Good communication skills will
strengthen families, communities, and nations. Two of the most important skills
involve speaking clearly and listening carefully. Parents will do their
children a huge favor if they will teach them to say what they mean and mean
what they say, to listen in order to understand, and to discern nonverbal
signals.
Communication involves the words we
say as well as our nonverbal behavior. We communicate even when we are silent.
Our silence may communicate anger or reverence depending on the situation. Our
body posture shows whether we want further interaction or none. If we intentionally
turn our back on someone or pick up our cell phone, we are communicating that
the interface is over. We communicate respect or lack of respect by the
clothing we wear. Our facial expressions and eye behavior tell a story even if
we are silent. We can communicate love or hate by a simple touch.
Good communication involves both a
sender and a receiver. The sender encodes their message in words and nonverbal
means and sends it forth. They hear what they have said and may rephrase their
words or apologize for the tone. The receiver receives the message, decodes it while
filtering it through their own ideas and feelings, and sends forth their own
encoded the message, which the sender then decodes by filtering with their
ideas and feelings.
There are different types of
learners, and social scientists have identified the following five poor listening
styles: (1) The Faker – They pretend to be listening and might smile or nod,
but they do not hear. (2) The Dependent Listener – They are more concerned with
making a good impression on the speaker than actually hearing what they are
saying. (3) The Interrupter – They never give the speaker an opportunity to
finish their statement. (4) The Self-Conscious Listener – They are more
concerned with their own status than actually listening for understanding. (5)
The Intellectual Listener – They listen to the words without paying attention
to the nonverbal cues or listening for the feelings (Lauer and Lauer, Marriage & Family – The Quest for
Intimacy, [2018], 199-200).
Lauer and Lauer teach the following good
listening skills: (1) Listen actively – look at the person and concentrate on
what they are saying. (2) Resist distractions. (3) Keep your emotions under
control and allow the speaker to finish. (4) Ask questions and rephrase to
clarify the meaning (2018, 201).
Since the family is the core unit of
society, we should practice good communication skills within our homes. Family
relationships can be damaged or strengthened by the words we say as well as by
our nonverbal behavior. By learning better communication skills we can
strengthen our families, get along better with our neighbors, and strengthen
our communities and nations.
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