1 / 13

Unit 5: Micro-Messages

Building Community Trust: Improving Cross-Cultural Communication in the Criminal Justice System. Unit 5: Micro-Messages. Prepared by. Session Objectives:. Define and identify micro-messages, micro-affirmations, and micro-inequities.

tod
Télécharger la présentation

Unit 5: Micro-Messages

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. Building Community Trust:Improving Cross-Cultural Communication in the Criminal Justice System Unit 5: Micro-Messages Prepared by

  2. Session Objectives: • Define and identify micro-messages, micro-affirmations, and micro-inequities. • Demonstrate technique for converting micro-inequities into micro-affirmations. • Analyze impact of micro-inequities on office culture or community perceptions regarding the fairness, integrity and reliability of the criminal justice system.

  3. Small, sometimes unspoken, and often unconscious messages that are constantly sent and received. They can have a powerful impact on our interactions with others. Micro-Affirmations Micro-Inequities Micro-messages

  4. Micro-Affirmations Convey inclusion, respect, trust and genuine willingness to see others succeed. May lead to a more productive and efficient work environment where all members feel valued and enjoy work.

  5. For example: Manager greets every member of trial team in the morning by name. Prosecutor greets victim by name at court hearing. Defender greets client and client family members by name.

  6. Micro-Inequities Micro-inequitiesare the ways in which individuals are either singled out, overlooked, ignored or otherwise discounted based on an unchangeable characteristic such as race or gender. • Usually take form in a slight difference of language, gesture, treatment or even tone of voice. • Are often subconsciously given but can have a huge impact on a work environment or social structure. • May lead to the perception of discrimination or harassment. • Are frequently unrecognized by perpetrator.

  7. For example: Rolling eyes or sighing when someone considered “different” is speaking. Manager walks down hall and doesn’t acknowledge coworkers or subordinates. Not paying attention in meetings when a certain person is sharing an idea.

  8. For example: Staff person (usually “of difference”) shares an idea and no one responds. Same idea is repeated by someone else and everyone acknowledges. Exclusion of environmental factors that represent a certain group (e.g., decorations, literature, artwork).

  9. Some individuals receive micro-affirmations but others do not. Gesture of affection/ praise for one colleague but not another. Supervisor chats frequently with one employee but not another. Colleague invites some office mates to lunch but not others. For example:

  10. Small but powerful.

  11. Affirmations can: Boost morale Create supportive, productive atmosphere Consistency. Inequities: Erode self-esteem and ability to perform. Create feelings of exclusion.

  12. Strategies: • Intentionality • Infuse micro-affirmations into daily behavior • Role model • Practice

More Related