful listening can increase your telephone efficiency. The average speaking rate is 150 to 160 words a minute‚ but we can think at 600 words a minute which means that only twenty five percent of our mental capacity is required to record what is being said. By using the rest to think about and react to the words instead of thinking about other distractions‚ we would improve our listening by gathering more information from what is being said. To let the other person know
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Center for Teaching and Learning Stanford University‚ Stanford CA Characteristics of Effective Listening Ineffective Effective Non-Verbal Behavior Listener looks bored‚ uninterested‚ or judgmental; avoids eye contact; displays distracting mannerisms (doodles‚ plays with a paper clip‚ etc.) Listener maintains positive posture; avoids distracting mannerisms; keeps attention focused on speaker; maintains eye contact; nods and smiles when appropriate Focus of Attention Listener shifts focus of attention
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Effective Listening assignment Listening is one of the main senses that people use every day all day. We listen in class‚ we listen to the radio‚ the news going on around the world‚ what the boss says at meetings‚ and what loved ones have to say. It’s a main communication to understand what is going on around us but some tend to ignore and not listen effectively and fallacies then play a part of the conversation. Effective listening can be done in many ways. It’s a listening process;
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INTRODUCTION Counselling is considered a learning process‚ especially for the client. An effective counsellor displays affirmation and nurturing behaviours whilst less effective counsellors use the ‘watch and manage’‚ ‘belittle and blame’ and ‘ignore and neglect’ behaviours (Najavits & Strupp‚ 1994). The role play that was undertaken was Michael the VCE student‚ whereby Karen Tran is the observer‚ Christian Brett is the Client and Sarah Boubis is the counsellor. A counselling session was
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The Role of counselling skills in the workplace This paper seeks to explore the role of counselling skills in the workplace‚ the benefits and how it can be used to enhance employee performance. In order to exhaustively analyze the role and importance of its use in resolving workplace issues‚ this paper will go through the following‚ What counselling is‚ the difference between counselling skills and counselling‚ what workplace counselling entails and the skills needed‚ the advantages and disadvantages
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Humanistic Theory The term of Humanistic theory is an umbrella term. In fact it covers several approaches that embrace the idea of individuals being inherently good and a positive attitude towards humanity in essence. The most famous would be the person centered approach by Carl Rogers. Rogers studied Psychodynamic theory but his personality drove to focus more on feelings and less on the unconscious. He developed a form of therapy that was non-directive by the therapist‚ allowing the
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1.1 The three stages of a counselling skills session are the beginning; here‚ the ‘ice’ is broken and the listener should try to make the speaker feel at ease. An introduction is made which helps the speaker understand what counselling skills are and the process of using them. Reference should be made to the BACP framework and the speaker should be invited in by use of gentle questioning. The beginning also gives the speaker the chance to introduce the topic they wish to discuss‚ and the listener
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CARDIOLOGY/HEMATOLOGY REPORT #6 Jonathan Vicors OFFICE HISTORY AND PHYSICAL EXAMINATION He is a 47-year-old male who states that he has had a 7-year history of palpitations which he described as skipped or fast beats. He states that the trigger is unclear. They can either last a few seconds several days‚ but he states also that he has had no rapid beating for sustaining durations. He states that he also can get several episodes of per month. He states by full‚ he had an echocardiogram done 7
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without their sense of sight. Even today‚ it is hard for anyone to imagine how they could survive without their sense of sight. However‚ with the days of hunting and gathering a time of the past‚ today’s survival skills are very different. Today‚ communication is one of man’s most important skills‚ and communication depends on the sense of hearing. Even when we are communicating by visual means‚ such as writing or typing‚ we are still using the language that most of us first learned by hearing before we
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