What Is Listening?: If You Ask A Group of People To Give A One Word Description of Listening, Some Would Say Hearing
What Is Listening?: If You Ask A Group of People To Give A One Word Description of Listening, Some Would Say Hearing
What Is Listening?: If You Ask A Group of People To Give A One Word Description of Listening, Some Would Say Hearing
• Listening is hard!
You must choose to participate in the
process of listening.
Listening is a conscious activity
based on three basic skills:
1) Attitude
2) Attention
3) Adjustment
1)Attitude
Maintain a constructive Attitude
2)Attention
Strive to pay Attention
3)Adjustment
Cultivate a capacity for Adjustment
Empathy
What is it:
reflection of content and feeling at a
deeper level
Purpose:
To try and get an understanding of what
may be deeper feelings
HERE IS AN EXAMPLE OF HOW
EMPATHIC LISTENING DIFFERS
FROM THE OTHER TYPES OF
LISTENING…
A computer instructor explains with
enthusiasm how to use a new word
processing program
Focuses on the Program
Negotiation skills
Emotional intelligence
… But not practiced effectively
70% of all communication
is
Misunderstood
Misinterpreted
Rejected
Distorted
Not heard
Listening is an active process
that has three basic steps.
1. Hearing
2. Understanding
3. Judging
TYPES OF LISTENING
1. Inactive listening.
2. Selective listening.
3. Active listening
4. Reflective Listening
Active Listening
WHAT IS ACTIVE
LISTENING?
InternalBarriers Within
The Speaker
External Barriers
noises
clutter
other interruptions
Internal Barriers Within the Listener
Comparing
Personal Experience
Automatic Talking
Mind-Reading
Judging
Day Dreaming
Perceptual Errors
Barriers Within the Speaker
Expectations
Avoidance
Speaking in Code
Boundary
When to Use Active Listening
Inappropriate Appropriate
Routine interactions Organizational Crises
Physical emergencies Conflict situations
Giving and receiving
feedback
Brainstorming, problem
solving
Seeking peers’
cooperation
STEPS OF ACTIVE LISTENING
1) Listen
2) Question
3) Reflect-Paraphrase
4) Agree
Step 1: Listen
2) Non-verbal behavior
1 ) Encouragement
“I see”
“Right”
“Uh huh”…
“Okay”
“Sure”
“Yeah”
“Yes”
“Wow”
“Really?”
2)Non-Verbal Behavior
Non-Verbal Active Listening Techniques:
Maintaining appropriate eye contact
with the interviewee.
Occasionally nodding affirmatively to
display understanding and interest.
Using expectant pauses to indicate to
the interviewee that more is expected
The various forms of
NVC
touch
sound
smell
timing and speed of delivery of speech
proximity
posture
dress
eye contact
gestures
facial expressions
use of silence
Communication through Eyes
2.Question
3 Purposes
Demonstrates you are listening
Gather information
Clarification
When you asked some questions:
Show interest
Encourage more explanation
Keep the person talking
Ask questions but not too many
Types of Questions
1) YES/NO QUESTIONS
2) OPEN-ENDED QUESTIONS
3)PROBING OR FOLLOW-UP
QUESTIONS
4) LEADING QUESTIONS
1)YES/NO QUESTIONS(Closed
questions)
Thistype of question involves
asking a question that requires only
a "YES" or "NO" response
2)OPEN-ENDED QUESTIONS:
1. Reflecting
2. Reframing
3. Paraphrasing
4. Acknowleding
5. Summarizing
1. REFLECTING
Reflect What Is Said (In your words)
Reflect Feelings
REFLECTING WHAT IS SAID
REFLECTING FEELINGS
Someone may say: “Don’t worry. I’m fine”
(when she actually looks very upset)…
Reflecting, you say
“You say you’re OK, but by the tone of your
voice, you seem upset, correct?”
Act like a mirror and reflect feelings
that you see and hear. This is
particularly useful when the person’s
tone of voice or gestures don’t match
the person’s words.
OR just as a check…
“Seems like you had a fun time, right? OR
“I sense you’ve become worried. Is that
so?”
2.REFRAMING
Why You Do It?
to help the other person see their concerns in a new light
to broaden the meaning of an issue to identify needs or
interests
to diffuse negative feelings
to establish the focus for resolution
How You Do It?
recognize underlying needs
re-word concerns from negative → neutral/positive past
→ future; problem → opportunity; interpersonal →
system rights/wrongs → impacts positions → interests
singular → multiple
REFRAMING(cont.)
Concern: “She always talks to everyone
else but me when there is a problem.”