1 / 16

Communication Between the Sexes

Communication Between the Sexes. http://cnettv.cnet.com/how-men-women-communicate/9742-1_53-50009166.html. Language. Very important in socializing Words are symbols in which we give meanings They do three things 1. Define 2. Describe 3. Evaluate. Language.

Télécharger la présentation

Communication Between the Sexes

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 Between the Sexes

  2. http://cnettv.cnet.com/how-men-women-communicate/9742-1_53-50009166.htmlhttp://cnettv.cnet.com/how-men-women-communicate/9742-1_53-50009166.html

  3. Language • Very important in socializing • Words are symbols in which we give meanings • They do three things • 1. Define • 2. Describe • 3. Evaluate

  4. Language • Draw the most typical person w/typical name • Language affects women in 3 ways • 1.) Ignores Them • “Generic he” (Ex: caveman) • There is no gender neutral pronoun (only he, she, & it)

  5. Language • Only 25% named a female so for the most of us, the “typical” is male • 2.) Defines women • Female is defined by relationship she has w/a male • Surnames link to father or husband

  6. Language • For a female, a name should be a non issue • Feminists argue changing your name is a loss of identity • Religion of child follows mother so why doesn’t the name? • Historically, wife and children were considered property

  7. Language • 3.) Deprecates Women - puts them down • Names of men & women who get around (player vs. slut) • We downplay things that are female such as the male vs. female form of a word • Female usually ends in “ess”

  8. Language • Example: Governor v. “governess” • Study: professors were sent journal articles to rate • Were identical except for the name of the author • Females were rated less than if males’ name was on it • Females often use pen names

  9. Patterns of Communication • Words hurt and heal • How would you feel if you were constantly criticized? • Men solve (find solutions) and women process (talk about it) and then solve • Females are better at expressing emotion & feelings non-verbally

  10. Non Verbal Skills • Social eye contact - how much eye contact you make in a social situation • Females look away • People who look away seem insecure

  11. Non Verbal Skills • 1 male and female volunteer to sit in chair • Hold hands • Who is leading who? • Personal Space - women take up less • Body position - females sit in more restrictive posture

  12. Non Verbal Skills • (legs crossed) while males sit with legs out • Space is status (ex: bigger office, bigger house)

  13. Verbal Skills • Masculine - direct or powerful • Feminine - indirect, powerless (seem weak or less convincing) • Doesn’t matter if a person is a male or female • 4 examples of Feminine Speech Patterns

  14. Feminine Speech Patterns • 1. Tag Questions - implies passivity • It’s asking for validation so shows doubt and weakness • EX: “That was a good movie, wasn’t it?” or “Call me back, all right?”

  15. Feminine Speech Patterns • 2. Qualifiers - words or phrases that soften a statement • EX: “This may be a stupid question but…” • 3. Longer request phrases • EX: Men to secretary - “Photocopy this for me” while Woman would say to secretary

  16. Feminine Speech Patterns • “When you have the time could you please photocopy this for me” • 4. Fillers - suggest discomfort with a topic • EX: “Ums, ers, ya know, like” • Men more often interrupt women than vice versa

More Related