Saturday, January 28, 2012

How Do Others Evaluate My Communication Skills?

This portion of my blog required the student to have completed three assessments, summarize the results, and compare them to the results of others concerning me: communication anxiety inventory, verbal aggressiveness scale, listening styles profile. I had three people take the test for me instead of two: my two closest friends – 1 male and 1 female, and a colleague. We all agreed on listening styles. What was surprising was that my best friends scored me as significant on the verbal aggressiveness and the colleague’s result was moderate along with mine. I am somewhat disturbed that my friends feel that I verbally attack people. To be good communicators we must first know ourselves O’Hair & Wiemann, 2009).  We must understand that our actions are directly affected by our self-perceptions (p. 57).
O’Hair, D., & Wiemann, M. (2009). Real communication: An introduction. New York: Bedford/St. Martin’s.

Saturday, January 21, 2012

COMMUNICATING WITH OTHERS

Do you find yourself communicating differently with people from different groups and cultures?
Of course I communicate differently with people from different groups and cultures. I speak differently to our clients who are bilingual, sometimes using my broken Spanish. There is a teacher at our center that I have determined I must pay attention to my words for her to understand. When I answer the phone, I answer differently if it’s my personal phone, the day care line, or the church phone. I often use my ‘church lady’ voice when I’m at church that I never use any other setting. My verbal and nonverbal communication skills all change in these settings.  
Based on what you have learned this week, share at least three strategies you could use to help you communicate more effectively with the people or groups you have identified.
·         I need to formally improve my Spanish. The neighborhood in which the center belongs has become increasingly diverse. As an administrator, I must be able to communicate with potential clients.
·         Deconstruct my schemas (O’Hair & Wiemann, 2009) – I must be able to allow myself to let go of my preconceived ideas of how others should act.
·         Eliminate cultural myopia (O’Hair & Wiemann, 2009) thinking. This goes hand in hand with deconstructing my schemas in order to communicate well with others and other groups.
O’Hair, D., & Wiemann, M. (2009). Real communication: An introduction. New York: Bedford/St. Martin’s.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

NONVERBAL COMMUNICATIONS

This week's assignment called for us to observe a television show we wouldn't ordinarily watch with the sound muted and then again with the sound in tact.

While watching the show "The Firm" without sound, it was obvious that the main male and female characters were a couple. The beginning of the show they were being escorted through a building as if the man escorting was a realtor and showing the inside of the building to clients. The couple nonverbal gestures of their togetherness were hands held while they walked, when one talked the other looked on with an adoring gaze, the woman did take the man’s arm and draw her body into his. They both were smiling and seemed happy about that showing. In a bedroom scene, it was unmistakably evident that they were a couple.
With the sound on my assumption on the nonverbal cues were correct about the couple. The actors were playing a married couple and they seemed to be much in love with each other. Their nonverbal cues were good situational context. I was wrong when I assumed that they were on the market to buy the building. They were in fact being shown the office building of where the husband was being offered a partnership at a law firm. The man showing them around was a lawyer of the firm ‘courting’ him.
There were many characters in this show and without verbal communications, my assumptions to the mini plots were completely wrong. One man I thought had ill intentions to the main character had been entrapped and was angry.  The main character was trying to help that man. It is clear that one must watch for nonverbal communications as well as verbal in order to grasp everything.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Communicating and Collaborating in the Early Childhood Field


This week starts a new class and new challenges for learning. In my line of work (church, nonprofits, EC programs), I interact with people from all walks of life. I have observed my father and pastor communicate in many different settings. What I admire about Dad is that he does not allow circumstances or others tones to not treat everyone the same. When he doesn't understand what someone is saying, he rephrases for clarification or politely asks for clarification. My father also watches and listens for clues of what is being said by nonverbal actions. These are skills I need to perfect in order to interact affectively with everyone.