The document discusses key aspects of ethical communication. It emphasizes the importance of active and respectful listening, avoiding prejudice, showing commitment and genuine interest, and respecting sociocultural beliefs and practices of others. It provides details on active listening, how past experiences and prejudice can affect communication, demonstrating commitment, and considering cultural differences to communicate respectfully.
The document discusses key aspects of ethical communication. It emphasizes the importance of active and respectful listening, avoiding prejudice, showing commitment and genuine interest, and respecting sociocultural beliefs and practices of others. It provides details on active listening, how past experiences and prejudice can affect communication, demonstrating commitment, and considering cultural differences to communicate respectfully.
The document discusses key aspects of ethical communication. It emphasizes the importance of active and respectful listening, avoiding prejudice, showing commitment and genuine interest, and respecting sociocultural beliefs and practices of others. It provides details on active listening, how past experiences and prejudice can affect communication, demonstrating commitment, and considering cultural differences to communicate respectfully.
The document discusses key aspects of ethical communication. It emphasizes the importance of active and respectful listening, avoiding prejudice, showing commitment and genuine interest, and respecting sociocultural beliefs and practices of others. It provides details on active listening, how past experiences and prejudice can affect communication, demonstrating commitment, and considering cultural differences to communicate respectfully.
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In communicative situations, ethics is best
observed by people who manifest the following:
1.Active and respectful listening (face-to-face communication) 2.Avoiding prejudice 3.Showing commitment and genuine interest 4.Respecting socio-cultural beliefs and practices of others 1. ACTIVE AND RESPECTFUL LISTENING “You cannot truly listen to anyone and do anything else at the same time.”- M. Scott Peck
Active listening allows a person to help others communicate better
Provides opportunities to be more productive at work, establish deeper relationships and increase efficiency in both study and work Helps avoid misinterpretation and misunderstanding, especially when communicating with people having different belief system, culture and social background The importance of self-awareness: A requisite for ethical communication is being aware of one’s behaviour and habits during the communicative process in different circumstances. While listening, the following must be considered: 1. Body language: Are you supposed to stand or do you have to remain seated? Are you fidgeting or relaxed? 2. Eye contact: Do you make direct eye contact and keep it? If yes, are you supposed to do that? Do you tend to look away, look down or turn your attention to your environment? 3. Sense of the message: Can you at least rephrase the message being told to you? Or does your mind wander off to another topic or to another person? 4. Turn-taking: Are you actually listening, or just waiting for the other person to stop talking so you can have your turn? The importance of active listening: Being an active listener requires involvement in the conversation or communicative situation. It demands a conscious effort to be attentive to the words and more importantly, to the sense of the message being relayed. This necessitates concentration, which means all distractions during communication must be ignored, as well as practice, which means it has to be done in every communicative situation until it becomes habitual. Five Key Aspects of Active Listening 1. Pay close attention 2. Show physical manifestations that you are listening 3. Check for understanding 4. Don’t interrupt 5. Respond appropriately 2. HOW PAST EXPERIENCE AND PREJUDICE AFFECT COMMUNICATION
Past experiences inevitably affect people’s
communication styles in the future. When their audience responded positively to their message, chances of them repeating the same style are relatively high. However, when they were turned down or given negative feedback, this will definitely influence how they deliver the message next time. Sample Past Experiences 1. Your parents reacted negatively when you opened up about your interest for an opposite sex. 2. Your colleague has forgotten some very important information many times in the past. 3. A subordinate in a group that you lead disagreed twice in your suggestions. 4. Your professor ignored your inputs last session. 5. Your teammates reacted positively to your strategy.
What will be the effects in communication on the given experiences?
Prejudice, on the other hand, when people take their past experiences and make certain assumptions that the same experience will happen with the same people, given the same context. Prejudices may be attributed to culture or personal preference.
It must be noted that effective communicators should
avoid prejudice because it influences the communication process even before it begins. 1. Old teachers in school are … 2. The athletes and performers in school usually … 3. The lowest form of job in the world is … 4. Working with homosexuals usually … 5. Disabled people in the workplace should … 6. Muslims, Buddhists, or people with other beliefs are … 3. SHOWING COMMITMENT AND GENUINE INTEREST A key component of ethical communication is showing commitment in the communicative situation. Being committed means giving sufficient time and resources to any discussion or conversation, and being open about any issue that may arise. Commitment also involves volunteering important information, even if it puts a person’s own short term interests at risk, as long as it is for the benefit of the majority especially in the long run. Encouraging a communicative environment of trust can go a long way in promoting ethical communication in any academic or business setting. THE BELLY BUTTO PSYCHE/THE BELLY BUTTON RULE believed to communicate true interest while engaging in face-to-face communication The origin of this rule dates back to the 1930s and since then, numerous scientists and body language experts have honed the theory Most notably, Dr. Albert Mehrabian, professor of Psychology at UCLA said that the belly button rule is the most important indicator of reading a person’s intention The belly button rule means the direction of a person’s navel reflects his/her true interest 4. RESPECTING SOCIO-CULTURAL BELIEFS AND PRACTICES OF OTHERS
The concept of globalization is not new, but people
somehow fail to realize that this is not confined to technology or bridging the world and making it a virtual community. Globalization also entails changing the way people communicate to others, especially with different norms, cultures and belief system.