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A SPEAKER

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a speaker s guidebook 4th edition chapter 4 listening – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A SPEAKER


1
A SPEAKERS GUIDEBOOK4TH EDITIONCHAPTER 4
  • Listening

2
Listening
  • Hearing physiological response
  • Listening active, cognitive process
  • Feedback Loop
    Successful
  • speakers adjust their
    messages based on reactions from
    listeners in a circular response.

3
Competent Listeners
  • Have more successful relationships
  • Experience greater professional success
  • Are better problem solvers
  • Are more engaged citizens
  • Learn from listening to other speakers

4
Components of the Listening Process
  • Mindfulness
  • Physical reception of communication
  • Selective perception of communication
  • Organizing perceived communication
  • Interpreting communication
  • Responding to others nonverbally
  • Remembering communication

5
Selective Perception
  • We pay attention to one message while ignoring
    another. For example, walking to
  • your next class, you ignore your
  • friend to answer your cell phone.
  • Listeners pay attention to a
  • message based on its importance,
  • its relevance to listener, and the
  • level of understanding.

6
Dialogic Communication
  • To occur, the speaker and listener must create
    meaning for the message together.
  • A speech is not a monologue by which the speaker
    tries to impose her beliefs and thoughts on the
    audience like she would enter data into a
    computer.
  • Speeches are dialogues by which the speaker and
    the listener share ideas collaboratively both
    take an active role in the process.

7
Four Steps in the Listening Process
  • 1. Reception the message must be successfully
    received by the listener.
  • 2. Selection the speaker must assist the
    listener in maintaining attention to the message.
  • 3. Organization the speaker must present her
    thoughts in an organized way, so that the
    listener can process the meaning more easily.
  • 4. Motivation the listener must be open to
    receive messages to which he may first wish to
    ignore.

8
Critical Thinking
  • The ability to evaluate claims on the basis of
    well-supported reasons.
  • Audience members should evaluate the evidence for
    accuracy and credibility.
  • Pay attention to assumptions and biases, such as
    overgeneralizations which are unreasonable and
    unsupported conclusions.

9
Guidelines for Evaluating Messages
  • Be honest and fair in your evaluating by being
    open to other viewpoints and considering the
    speech as a whole.
  • Adjust to the speakers style of delivery,
    especially with your classmates who are learning
    how to improve their word choice and gestures.
  • Be compassionate in your criticism by providing
    constructive feedback.

10
A SPEAKERS GUIDEBOOK4TH EDITIONCHAPTER 4
  • Barriers to Active Listening

11
Factors that have reduced listening skills
  • We move at a fast pace in everyday life.
  • Media outlets encourage passive listening.
  • Commercials and other mini-messages contribute
    to difficulty in sustaining attention for long
    periods of time.

Try this Count the mini-messages during
your favorite TV sitcom using your stopwatch. How
much time elapsed between commercial breaks or
scene changes? How long was each commercial? Did
you have any interruptions during the sitcom
i.e. telephone ringing, person entered room,
your pet barked?
12
External Obstacles to Listening
  • A. Message Overload
  • B. Message Complexity
  • C. Noise
  • Question Which of these is more of an
    obstacle to you than the others?

13
Internal Listening Distractions
  • Thoughts and feelings that intrude on our
    attention are internal listening distractions or
    obstacles.
  • Daydreaming, anxiety, illness, or fatigue are
    examples of common distractions.
  • Scriptwriting is when the listener is to busy to
    listen because he is thinking of what to say
    next.
  • Defensive listeners prejudge the message and
    assume they already know the information or that
    the speaker is against their values.
  • Cultural differences impact how well we listen.

14
Internal Obstacles to Listening
  • A. Preoccupation
  • B. Prejudgment
  • C. Reacting to Emotionally Loaded Language
  • D. Lack of Effort
  • E. Not Adapting to Diverse Speaking Styles
  • Question Which of these is more of an
    obstacle to you?

15
Active Listeners
  • Set listening goals.
  • Listen for main ideas.
  • Watch for the speakers nonverbal cues.
  • Did you ever try to
  • tune out the speaker as
  • this child is doing?

16
Steps in Setting Listening Goals
  • Identify your need for listening to the speech.
  • Indicate the performance standard to demonstrate
    effective listening has occurred.
  • Make an action statement where you visualize
    minimizing internal distractions and listening
    well.
  • Assess goal achievement by taking a moment to
    review your evaluation sheet to confirm that you
    did an adequate job as a listener.

17
Listen for Main Ideas
  • Listen for the organizational pattern of the
    message.
  • Listen for the internal preview in the
    introduction, transition statements and signposts
    between the main ideas, and match these with the
    concluding review.
  • Take notes on the main ideas and supporting
    evidence.

18
Watch for Nonverbal Cues
  • Pay attention to direct eye contact speakers
    often emphasize important thoughts by gazing
    directly at the audience.
  • Emphatic gestures and changes in facial
    expressions often indicate important concepts or
    strong feelings on the part of the speaker.

19
Group Work Listening to Support Others
  • The primary concern should be the relationship
    with other group members we should care about
    others feelings and perceptions.
  • Concentrate on what is behind the literal content
    to know what the other person is thinking or
    feeling.
  • Avoid judgmental responses,
  • but be honest when others
  • want our evaluative feedback.

20
Chapter 4 Key Terms for Review
  • feedback loop
  • listening
  • selective perception
  • dialogue
  • dialogic communication
  • active listening
  • listening distraction
  • external listening
  • distraction
  • internal listening
  • distraction
  • defensive listening
  • critical thinking
  • valid generalization
  • overgeneralization
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