Listening Journal Guidelines 1. Listen. Listen to a talk‚ lecture or broadcast in English each week. a. The broadcast should be a minimum of 5 minutes. b. The broadcast should be on a subject appropriate for Academic English (i.e. no celebrity gossip or fashion news). 2. Take notes. Take notes as you listen. (Follow the guidelines provided by your teacher. See the example below.) 3. Summarize. At the bottom of your notes‚ summarize the main idea of the talk in 1-3
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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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Listening Distractions Distractions are the divided attention of an individual or group from the chosen object of attention‚ onto the source of distraction. Distractions are caused by: the lack of ability to pay attention; lack of interest in the object of attention; or the great intensity‚ novelty or alertness of something other than the object of attention. Distractions come from both external sources and internal sources. “Art of Public Speaking” by Stephen E Lucas In this assignment
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listeners all the time‚ with everything going on in our lives sometimes we just need to nod our heads at the non important things or answer “yes” without even knowing what were answering to. To be honest I probably use all of the negative listening types daily. When I read the first type of listening “selective” I immediately thought of my mom. As wrong as that sounds‚ I definitely use selective listening when she calls. Selective listening is when you respond only to the remarks that interest you‚ rejecting
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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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Active Listening in Communication HCA/230 MEMO Date: June 30‚ 2014 To: All Staff Members RE: Active listening within our Clinic Active listening within our clinic practice is imperative. At times‚ it is easy to fall into the trap of letting things being heard go in through one ear and out the other. This is how different perceptions and miscommunication occur within the workplace (Wienclaw‚ 2014). Here in this medical
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Active listening includes a variety of behaviors which communicate to the other that they are heard and understood‚ that the feelings which underlie the words are appreciated and accepted‚ and that regardless of what the individual says‚ thinks or feels‚ they are accepted as a person by the listener. Active listening demands that the receiver of the message put aside the belief that listening is easy and that it happens naturally and realize that effective listening is hard work. Good listening encourages
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Relational‚ analytical‚ critical‚ and task are the four listening styles that people resort to when they are actively listening. Most people resort to only one style at a time but some may resort to many different listening styles at once. Certain jobs such as social worker‚ teachers‚ people in the medical fields‚ and police officers must be able to use all the listening skills depending on the situation they are in at that moment. The reason for this is because they deal with multiple personalities
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Chapter 1 Review Questions 1. Each of the following factors illustrates why information security is increasingly difficult except _______. a. faster computer processors b. growing sophistication of attacks c. faster detection of weaknesses d. distributed attacks 2. A type of software that repairs security flaws in an application is called a(n) _____. a. hot fix b. exploit c. repair d. patch 3. The primary goal of information security is to protect __________. a. procedures
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Listening does not come as natural for me as it does for others. I am always either being distracted or simply just spacing out‚ especially in class. Tuning out the lessons is easy when I am bored and or tired. Yet‚ I try my best when it comes to communicating with friends and family. I have been told that I have selective hearing and it does get me in trouble‚ a lot. There are times when I am in a middle of a conversation‚ where I don’t catch on to what the person is talking about and I end up just
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