COM100 Final(Lessons 1 - 11)
Cultural communication
Communication between people who have different cultural traditions
Intrapersonal communication
Communication with oneself using internal vocalization or reflective thinking
Rate
How fast or slowly a speaker speaks
Other-knowledge
Learning from other-awareness, mindfulness, and cognitive flexibility
Small group communication
Occurs when three or more people communicate together to achieve a shared communication goal
Which of the following words is the most concrete?
Sailing
Extemporaneous speaking
Speaking from notes on a written or memorized outline without having memorized the exact wording of the presentation
Cadence
The rhythm of spoken language
Vocalics (paralanguage)
The study of paralanguage, which includes the vocal qualities that go along with verbal messages, such as pitch, volume, rate, vocal quality, and verbal fillers
Word picture
Vivid words that invite listeners to draw on their senses
Fred has always been a nervous public speaker, but this time he's going to prepare a speaking outline that will really help him calm his nerves and build his confidence. When he prepares his speaking outline, he should include all the following EXCEPT ___
a list of decisions he made while preparing the outline
We can learn to make decisions for using selected nonverbal messages in specific communication situations where there are expected and accepted cultural behaviors. For example, we might ___
adapt to the nonverbal messages of an interviewer or the context in a job interview situation
Lisa and Jody are sisters. After spending time at separate colleges, they came home at Christmas. The first time they saw each other after months away, they ran to each other and embraced in a happy hug. The nonverbal behavior displayed by the sisters was an ___
affect display
A person with a high handshake index may be perceived to be ___
extroverted
According to readings in this lesson, many people do not approach speech preparation in an informed and systematic way, which results in ___
poorly planned or executed speeches
In order to reduce cognitive barriers to listening you could ask yourself ___
"What listening type and style are most appropriate for this message?"
David sees Joe and says, "Hey Joe. I just don't know what to do. I've got a term paper in Johnson's class, a group project in marketing, my boss wants me to work overtime this week, and now Mary is after me to go visit her parents over the weekend." Which of the following would be an appropriate active listening paraphrase of content to David's statement?
"You sound like you have a lot of demands on your time, Dave"
Communicators can express language bias against which of the following categories?
(All of the above)
Proposition of policy
A claim advocating a specific action to change a policy, procedure, or behavior
Proposition of value
A claim that calls for the listener to judge the worth or importance of something
Proposition of fact
A claim that something did or did not happen
Proposition
A claim with which you want your audience to agree
Specific purpose
A concise statement of what listeners should be able to do by the time the speaker finishes the presentation
Dialect
A consistent style of pronunciation and articulation that is common to an ethnic group or geographic region
Collectivist culture
A culture that places high value on collaboration, teamwork, and group achievement
Masculine culture
A culture that values achievement, assertiveness, heroism, material wealth, and traditional male and female roles
Feminine culture
A culture that values being sensitive toward others and fostering harmonious personal relationships with others
Individualistic culture
A culture that values individual achievement and personal accomplishments
High-context culture
A culture which often look for nonverbal clues like tone, silence, or what is not said for meaning
Low-context culture
A culture which values verbal communication as the primary, meaning-rich form of communication
Consensus or consensus rule
A decision-making technique in which all members of the group must participate and then ultimately agree on the same decision to support an idea, proposal, or solution
Central idea or thesis
A definitive point about a concept that can be explained by focusing on Main Ideas that support it
Groupthink
A faulty sense of agreement that occurs when members of a group fail to challenge an idea; a false consensus; conflict is minimized and group members do not express concerns or reservations about an idea or proposal
Pause
A few seconds of silence during a presentation; can be used both to slow a fast pace and to signal a key idea
Discriminative listening
A focused and usually instrumental type of listening that is primarily physiological and occurs mostly at the receiving stage of the listening process
Virtual group
A group whose members are not together in the same physical location but who are typically connected via an electronic channel such as the Internet, a telephone, or a video conference that enables them to take advantage of the technology to use their group communication skills to achieve their goals
Attitude
A learned predisposition to respond favorably or unfavorably to something; a like or dislike. A speaker needs to evaluate the audience's attitude toward the topic
What form of supporting material is being used in the following question? "If many states profit from the institution of a lottery, why can't our home state do the same?"
A literal analogy
Concrete meaning
A meaning with a tangible and concrete reference; it refers to something that can be perceived and understood with one of the senses
Affect display
A nonverbal behavior that communicates emotion
Adaptor
A nonverbal behavior that helps satisfy a personal need and helps a person adapt or respond to the immediate situation
Regulator
A nonverbal behavior that helps to control the interaction or level of communication between people
Emblem
A nonverbal cue that is a gesture that has a specific agreed-on meaning
Channel
A pathway or a sensory route on / in which a message travels to the receiver for decoding
Physical delivery
A person's gestures, movement, and posture, which influences how a message is interpreted
Self-concept
A person's subjective description of who he or she is
Functions of nonverbal communication
A primary function of nonverbal communication is to convey meaning by reinforcing, substituting for, or contradicting verbal communication. Nonverbal communication is also used to influence others and regulate conversational flow
Nonverbal communication
A process of generating meaning using behavior other than words
Final summary
A recap of all the main points of a presentation, usually occurring just before or during the conclusion
Internal summary
A recap of what has been said so far in the presentation
Delivery cue or speaking cue
A reminder of how to speak or move during a presentation, which is often written on a delivery outline or a speaker's note cards
Belief
A sense of what is true or false. A speaker needs to evaluate the audience's beliefs about the topic
Appearance
A speaker's dress and grooming
Posture
A speaker's stance
Mindfulness
A state of self- and other-monitoring that informs later reflection on communication interactions
Preview
A statement of what is to come; specifically the part of a speech giving information about the Main ideas in the Body.
Abstract meaning
A symbol or written word that stands in for an idea or object; it is meaning with an intangible reference; it refers to something that cannot be perceived or experienced with one of the senses
Language
A system of symbols (words or vocabulary) that is usually learned and is structured by rules (grammar) and patterns (syntax) common to a community of people; the productive and limitless use of words to generate meaning
Public speaking (presentational speaking)
A teachable, learnable process of developing, supporting, organizing, and presenting ideas orally
Brainstorming
A technique for generating many possible solutions to a problem by withholding evaluation while group members in a group communication situation suggest ideas; ideas are evaluated by the group after suggestions have been offered
Silent brainstorming
A technique used to generate ideas for the Main ideas, topics and subtopics for support for a Central Idea of a speech
Antithesis
A two-part parallel structure in which the second part contrasts in meaning with the first
Dyad
A two-person communication interaction, or in pairs
Sign posts
A verbal or nonverbal organization signal or transition
Back-channel cue
A vocal cue that signals when an individual wants to talk and when he/she doesn't
Verbal transition
A word or phrase that indicates the relationship between two ideas
Visualization
A word picture of the future that can be used to help an audience understand the implications of your persuasive message
Transition
A word, phrase, or nonverbal cue that indicates movement from one idea to the next or to the relationship between ideas
Symbol
A word, sound, gesture, or visual image that stands in for or represents something else, such as a thought, concept, object, or experience, often within a given cultural context
Kim was constantly twirling her hair as she talked to her teacher. Which type of nonverbal cue showed Kim's nervousness?
Adaptors
Adrian used primarily Web sources for his informative speech about gun control. However, his over-reliance on a Web site the National Rifle Association sponsored caused his speech to be slanted in one direction, rather than presenting multiple sides of the issue. Which of the following statements best explains this situation?
Adrian forgot the key concept of determining the objectivity of a Web site before relying too heavily on it in a speech
Motivated sequence
Alan H. Monroe's five-step plan for an organization pattern where the speaker is organizing a persuasive message through attention, need, satisfaction, visualization, and action
In his speech about registering to vote, Dan explains the new legislation that allows voter registration to coincide with driver's license renewal. He concludes the speech by stating that any person who is not registered should go to several locations that he has listed on the chalkboard to register in time for the next election. Finally, Dan reiterates, "Everyone please register to vote; it's your right and your duty as a citizen." What aspect of effective conclusions has Dan decided to use?
An appeal to motivate the audience to respond and act
Leadership styles
An approach to describing the group communication role of leader based on use of specific communication elements during group communication; these styles include directive, participative, supportive, and achievement-oriented
Trustworthiness
An aspect of a speaker's credibility that reflects whether the speaker is perceived as believable and honest
Competence
An aspect of a speaker's credibility that reflects whether the speaker is perceived as informed, skilled, and knowledgeable
Credibility
An audience's perception of a speaker's competence, trustworthiness, and dynamism
Empathy
An emotional reaction similar to the reaction being experienced by another person
Value
An enduring conception of right or wrong, good or bad. A speaker needs to evaluate the audience's values related to the topic
Spatial organization
An organization pattern according to location, position, or direction
Complexity
An organization pattern based on arranging ideas from simple to more complex
Primacy
An organization pattern based on arranging ideas from the strongest or least controversial to the weakest or most controversial
Cause-and-effect organization
An organization pattern based on discussing a situation and its causes or its effects
Problem-and-solution organization
An organization pattern based on discussing first the problem and then various solutions
Specificity
An organization pattern based on moving from specific information to a more general statement
Recency
An organization pattern based on the principle that audiences remember best what they hear last, which guides the arrangement of ideas from the least to the most important
Chronological organization
An organization pattern based on time or sequence
Presentational aid
Any tangible item used to help communicate ideas to an audience
Noise
Anything that interferes with a message being sent between participants in a communication encounter. Also referred to as interference
Facial Expression
Arrangement of the facial muscles that communicates nonverbally
Grace knew her speech content. She rehearsed it according to her plan for some practice without memorizing it and timed it to make sure she didn't run over the time limit. When she actually delivered the speech, she found herself much less nervous and much more confident than she expected to be. Which guideline for developing confidence provided in your textbook applies here?
Be prepared
Intercultural communication is communication ___
Between people with differing cultural identities
Movement
Change of location during a presentation
What type of organizational pattern is reflected in these main points? I. As a young child, J.R.R. Tolkien and his young cousins invented a language called Nebosh. II. As a college student, J.R.R. Tolkien invented several languages influenced by Welsh and Finnish. III. By the time he published the works of fiction for which he is famous, J.R.R. Tolkien had invented a number of Elvish languages.
Chronological
Conclusion
Closing lines of a speech presentation, which leave a final impression
Artifacts
Clothing or another element of appearance (e.g., jewelry, tattoos, piercings, makeup, cologne)
Cultural aspects of interpersonal communication
Communicating in relationships helps establish relationship cultures that are unique and are also based on larger cultural and social norms
Interpersonal communication
Communication between people whose lives mutually influence one another and typically occurs in dyads (pairs)
Speaking or Delivery outline
Condensed and abbreviated outline of a presentation used as speaking notes or from which speaking notes are developed
Storming stage of group development
Conflict emerges as group members start to play their various roles, have their ideas heard, and try to negotiate use of various group communication skills
Audience-centered presentation
Considering and adapting to the audience at every stage of the presentational speaking process
Standard outline format
Conventional use of Roman Numerals, letters, and headings and sub-headings to indicate the relationship among parts of a presentation
What type of listening would be used if Jim was trying to determine if he understands why his employees do not like the new healthcare coverage?
Critical listening
Greg's new job required him to make a sales presentation in Korea. When he arrived, he was stressed due to the differences in language, customs, and food. How would you best describe what Greg was feeling?
Culture shock
Group decision making
Decisions made by a group have specific challenges and benefits compared to individuals making decisions
Denotative meaning (denotation)
Definitions that are accepted by the language group as a whole, or the dictionary definition of a word; the literal or restrictive meaning of a word
Connotative meaning (connotation)
Definitions that are based on emotion- or experience-based associations people have with a word; the personal and subjective or culturally constructed meanings of a word
Impromptu speaking
Delivering a speech presentation without advance preparation
Memorized speaking
Delivering a speech presentation word-for-word from memory without using notes
________ meaning conveys the content of what a word means and the ________ meaning contains the feelings behind words
Denotative; connotative
Formal outline or Preparation outline
Detailed outline of a speech presentation that includes main ideas, subpoints, and supporting material and that may also include a specific purpose, introduction, blueprint, internal previews and summaries, transitions, and a conclusion
Which of the following words is the most abstract?
Education
Norming stage of group development
Effective group communication occurs more often as the group uses agreed on group communication skills, including group communication norms, group communication roles, and agreed on structure
Pathos
Emotional appeals
Your roommate has just returned from giving her speech. She is visibly upset and begins to criticize the instructor as an incompetent old fuddy-duddy. You sit patiently while she continues her tirade against the instructor's criticism of her performance. When she is done, you say, "It must be really frustrating to have something you worked so hard on evaluated so harshly." This response indicates you are listening for what purpose?
Empathy
Repetition
Emphasizing a key word or phrase by using it more than once during oral delivery
An informative speech has been assigned, so Jamal starts to worry about what he can possibly present to his class. That night he takes out a blank sheet of paper and just starts writing down every possible idea for a speech topic related to topics the class has been studying that he can think of. What is Jamal doing?
Engaging in silent brainstorming
Critical listening
Entails listening with the goal of analyzing or evaluating a message based on information presented verbally and information that can be inferred from context
Proof
Evidence plus reasoning
Nonverbal transition
Facial expression, vocal cue, or physical movement that indicates a speaker is moving from one idea to the next
Hard evidence
Factual examples and statistics
Rey presented an informative speech on earthquakes. He described the structural causes of earthquakes, how they develop, which areas of the earth are prone to quakes, how quakes are measured, the damage they do, and what to do when one hits. The speech became dry, the audience's attention declined, and it exceeded the time limit by almost twice the amount of time. From this description, what was Rey's mistake?
Failing to narrow his topic
Logical fallacy
False reasoning that occurs when someone attempts to persuade without adequate evidence or with arguments that are irrelevant or inappropriate
Structure of small groups in group communication situations
Formal and informal connections that form the group's structure as group members communicate with each other while participating in the group communication situation. The group's structure is also affected by external and internal influences
What is the difference between a formal outline and a speaking outline?
Formal outlines include your specific purpose; speaking outlines do not
Stereotype
Generally held beliefs that place a person or group of persons into an inflexible, all-encompassing category
Performing stage of group development
Group members consistently use effective group communication skills as the group makes steady progress toward the completion of their group goal. This stage can include a strong focus on task and relational aspects
Forming stage of group development
Groups begin to use selected group communication skills in order to focus on accomplishing their goal and reducing uncertainty
Task oriented groups
Groups who are primarily formed to accomplish the goals of problem solving, provide ideas for support or assistance, or produce ideas or information for planning, budgeting and other needs
Relational groups
Groups who are primarily formed to support and contribute to personal connections and relationships that focus on interactions during their group communication in order to contribute to the quality of life of the group members
Pitch
How high or low a speaker's voice is
Soft evidence
Hypothetical illustrations, descriptions, explanations, definitions, analogies, and opinions or transitions
Which of the following statements illustrates a difference between public speaking and writing?
In writing, redundancy is not desirable; in public speaking, the decision to use redundancy may be necessary, depending on the goal and the audience
Suspension
Intentionally withholding a key word or phrase until the end of a sentence
Group/Small group communication
Interactions based on selected group communication skills among three or more people who are group members, who are connected through a common purpose, mutual influence, and a shared identity
After doing a survey of his class, Ryan decided his discussion of Tesla's death ray device would be difficult for his audience to follow. One of the ways he adapted to this was to paraphrase and repeat vital information at the end of each main point. What device was Ryan using in his speech?
Internal summary
Figurative language
Language that deviates from the ordinary, expected meaning of words to make a description or comparison unique, vivid, and memorable and adds emotion to the meaning
Informational listening
Listening with the goal of comprehending and retaining information
Research
Locating and evaluating different types of sources that may be relevant for supporting your speech Central Idea
Logos
Logical arguments
Eye contact
Looking at an audience during a presentation
Main ideas
Major subdivisions of the central idea of a presentation, which provide points of focus for developing the presentation and are points for the audience to understand and remember
Language adaptation
Making a decision to select a different word to add more emotion or subjective meaning; also adding exclamations or audible sighs or other sounds that are not complete words but also add emotion
Evidence
Material used to support a point or premise
Feedback
Messages sent in response to other messages
Supportive language/communication
Messages that have language that communicates in an open, honest, and non-confrontational way; language that creates a climate of trust, caring, and acceptance
Unsupportive language/communication
Messages that have language that makes others respond defensively, which can lead to feelings of separation and actual separation or dissolution of a relationship; language that creates a climate of hostility and mistrust
Gestures
Movements of the hands and arms to communicate ideas
Which of the following statements is true concerning culture and nonverbal norms?
Nonverbal norms vary based on cultural values
Vocal delivery
Nonverbal voice elements including volume, pitch, rate, and articulation. Also known as paralanguage
Mass communication
Occurs when messages are sent to large audiences using print or electronic media and there is no, or little, opportunity for direct and immediate response
Introduction
Opening lines of a speech presentation, which must catch the audience's attention and introduce the speaker's topic
Sender/Source
Originator of a thought or emotion who puts it into a verbal or nonverbal code that can be understood by a receiver
Listening styles
People may choose or prefer to be People-oriented listeners, action-oriented listeners, content- oriented listeners, and / or time-oriented listeners
Receiver
Person who decodes a message and attempts to make sense out of what the source has encoded
Context
Physical and psychological influences that enhance or impede communication. The transaction model considers how social, relational, and cultural contexts frame and influence our communication encounters
Graphs
Presentation of statistical relationships to an audience to help make data more concrete
Of these organizational patterns, which is more effective in the persuasive speech presentation?
Problem solution
Chris and Ryan are having a huge argument. Chris said to Ryan, "Why do you seem to always think this is a joke?" Which of the following barriers to effective communication does this statement represent?
Psychological noise
Manuscript speaking
Reading a speech presentation from a written text
The stage of listening in which you need to use perceptual filters is ___
Receiving
Listening involves which of the following processes?
Receiving, Interpreting, Recalling, Evaluating, and Responding
Group communication Negative Roles
Regular use of skills and displays of behaviors that are evidence of playing a role that results in a negative or undesirable impact on the group communication
Group communication Task-related Roles
Roles played by group members where their skills and behaviors contribute directly to and help a group have more effective group communication and therefore achieve its goal
Group communication Maintenance Roles
Roles played by group members where their skills and behaviors directly contribute to creating and maintaining social cohesion and a supportive group communication climate, enabling the group to have more effective group communication and accomplish its goals
Perception checking
Skill of asking other observers or the person being observed whether your interpretation of nonverbal behavior is accurate
Cultural identities
Socially constructed categories that teach us a way of being and include expectations for social behavior or ways of acting
_____________________ is organization according to location, position, or direction
Spatial organization
Group communication norms
Standards, rules or guidelines for group communication behaviors in group communication situations, ideally discussed and decided on by the group, based on the group members and their skills, their goal, and the situation. These standards describe what is appropriate group communication behavior and what is not appropriate group communication behavior. The skills of group members in establishing, following, and enforcing their own group communication norms can increase the level of effective group communication that needs to occur
Language that creates a climate of trust, caring, and acceptance is called which of the following?
Supportive communication
Which of the following would be an appropriate central idea for a presentation?
Swimming is an enjoyable recreational activity that provides important health benefits for college students
In Ted's speech on surfing, he is trying to decide whether to tell the audience in his introduction that he has been a surfer since he was just a kid. He wonders if this will help or hurt his credibility. What textbook advice applies here?
Ted should give a brief, credibility-building explanation of his experience with the topic
Perception
The arousal of any of your senses that leads to some categorizing or organizing the information you are processing
Ethnocentrism
The belief that one's own cultural traditions and assumptions are superior to those of others
Ethics
The beliefs, values, and moral principles by which one determines what is right or wrong
General purpose
The broad reason for giving a presentation: to inform, to persuade, or to entertain an audience
Sara is giving a speech to her sociology class. Her central idea is "Why are consumers drawn to the violence in video games?" What is the problem with this central idea?
The central idea should be a complete declarative sentence
Cohesion
The commitment of the group members to the group to accomplish the group's goals. Evidence of cohesion could be the use of selected group communication skills and a focus on an appropriate balance of the two kinds of cohesion, relative to accomplishing the group's goals
DECIDE
The communication decision-making tool that focuses on the steps a sender needs to follow, where decisions need to be made in order, based on decisions for the previous steps
Social identities
The components of self that are derived from involvement in social groups with which we are interpersonally committed
Ethos
The credibility or ethical character of a speaker
_____________________ is the broad reason for giving a presentation: to inform, to persuade, or to entertain an audience.
The general purpose
The group communication task-related role of Task Leader
The group member who uses group communication skills to positively influence the behavior and group communication skills of the other group members in the group communication situation in order to help accomplish the group goal
Personal identities
The identities that include the components of self that are primarily intrapersonal and connected to our life experiences
The listening process
The learned process of Receiving, Interpreting, Recalling, Evaluating, and Responding to verbal and nonverbal messages
Types of listening
The main types of listening we are studying are discriminative, informational, critical, and empathetic
Body
The middle part of a speech presentation, which includes the Main Ideas, and the supporting topics, subtopics, and details
Group communication climate
The morale of the group when they are involved in their group communication; the tone and quality of the group interaction that is experienced in the same way by the group members
Empathic listening
The most challenging form of listening, which occurs when we try to understand or experience what a speaker is thinking or feeling
Culture
The ongoing negotiation of learned and patterned beliefs, attitudes, values, and behaviors that is shared by a group of people and shaped from one generation to the next
Group problem-solving process (Reflective thinking process)
The problem-solving process involves the thoughts, discussions, actions, and decisions that occur from the first consideration of a problematic situation to the goal. Problem characteristics: Task difficulty, number of possible solutions, group member interest in the problem, group member familiarity with the problem, and the need for solution acceptance
Human communication
The process by which people generate meaning by sending and receiving verbal and nonverbal symbols and signs that are influenced by multiple contexts
Persuasion
The process of attempting to change or reinforce a listener's attitudes, beliefs, values, or behavior
Reasoning
The process of drawing a conclusion from evidence
Interpersonal communication
The process of exchanging messages between people whose lives mutually influence one another in unique ways in relation to social and cultural norms
Articulation
The production of clear and distinct speech sounds
Alliteration
The repetition of a consonant sound (usually the first consonant) several times in a phrase, clause, or sentence
Closure
The sense that a speech presentation sounds finished
Volume
The softness or loudness of a speaker's voice
Haptics
The study of communication by touch
Kinesics
The study of hand, arm, body, and face movements. These include gestures, head movements and posture, eye contact, and facial expressions
Proxemics
The study of how space and distance influence communication
Chronemics
The study of how time affects communication
Democratic leadership style
The style of one who plays the Task Leader group communication role and leads group communication by developing a consensus among group members; a group leader who asks for group input and who influences the group to discuss and decide as a group
Authoritarian leadership style
The style of one who plays the Task Leader group communication role and leads group communication by directing, controlling, telling, and ordering others
Laissez-faire leader
The style of one who plays the Task Leader group communication role who fails to lead group communication or who leads group communication or exerts influence only when asked or directed
Self-perception
The view of yourself based on how you perceive, receive, and organize information about your self-concept, your self-esteem, social and family influences, culture, and the media
Structure
The way a group or team discussion is organized for effective group communication, focusing on the group's agenda and the goals that need to be achieved
Agenda
The written plan for achieving the goals during a group meeting; groups often discuss and decide as a group to include items for discussion, action, and information, depending on the goals, situation and group input
Decision making techniques
These involve determining a course of action based on the level of agreement among the group members. These methods include majority, expert, authority, and consensus rule
Small group
Three to 15 people who share a common purpose, feel a sense of belonging to the group, and exert influence on one another through selected group communication skills
Inform
To share information with others to enhance their knowledge or understanding of the information, concepts, and ideas you present
If you want to inform an audience about three equally risky behaviors related to contracting HIV, which organizational pattern would work best?
Topical
Which of the following statements reflects the importance of touch behaviors?
Touch behaviors such as hand-shaking affect the initial impressions people make of each other
Parallelism
Using similar or exactly the same grammatical structure for two or more clauses or sentences
Donald Brown found that people in all cultures share a list of universal behaviors. Which of the following is not included in that list?
Value some degree of conflict
Listening barriers
Variables that are present at every stage of the listening process; these include emotional noise, self-focus, and criticism
Which of the following statements accurately expresses the differences between verbal and nonverbal behavior?
Verbal behavior is less ambiguous; nonverbal is more ambiguous
Supporting material
Verbal or visual material that include topics, subtopics, and details that clarify, amplify, and provide evidence to support the main ideas of a presentation
It is important to be aware much of our nonverbal communication is multichannel because ___
We can monitor our nonverbal messages for messages that are incongruent
Bill was visiting his friend Carol's parents in Chicago. They offered him some tea; he was very thirsty, so he said he would love some. He was very surprised when they brought him a cup of hot tea. In Arkansas, where he was from, the word tea always meant iced tea. If you wanted a cup of hot tea, you asked for hot tea. Which of the following characteristics of language best describes this situation?
Words are culture-bound
You have gained your audience's attention, introduced your speech topic, previewed your main points, and given your audience a reason to listen to your speech. Next, you transition into your first point. What have you left out of this speech introduction?
You have not included the proof of your credibility
Which of the following statements is true concerning speaking outlines?
You may write out your first sentence word-for-word if that makes you feel more comfortable
Self-esteem
Your assessment of your worth or values reflected in your perceptions of your skills, abilities, appearance, etc
One way to respond to a person or situation with empathy would be to ___
ask questions
A/an _________________ public speaker is someone who considers and adapts to the audience at every stage of the public speaking process ___
audience-centered
Decoding nonverbal signals includes recognizing that ___
certain nonverbal signals are related
To make sure you use analogies as effective support the speaker needs to ___
choose ideas, items, or situations to compare that are similar enough to justify the analogy
While an introduction creates a critically important first impression, your _______________ leaves an equally important final impression.
conclusion
A _______________ speaker is one whom the audience judges to be believable, competent, and trustworthy
credible
A learned system of knowledge, behavior, attitudes, beliefs, values, rules, and norms that a group of people shares and one generation to the next shapes is known as a ___
culture
Outlining your speech is the process of breaking Main Ideas and topics down into logical divisions and then ___
deciding how to connect the information together
Decisions to use reminders such as "Louder," "Gesture," and "Slow down" written on the speaking outline in a different color of ink means you decided to use ___
delivery / speaking cues
Adjourning stage of group development
development Group members decide to end the group because they have accomplished their goal or there is internal or external reasons to conclude the group
The statement "Nonverbal communication is nonlinguistic" means that nonverbal messages ___
do not conform to the patterns of oral language
"At the end of my presentation, the audience will be laughing at my misadventures as an adult cello student." This is an example of a general purpose to ___
entertain
Brady is making a presentation to his freshman speech class. Since he was in AP classes during his high school career, he develops the central idea for his presentation around his experience: "Taking AP classes in high school can help prepare you for college." In choosing this central idea, Brady has not ___
evaluated his audience
Lisa complains that her sister, Jody, doesn't pick up on her verbal and nonverbal cues. In fact, she never seems to make sense out of Lisa's symbols or language use. Jody is most likely ____________ instead of ______________
hearing, listening
You first need to decide how you will organize your Main Ideas and then how you will organize your supporting materials so you can:
help your audience to better understand your speech
A regulator is a nonverbal behavior that ___
helps to control the interaction or level of communication between people
A key principle of nonverbal communication is that it often takes on more meaning ___
in emotional communication situations
"At the end of my presentation, the audience will be able to list two benefits for adults of learning to play a musical instrument." This is an example of a general purpose to ___
inform
Before moving to your next point in your speech presentation, you say, "We have discussed what sleep deprivation is and why it can be a problem for college students." This is an example of a/an ___
internal summary
Communication that occurs between two people who simultaneously attempt to mutually influence each other, usually for the purpose of managing relationships, is known as ___
interpersonal communication
In oral communication situations, the nonverbal channel ___
is always open
As Jerome reached the third and final point of his speech, he paused dramatically and moved about three feet toward his left before continuing. This example describes Jerome using a/an ___
nonverbal transition
Groupthink
occurs when every group member seems to quickly show uncritical acceptance of decisions or suggestions for a strategy or solution or outcome
Critical listening is about making an evaluation or judgment, whereas empathetic listening ___
occurs when we try to understand or experience what a speaker is thinking or feeling
When Dominique quickly yells at her parents to make her point, she is using ___
paralanguage
The gap between the thought rate and the speech rate can be a barrier to listening because ___
people are normally capable of processing information and any number of thoughts faster than most speakers speak
The skill of asking other observers or the person being observed whether your interpretation of his or her nonverbal behavior is accurate is known as ___
perception checking
You must cite the sources in your speech for all of the following except ___
personal analogies
"At the end of my presentation, the audience will enroll in a music appreciation course." This is an example of a general purpose to ___
persuade
Public speaking is also known as ____________ speaking
presentational
Before the oral delivery of the Body of your speech, you decide to tell the audience what your main ideas are going to be. This is considered your ___
preview
If you were speaking on how listeners can protect themselves from mountain lion attacks when hiking in the American West, you might decide to first establish that a significant problem exists, then talk about solutions to that problem. This would be considered ___
problem-solution organization
One function of nonverbal communication is to ___
regulate conversation flow
When Keri wanted Ben to stop talking, she averted her eyes and turned her back. The function of this behavior was to ___
regulate interaction
Which of the following statements does not describe a way to adapt to your diverse audience?
repeating one set of examples
After you have decided on your general purpose, specific purpose, Central Idea and possible Main Ideas it is time to ___
research and decide on support materials
The less accountability information is available about a possible resource, the more you should ___
scrutinize the information
"As a result of my presentation, my audience will recycle their newspapers and aluminum products." This is an example of a ___
specific purpose statement
Speaker anxiety can have a variety of symptoms that are the same as ___
stage fright
A speech introduction that begins with "Did you know that a light bulb has been invented that will last 10 times as long as the ones used today, but the government won't let it be marketed to the public?" is employing a device known as a/an ___
startling statement
Deciding which organizational pattern you will use is a decision for ___
step 3 in DECIDE based on decisions for steps 1 and 2
Culturally biased language is often based on ___
stereotypes and myths that influence the words we use
You would not focus on accomplishing the objective of _____________ in the Introduction
summarizing the importance of your topic
Verbal or visual material that clarifies, amplifies, and provides evidence to support the main ideas of a presentation is categorized as ___
supporting material
A speaker can decide how much support material he / she needs for the upcoming speech by focusing on ___
the communication goal, the audience, the situation, the Thesis or Central idea, and the selected Main Ideas
Receiving, Interpreting, Recalling, Evaluating, and Responding are all a part of ___
the listening process
Decoding
the process of turning communication into thoughts, often referring to the receiver decoding the sender's communication messages into thoughts the receiver has
Encoding
the process of turning thoughts into communication, often referring to the sender encoding his / her thoughts into communication messages to the receiver
Discriminative, informational, critical, and empathetic are all a part of ___
the types of listening
Message
the verbal or nonverbal content being conveyed from sender to receiver
Group communication roles
the way group members decide to consistently communicate by using selected group communication skills with other group members in a specific group communication situation
There is research that shows evidence of the statement "the overwhelming majority of current research on gender and communication finds that while there are differences between how men and women communicate ___
there are far more similarities
Paraphrasing and questioning are useful techniques for empathetic listening because ___
these skills allow us to respond to a speaker without taking "the floor," or the attention away from the speaker
Interrupting can be a barrier to listening if you ___
think the speaker is done speaking
Haptics is the study of human ___
touch
Ashley and Candice were shopping at the mall. Ashley needed to go to the other end of the mall to get something. She said to Candice, "Meet me at 2:00 in front of Sears." Candice thought that in front meant outside in front of the parking lot entrance. Ashley thought that in front meant in front of the entrance on the inside of the mall. Ashley and Candice spent two hours waiting for each other. What language problem is reflected in this situation?
unexpected connotation
The statement "Jim, clearly you did not put any effort into this project" is an example of ___
unsupportive language
A good conversationalist ___
uses relevance, tact, courtesy, and sincerity
In a speech, stating "This brings me to my next point..." is an example of decisions to use a/an ___
verbal transition
Touch and facial expressions are two primary ways ___
we express emotions nonverbally
Making a formal outline is important to help you make sure your content is coherent and ___
your ideas are balanced and expressed clearly