Interpersonal Communication - Exam #2
David Augsberger's 5 ways to resolve conflict (fill in circle model)
1. MY WAY 2. OUR WAY 3. YOUR WAY 4. NO WAY 5. COMPROMISE
Five laws about listening: 1. listening is not _ _______ _______ 2. listening and _______ are not the same thing 3. not all listeners receive ___ ____ _______ 4. listening is not a _______ ________ 5. listening is not simply about _______ _____
1. a natural process 2. hearing 3. the same messages 4. passive activity 5. hearing words
The terms confirmation and disconfirmation refer to the extent to which you acknowledge another person. Identify which messages fit in as disconfirmation messages and which are confirmation messages a. disconfirmation b. confirmation 1. monologues 2. responds directly and exclusively to what the other says 3. demonstrates understanding 4. jumps to interpretation or evaluation
1. a. disconfirmation 2. b. confirmation 3. b. confirmation 4. a. disconfirmation
Four destructive conflict management strategies
1. avoidance 2. using force 3. defensiveness 4. aggressiveness
Thomas and Kilmann's five modes for responding to conflict situations...
1. competing 2. accommodating 3. avoiding 4. collaborating 5. compromising
Two categories of conflict
1. content conflict 2. relationship conflict
Four productive conflict management strategies
1. fight actively 2. talking 3. supportiveness 4. argumentativeness
Three central issues of conflict
1. issues of facts 2. issues of values 3. issues of policy
Conversations follow a Five-Stage developmental process. In the appropriate order, the 5 stages are (fill in the blank)...
1. opening 2. feedforward 3. business 4. feedback 5. closing
Language is rule-governed Technical: 1. ____________ rules - how words are pronounced 2. _________ rules - structure of language (grammar) Cultural: 3. ________ rules - meaning of specific words 4. _________ rules - how people use language
1. phonological 2. syntactic 3. semantic 4. pragmatic
Fill in the style map Style I: 1. 2. Style II: 3. 4. 5. Style III: 6. Style IV: 7.
1. small talk 2. shop talk 3. control talk 4. fight talk 5. spite talk 6. search talk 7. straight talk
Using DeVito's 5-stage process of listening, add the appropriate missing stages of listening to the list below (fill in the blank): 1. Receiving 2. 3. 4. 5.
2. understanding 3. remembering 4. evaluating 5. responding
True/False: DeVito believes that the way you listen should not really depend on the situation you are in
False
True/False: If you engage in depth listening you miss the opportunity to make meaningful contact with the other person's feelings and needs
False
DeVito identifies 7 stages to conflict resolution. Finish the model of conflict resolution model by filling in the remaining 3 stages as developed by DeVito (fill in the blank): Stage 1: Set the stage Stage 2: Stage 3: Stage 4: Identify and evaluate your choices Stage 5: Act on the selected choice Stage 6: Stage 7: Wrap up/Evaluate the choice and its effect
Stage 2: Define the problem Stage 3: Identify your goals Stage 6: Evaluate the choice/solution
True/False: According to DeVito, effective listening include both nonjudgemental and critical responses
True
True/Flase: Display rules are cultural rules that govern which nonverbal behaviors are appropriate and which are inappropriate in a public setting
True
Allness
a communication fallacy that assumes that you can know all there is to know about someone or why they did what they did
Dialogue
a conversation in which there is genuine two-way interaction
Monologue
a conversation where one person speaks and the other listens
Verbal Aggressiveness
a method of winning an argument by inflicting psychological pain, by attacking the other person's self-concept
Nonnegotiation
a type of avoidance where you refuse to discuss the conflict or listen to the other person's arugments
Backchanneling
a type of cue that is used to communicate various types of information back to the speaker without assuming the role of speaker
Which of the following is not a function of nonverbal communication? a. to avoid expressing emotions b. to help manage impressions c. to help form relationships d. to integrate with and comment on verbal messages
a. to avoid expressing emotions
Which of these are not a function of active listening? a. to check understanding b. to make an evaluation about the speaker's perspective c. to stimulate the speaker to explore feelings d. to acknowledge the speaker's feelings
b. to make an evaluation about the speaker's perspective
Assertive messages
behaviors that enable you to act in your own best interest without denying or infringing on the rights of others
Emblems
body gestures that directly translate into words or phrases
Olfactory communication
communication through smell
There are 3 types of risk when self-disclosing. Which of the following is not one of the 3 risks according to DeVito? a. Personal Risk b. Professional Risk c. Relational Risk d. Physiological Risk
d. Physiological Risk
Geoffery Leech identified 6 Maxims that seem to encompass what people commonly think of as conversational politeness. The Maxim of Generosity is one the 6 Maxims of Politeness. Which of the following is not one of the other Maxims of Politeness? a. Maxim of sympathy b. Maxim of tact c. Maxim of modesty d. Maxim of Approbation e. These are all Maxims of Politeness
e. These are all Maxims of Politeness
Illustrators
gestures that enhance the verbal messages they accompany
Regulators
gestures that monitor, control, coordinate, or maintain the speaking of another individual
Collaborating conflict style
ideally, this enables each person's needs to be met, making it an "I Win, You Win" situation
Accommodating conflict style
in ones quest to maintain harmony, they sacrifice their own needs for the needs of the other person. It is the "I Lose, You Win" philosophy
Competitive conflict style
involves great concern for your own needs and desires, and little for those of others. It is the "I Win, You Lose" philosophy
"Gunnysacking"
involves storing up grievances and then unloading them on the other person
Affect displays
movements of the body, face, as well as hands that communicate emotions
Argumentativeness
refers to ones willingness to argue for a point of view-- ones tendency to speak their minds on significant issues
Truth bias
the assumption that people are telling the truth. This is especially strong in long-term relationships where it is simply expected that each person tells the truth
Turn-taking
the defining feature of a conversation, where the speaker and listener exchange roles throughout the interaction
Kinesics
the study of communication through body movements and gestures
Oculesics
the study of communication via eyes (like the duration, direction, and the quality of eye movements)
Haptics
the study of how touch has different meanings
Proximics
the study of the ways we use space to communicate
Indiscrimination
this is a form of stereotyping that fails to see the unique differences among people or things covered by the same label
Intensional orientation
this refers to the tendency to view people, objects, and events in terms of how they're talked about or labeled rather than in terms of how they actually exist
Static evaluation
we engage in this when we retain an evaluation of a person despite the inevitable changes in the person