Title: Listening
1Listening
2Listening A CHOICE
- Hearing comes naturally. We all HEAR.
- Listening is a learned social skill. You have to
DECIDE to do it. - Brainstorm
- 1 time when you were hearing someone but not
listening to them - 1 time when you forced yourself to actually
listen even though you really didnt want to - 1 time when someone called you out on not
listening to him or her
3The Listening Process 5 Steps
- 1 Hearingyou select some sounds to focus on and
tune out others. - 2 Interpretingyou decode the signals and
understand the sensory input (making sense of
what you hear based on what you already know)
Fact you can process almost 3 times more words
per minute than people speak. - 3 Evaluatingyou judge the worth or importance
of something (figuring out the speakers intent
based on fact opinion).
4The Listening Process 5 Steps (Cont.)
- 4 RememberingNOT objective. You remember what
you understood based on what you perceived from
what was said. - 5 Respondingyou react to the speaker by sending
cues. The listener sends feedback to the speaker
to clarify what was heard or to take part in the
conversation. - PRACTICEtake 5 minutes to tell your neighbor
what you did this weekend. When it is your turn
to listen, record your thought process for each
of the 5 steps of listening.
5Recipe for Listening 5 Ingredients
- It is important to listen for ALL 5 of the
following elements when having a conversation
with someone in order to fully understand him or
her. - 1 Informationfacts or instructions
- 2 Emotiondetermine what mindset the speaker
has. Are they insecure or nervous? - 3 Attitudedistinguish fact from opinion
- 4 Goals and Hidden Agendasthere may be messages
that are not expressed directly - 5 Thoughts, Ideas, and Opinionspay attention to
omissions and nonverbal symbols, these will
reveal opinions
6Interview Critique Picking out the Ingredients
- Information What is the interviewee telling
you? - Emotion Is he or she happy? Sad? Angry? Upset?
WHY? - Attitude What are the facts? What is his or her
position? - Goals and Hidden Agendas Is there a theme going
on behind the words? - Thoughts, Ideas, and Opinions What verbal and
nonverbal symbols does the interviewee use to
express him or herself?
7ACTIVITY Watch Interviews
- George W. Bush Kanye West
- Evaluate the interview for the 5 ingredients in
the recipe for listening.
8Listening Barriers 4 Types
- 1 External Barriersenvironmental hindrances to
listening - Noisescan overpower message
- Other Stimuliother senses reacting to events
- Information Overloadwe tune out when there is
too much coming at us - 2 Listener Barrierspsychological blocks to
effective listening - Boredom Opinionatedness
- Laziness Prejudice
- Waiting to speak Lack of interest
9Listening Barriers 4 Types (Cont.)
- 3 Speaker Barriersobstacles to listening that
originate with the speaker - Appearance Credibilitybelievability
- Manner Message
- Power
- 4 Cultural Barrierslearned responses that
predispose one to see things a particular way - Prejudice Nonverbal communication
- Speaking style Accents
- Source credibility
10ACTIVITY Identifying Listener Barriers
- List 7 examples of situations when you have been
affected by listener barriers (list examples from
home, school, work, and social situations). - Classify each situation as one or more of the six
listener barriers. - Boredom, laziness, waiting to speak,
opinionatedness, prejudice, lack of interest - Where did most listener barriers occur? Which
types were most common?
11Types of Listening 3 Types
- 1 Active Listeninglistening for meaning
- 2 Informational Listeninglistening for content
and attempting to identify the speakers purpose,
main ideas, and supporting details - 3 Critical Listeningexamining information or
persuasive messages and drawing conclusions
SAY WHAT?!
12ACTIVITY!
- Brainstorm 2 different places or situations you
may use or have used each type of listening. - (2) Active Listening
- (2) Informational Listening
- (2) Critical Listening
- Be prepared to share at least one example with
the class and justify why it is that type of
listening. (HINT refer back to your definitions!)
13(1) Active Listening In-depth
- There are two types of active listening.
- 1 Emphatic Listening listening to discern
another persons feelings and emotions - You attempt to feel the speakers feelings and to
share his or her mood. - 2 Creative Listening receiving anothers ideas
but using them to generate ones own creative
ideas - You use creative listening in brainstorming
sessions by building off of others ideas.
14(1) Active Listening Process 5 Steps
- 1 Find and organize the speakers main ideas.
- Use logic!
- 2 Mentally summarize what the speaker is saying.
- Put a message into your own words!
- 3 Echo the speakers meaning.
- Repeat what you think you heard!
- 4 Echo the speakers expressed or implied
feelings - Watch your perceptions!
- 5 Ask questions to receive further
clarification. - Show interest and support!
15(1) ACTIVITY! Active listening in tough
conversations
- Role-Play
- Speaker
- BE DIFFICULT! BE A PAIN!
- Listener
- Attempt to actively listen and empathize/sympathiz
e with the speaker. - Pay attention to emotions and ideas.
- Observers
- Is the active listener being successful in
picking up on the emotions and concerns of the
speaker?
16(2) Informational Listening In-depth
- When informational listening is important
- Classroom settings
- Work training sessions
- Receiving directions
- Traveling
- Interviews
- How to improve understanding when practicing
informational listening - Take good notes!
17(2) Informational Listening ACTIVITY
- When your informational listening skills FAIL
you - Brainstorm at least 3 times in your life when you
have failed in the informational listening
department. What did you do to fix it? - Turn Talk share your fails with your neighbor
and compare your situations.
18(3) Critical Listening In-depth
- Pay attention to the following 5 areas when
listening critically - 1 Source Credibility who is speaking, and how
believable is he or she? - 2 Attitudeis the speaker respectful or
condescending to the listener? - 3 Speakers Goalwhy is the speaker trying to
persuade me? Is he or she repeating anything? - 4 ContentWhat is the main idea? What evidence
is presented? Is the conclusion logical? - 5 Reasoningare the ideas presented
well-supported?
19(3) Critical Listening Faulty Reasoning
- Inductive Reasoning identifying facts and
linking them together to support a specific
conclusion - Logical Fallacies false methods of reasoning
-
20(3) Critical Listening 7 Common Logical
Fallacies
- 1 Begging the Question speakers assume the
truth or falsity of a statement without supplying
proof. - 2 Card Stacking speakers select only the
evidence and arguments for the side that they
support. - 3 False Premises speakers begin with false
assumptions that are assumed to be true. - 4 Glittering Generalities speakers use vague or
general words or phrases that express an attitude
or idea that has popular support.
21(3) Critical Listening 7 Common Logical
Fallacies
- 5 False Generalizations speakers dont have
enough evidence to support a broad conclusion, or
they selectively leave out details and come to a
quick conclusion. - 6 Non Sequitur speakers assert something that
doesnt follow logically or that deals with a
completely different subject. - 7 Testimonial speakers use an authority or a
well-known person to endorse a particular subject
or position to gain the listeners approval.
22ACTVITY! Research.
- Research one of the 7 common logical fallacies.
- In your presentation to the class you will
- present the definition (same or reworded)
- present at least one example that you found
- each person must talk at least once
23(3) Critical Listening 7 Propaganda Techniques
- Propaganda a form of persuasion that discourages
listeners from making an independent choice by
stating opinions as though they are accepted
truths.
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25(3) Critical Listening 7 Propaganda Techniques
- 1 Transfer makes an illogical connection
between unrelated things - 2 Bandwagon encourages listeners to join a
group that favors a particular person, product,
or idea because it is popular - 3 Name Calling uses a negative term to refer to
a group or an idea without providing evidence or
proof - 4 Loaded Words uses language that evokes
strong feelings and attitudes in the listener to
sway an argument
26(3) Critical Listening 7 Propaganda Techniques
- 5 Emotional Appeals assumes that the listener
shares the emotional responses of the speaker - 6 Stereotypes applies preconceived notions to a
person based on his or her membership in a group - 7 Either/Or poses arguments between two
opposite choices, failing to take into account
other possibilities