1 / 45

Communication Strategies & Conversational Styles Chapter 7

Communication Strategies & Conversational Styles Chapter 7. Perry C. Hanavan, Au.D. Belonging, Independence, Mastery, Generosity.

monai
Télécharger la présentation

Communication Strategies & Conversational Styles Chapter 7

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Communication Strategies & Conversational StylesChapter 7 Perry C. Hanavan, Au.D.

  2. Belonging, Independence, Mastery, Generosity • “For successful conversation between any two people, there must be mutual interest, cooperation, and sensitivity. For successful conversation between a normal-hearing person and a hearing impaired partner, the same basic requirements exist. Greater time, effort, and awareness may be required, however, to reach the same level of understanding.” NP Erber, 1993, p 109

  3. Communication Strategy • A course of action taken to enhance communication • facilitate • repair

  4. Communication Training • Instruction provided to a person with a hearing loss to maximize his or her communication potential

  5. Conversation • Sharing ideas • Relating experiences • Telling stories • Expressing needs • Instructing • Influencing • Create meaning • Build understanding • Establishing intimacy

  6. Conversational Rules • Implicit rules guide the conduct of participants in a conversation • Typically cultural established conventions

  7. Rules of Conversation • Agree to share one another’s interests • Ensure all share in talking • Participate in topic • Take turns talking in organized fashion • Try to be relevant to topic discussion • Not too verbose…succinct messages Dr. Sam Trychin

  8. Hearing Loss Characteristics • Disrupted turn taking • Modified speaking and listening style • Modified turn taking style • Inappropriate topic shifts • Less rich content • Superficial content • Frequent clarification • Violation of implicit social rules…speech too loud • Disrupted grounding

  9. Question • Select the 2 classes of strategies in communication: • Belonging • Facilitative • Mastery • Repair

  10. Facilitative instructing, structuring Repair specific tactics Classes of Strategies

  11. Reception of Messages Talker Message Environment Listener

  12. Facilitative Strategies • Strategies that influence the talker • instructional strategies • the listener asks the talker (communication partner) to change the delivery of the message (assertive) • slow down • it is difficult to lipread when you cover your mouth • could you face me

  13. Facilitative Strategies • Strategies that influence the message • Message-tailoring strategies • phrasing remarks to constrain a response of a speaker • Did you go fishing or boating? • Are you afraid of snakes? • Metacognition – considering in one’s mind how to say something • Acknowledgment gesture – listener providing feedback to communication partner via head nod or shake

  14. Facilitative Strategies • Strategies that influence the environment • Constructive strategies • tactic designed to optimize the listening environment for communication • Let’s go into the living room to talk • Let’s sit where it is more quiet • Let’s step over here where there is more light • Moving closer to speaker • Avoiding rooms with reverberation • Avoiding places with visual distractions

  15. Facilitative Strategy • Strategies that influence reception (listener) • Adaptive strategies • methods of counteracting maladaptive behaviors that stem from hearing loss • relax • taking a deep breath

  16. Facilitative Strategy • Strategies that influence reception (listener) • Attending strategies • methods of counteracting maladaptive behaviors that stem from hearing loss • watch the speaker’s lips • focus on the speaker

  17. Facilitative Strategy • Strategies that influence reception (listener) • Anticipatory strategies • methods of preparing for a communication interaction • observant of situation clues • makes predictions about message • predicts speakers style

  18. Talker Message Environment Listener Instructional Strategy Tailoring Message Acknowledge-ment Strategy Constructive Strategy Adaptive Attending Anticipatory Strategy Facilitative Strategies

  19. Instructional Strategies Worksheet (Talker) • ______________________________ • ______________________________ • ______________________________ • ______________________________ • ______________________________ • ______________________________ • ______________________________ • ______________________________ • ______________________________

  20. Tailoring (Message) Strategy • ________________________________ • ________________________________ • ________________________________ • ________________________________ • ________________________________ • ________________________________ • ________________________________ • ________________________________ • ________________________________

  21. Constructive Strategies (Environment) • _______________________________ • _______________________________ • _______________________________ • _______________________________ • _______________________________ • _______________________________ • _______________________________ • _______________________________ • _______________________________

  22. Adaptive, Attending, Anticipatory Strategies (Listener) • __________________________________ • __________________________________ • __________________________________ • __________________________________ • __________________________________ • __________________________________ • __________________________________ • __________________________________ • __________________________________

  23. Repair Strategies • Communication breakdown • when one communication partner speaks a message and the communication partner does not recognize the message

  24. Detecting Communication Breakdown Choose Course of Action Use Repair Strategy Disregard Utterance Bluff

  25. Repair Strategies • Receptive repair strategy • tactic used by the listener (with hearing loss) when the message presented by a communication partner is not understood • Expressive repair strategy • strategy used to rectify a communication breakdown that occurs because the person with a hearing loss (speaker) produces an unintelligible utterance

  26. Specific Receptive Repair • repeat all or part of message • indicate the topic of conversation • rephrase message • elaborate message • simplify the message • confirm the message • write • fingerspell

  27. Question Not an example of a non-specific strategy: • Huh • What • Pardon • I got the first part of the sentence

  28. Nonspecific Expressive Repair • What • Huh • Pardon

  29. Six Basic Principles of Conversational Repair • ONE: Use of requests for clarification improves understanding between conversational partners (e.g., Tye-Murray, Purdy, Woodworth & Tyler, 1990). • TWO: Specific training in the use of repair strategies is effective (Tye-Murray, 1991). • THREE: Some requests for clarification are considered specific, or contingent (e.g., requests for confirmation) whereas others (e.g., neutral queries) are considered non-specific, or non-contingent (see, Table 2). • FOUR: Contingent requests for clarification are more likely to sustain interaction over multiple turns than non-contingent requests (Kenworthy, 1984). • FIVE: Strategies that elicit rephrasing by the speaker are more likely to repair the communication breakdown (Gagne & Wyllie, 1989). • SIX: Requests for specific clarification are viewed more favorably by the speaker than non-specific requests (Gagne, Stelmacovich, & Yovetich, 1991; Caissie & Gibson, 1997). In other words, both interactants communicate more effectively when more specific, or contingent, repair strategies are employed. (Kenworthy)

  30. Patronizing Communication Style with Older Persons • Talking only about restricted topics • Using directive speech • Using childlike expressions • Speaking very slowly • Exaggerating nonverbal signals • Paraphrasing frequently • Decreasing grammatical complexity • Talking about fewer topics

  31. Bilingual Children and Repair Most, T. (2003). The use of repair strategies: bilingual deaf children using sign language and spoken language. American Annals of the Deaf. 148:4, 308-314. When using sign, greater diversity in repair strategies were used.

  32. You Say, I Say Adjacency pairs: linked speaking turns Hearing Loss PartnerComm. Partner • nonspecific repair strategy- • request for information repair strategy- • confirmation repair strategy- • message repetition response • provide information response • feedback response

  33. Topic Shading • When a new emphasis is derived from an ongoing topic of conversation such that the topic remains the same but the relevant details shift • Jan: (has HL) I’m going to Phoenix today. • Rob: Are you flying or driving? • Jan: Flying • Rob: I need to get my tickets for Orlando. • Jan: What?

  34. Research • 67% at a family gathering, a party or social meeting likely to pretend (bluffing) to be understanding while keeping quiet • Most individuals ask communication partner to repeat a message verbatim following a communication breakdown rather than other repair strategy • Message restructuring rather than repeating improves understanding • Non-specific repair strategies (huh, what?) beneficial in some contexts

  35. Likely to Use Repair Strategies • Those using repair strategies less likely to • feel frustrated with speechreading skills • Avoid social interactions • Those less likely to use repair strategies tend to • Have attained lower levels of educations • Have experienced a sudden hearing loss • Received minimal benefit from their listening devices

  36. Mentioning a Hearing Loss • Can be beneficial • May result in conversation center on hearing loss • May be factor why persons with hearing loss reluctant to reveal hearing loss

  37. Conversational Styles • Passive conversational style • withdraws, bluffs, avoids • Aggressive conversational style • hostile, belligerent, bad attitude • blames others • denies, dominates, interrupts • Assertive conversational style • takes responsibility for managing communication • respects the rights of their communication partner • openly and honestly expresses needs and emotions

  38. Communication Style

  39. Communication Style

  40. Communication Behaviors • Interactive • assertive communication style • Non-Interactive • passive communication style • Dominating • aggressive communication style Dr. Sam Trychin

  41. Assertiveness Training • Key Elements: • Ways to indicate a hearing loss • Means to request a change in the communication environment • Ways to suggest how the communication partner can facilitate the patient’s understanding of spoken messages • Means to provide positive feedback to communication partners to reinforce desirable behaviors

  42. Assertiveness Training • STEP ONE: Realize where changes are needed and believe in your rights • STEP TWO: Figure out appropriate ways of asserting yourself in each specific situation that concerns you • Example: • Situation: You have just been introduced to someone, but it is very noisy and it is difficult to understand their speech. • Response: As soon as appropriate, ask, “It is very noisy and I am having difficulty hearing you, can we move where it is quiet? • Poor responses: Let it go and try to avoid situations and say huh and what. An aggressive response would be to blame him/her, "You don't speak up very well, you seem to mumble?"

  43. Assertiveness Training • Increase the cooperation between person with hearing loss and communication partner • Ways to indicate a hearing loss “I have a hearing loss and may not understand.” • Ways to request a change in the communication partner “The lights are dim. Could we move to another room.” • Ways to suggest how the communication partner can facilitate understanding of spoken message “It helps me understand if I can see your face.” • Ways to provide positive feedback to communication partners to reinforce desirable behaviors • “I appreciate your talking to me face to face.”

  44. Examples • Dr. Sam Trychin • HearWell • Dr. Mark Ross (Assertiveness)

  45. Assignment • During the next two days: 1. analyze your communication behavior 2. analyze 2 people you communicate with daily and determine their style 3. select the communication style you prefer others use 4. Read: A Conversational Approach to Aural Rehabilitation

More Related