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Introducing Your totem goes here Your name goes here Your Position goes here Communication Bringing the Vision to Life Learning Objectives • Relate the experience of the Communication Traps and Zulu Toss Games to basic principles of communication • Understand how listening can be an important part of communication. • Develop strategies to overcome barriers to communication. • Practice some skills of effective instruction. Communication Traps Game Communication Traps • • • • • Challenges Simulate Trust Barriers Communication Examples of Forms of Communication • Gilwell Song • Symbol on B-Ps gravestone: (I have gone home.) • BSA uniforms and patches • Wood Badge beads and icon • Gilwell Gazette, including agenda of the day What Makes Communication Effective? • Message is important. • Message presents a vision. • Speaker’s established authority. • Believe your own message – and act like it • Get to the point – no rambling. • Personal skills (eg, volume and tone of voice, body language, genuine enthusiasm) are important. Exercise • Philmont Expedition 7-30 (8 Scouts, 2 adults) • Bear sighting – 2 Scouts mauled • Tooth of Time Camp • One hour ago • We need assistance, now! • Need: ambulance, medics, first-aid supplies; really big bear trap could be useful Does it grab your attention and why? Strengths/weaknesses? Blueprint for Communication Per Aristotle >2,000 years ago . . . • Sender • Message If any one is actually or functionally missing, there is no communication! • Receiver Applies to ALL forms of communication, eg, spoken, written, music, film, pantomime. Zulu Toss Game – how applies to “communication?” Effective Listening as a Communication Tool • Receivers pay attention and seek the message; provide feedback • Senders provide what receivers need in a manner that engages their minds; pay attention to receivers spoken and unspoken feedback • Good communication depends on good listening – it’s a two-way street! Engaging the Audience “I want this presentation to be a success. If it’s not working for you, let me know, and we’ll try something different to make it better.” • Has anyone ever said that to you? How does it make you feel as a listener? • Do speakers seem too “locked in” to their presentations, regardless of the situation? Engaging the Audience • “What do you want?” How often do speakers really ask this most important question in communication, rather than “What do I want to tell you?” • How often do we think about this with regard to youth. • If we do not know what others want/need, there is little chance that we can communicate effectively. Barriers to Effective Communication Can Be . . . • • • • • • • lack of common ground lack of sincerity lack of authority lack of clarity poor presentation skills lack of receptiveness environment Ways to Assure Good Communication Are . . . • common ground • sincerity (care about message / receiver) • authority (know what you’re talking about) • clarity (concise, to the point, no “spin”) • good presentation skills • receptiveness (you and them) • environment Communication in a Digital Era . . . • How many of you use e-mail? • How many send text messages? • How many blog or read blogs? • Who has Facebook account? • Who uses Twitter? Important Rules • The responsibility for anything you write is yours alone. • Be Authentic • Consider Your Audience • Exercise Good Judgment • Respect Copyrights and Fair Use • Protect Personal Information Good Teaching Requires Good Communication • Teaching of skills REQUIRES effective communication. • Discuss the process for teaching you how to tie a woggle? – what techniques? – strengths? – room for improvement? Good Teaching • Make it hands-on (Everyone had a cord and was actively involved). • Set an achievable, understandable goal (There was a finished woggle to observe). • Use a multimedia approach—handouts, visuals, etc (You had a handout with diagrams). • Demonstrate the process (Leader demonstrated). • Let participants try it (You did!). • Give support and praise (Did I? Did your patrol mates?). The Teaching ™ EDGE • E xplain how to do the skill. • D emonstrate how to do the skill. • G uide others as they do the skill (feedback). • E nable others to use the skill: – time – materials – opportunity Communication . . . • • • • • is a tool of leadership is essential to effective teams happens in the “common ground” should be clear and concise happens when sender and receiver consider each other • takes many forms, eg, written, spoken, pictorial, non-spoken aural • requires the gift of feedback! Great Leaders Are Great Communicators! So, did we . . . • Relate the experience of the Communication Traps and Zulu Toss Games to basic principles of communication? (YOU BET!) • Understand how listening can be an important part of communication? (YOU BET!) • Develop strategies to overcome barriers to communication? (YOU BET!) • Practice some skills of effective instruction? (YOU BET!) Thank You! Your totem goes here