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BARRIERS TO COMMUNICATION. Facial Expressions Convey Emotions © Prentice Hall, 200211-2.

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Presentation on theme: "BARRIERS TO COMMUNICATION. Facial Expressions Convey Emotions © Prentice Hall, 200211-2."— Presentation transcript:

1 BARRIERS TO COMMUNICATION

2 Facial Expressions Convey Emotions © Prentice Hall, 200211-2

3 Barriers to Effective Communication Filtering Selective Perception Emotions Language Gender

4 Barriers to Effective Communication Filtering – information reduction by sender Selective perception – what you attend to Judging message Not listening with understanding (Covey) Information overload Gender -Do men and women communicate in the same way? The answer is no. And the differences between men and women may lead to significant misunderstandings and misperceptions

5 Barriers to Effective Communication Distractions Differences in background Poor timing Emotions Personality differences Prejudice Differences in knowledge and assumptions Stress

6 Biases Affecting Communication First impressions Stereotypes Just-like-me Halo or pitchfork effect Contrast effect Leniency/severity effect

7 Barriers to Effective Communication (cont.)  Defensiveness - behaviors that result from feeling threatened hinders effective communication  Language - meaning of words differs among people with diverse backgrounds jargon - specialized terminology used by a group even those who speak the same language may use it quite differently  National Culture - cultural values affect the way people communicate individualism versus collectivism © Prentice Hall, 200211-7

8 Overcoming Barriers A. Solicit feedback – request information of message, restate in own words, performance appraisals, look for nonverbal cues B. Simplified language C. Active listening – including empathy

9 Overcoming the Barriers to Effective Interpersonal Communication  Use Feedback - ask a set of questions about a message to determine whether it was understood as intended ask receivers to restate the message in their own words  Simplify Language - tailor the language to the audience for whom the message is intended jargon can facilitate understanding when used in appropriate groups  Listen Actively - listen for full meaning restrain premature judgments or interpretations enhanced by developing empathy with sender © Prentice Hall, 200211-9

10 Overcoming Communication Barriers (cont.)  Constrain Emotions - emotions severely cloud and distort the transference of meaning refrain from communicating until one regains her/his composure  Watch Nonverbal Cues - actions should be aligned with words nonverbal message should reinforce verbal message © Prentice Hall, 200211-10


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