Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Communicating Differently


Communication is so complex!  Everyday I find myself in situations where I am communicating differently with different groups of people.  At home I have more of a low-language, but even within in my own family I communicate differently.  I communicate with my grandmother differently than I communicate with my sister.  With my grandmother I communicate with language I would consider as respectful.  I answer with yes ma’am or no ma’am and my voice would be softer.  With my sister I talk loud and use lots of slang (sometimes words that we’ve created ourselves during childhood).  When I am at work I communicate with my supervisor differently than I communicate with my co-workers.  My communication with my co-workers is not as laid back as my communication with my family; however, it’s doesn’t always have a professional tone.  Communication with my co-workers typically falls in the middle of low-language and high language.  Communication with my supervisor is more professional and I would use high language.

Based on what I have learned this week, I believe working on understanding my own nonverbal communication, understanding others nonverbal communication, and respecting the ideas of others  will help me be more effective. 
 

2 comments:

  1. Dalhia,
    I agree with your views of communication styles. We have different styles based off of our contexts and relationships with others. When I used to teach sixth grade effective communication styles, I often would use these exact examples to teach formal vs. informal styles--- so they would understand the many uses and differences communication has....thanks for sharing!

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  2. Dahlia,
    Thank you for consciously brining attention to how we adapt both our low language to meet the needs of our communicative partners. This is critical to remember when we are supporting children and families.

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