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1. COMMUNICATION SKILLS INTRODUCTION The progression of transmission and interchange of ideas, facts, feelings or actions is known as “Process of Communication”. It includes the giving; getting and sharing of information with others may be oral or written. THE PROCESS OF COMMUNICATION The word communication has its root in the Latin word “communicare”, which means “to share”. In brief communication can be defined as the exchange of information, ideas, and knowledge between sender and receiver through an accepted code of symbols. THE COMMUNICATION CYCLE The following diagram shows the process taking place during effective communication: Sender Message Response Encoded decoded Sent Receiver Channel message Received Message message Feedback The sender encodes the message and sends it through a channel. This channel is nothing but the language used. The receiver receives the message, decodes it, and acts on it. If the message received is the same as the message sent, there will be a response; if not, there has been a breakdown of communication. This may happen because of “noise”. The transmission of the receiver’s response to the sender is called feedback. Feedback is the indicator of effective communication. Communication always 1 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 1 of 23 takes place in a well defined set-up. This is called the communication environment. A classroom is the communication environment when a teacher delivers lectures to students. In brief, the essentials of effective communication are: 1. A common communication environment 2. Cooperation between the sender and receiver 3. Selection of correct channel 4. Correct encoding and decoding of the message 5. Receipt of the desired response and feedback Noise When you communicate, you desire that the message received should be the same as the message sent. But it is not always the same. Sometimes this is due to the presence of noise. Noise is defined as any unplanned interference in the communication environment, which caused barrier in the transmission of the message. Noise can be classified as channel and semantic. Channel noise is any interference in the mechanics of the medium used to send a message. Semantic noise is generated internally, resulting from errors in the message itself. GENERAL AND TECHNICAL COMMUNICATION Communication is part and parcel of one’s everyday life whether it is general or technical. Characteristics of general and technical communication are as under: General Communication 1. Contains a general Message 2. Informal in style and approach 2 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 2 of 23 3. No set pattern of communication 4. Mostly oral 5. Not always for a specific audience 6. Doesn’t involve the use of technical vocabulary or graphics Technical Communication 1. Contains a technical Message 2. Mostly formal 3. Follows a set pattern 4. Both oral and written 5. Always for specific audience 6. Frequently involves jargon, graphics etc. 3 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 3 of 23 LANGUAGE AS A TOOL OF COMMUNICATION Effective communication is made possible with the help of language. It requires reasonably good command over language. Language employs a combination of words to communicate ideas in a meaningful way. By changing the word order in a sentence, you can change its meaning, and even make it meaningless. Characteristics of Language According to the ideas put forward by eminent linguists: Language is Artificial Language is created by people. It does not exist in isolation or outside the minds of people. It is created by human as they need it. Every symbol is attached to a particular thought or thing, called a referent which is created by humans. That’s why language is Artificial. Language is Restricted When we translate our thoughts into language, some meaning is lost in the process. No symbol or word can transmit the exact reality. That is one reason you sometimes find yourself saying that you cannot find words to express your feelings. This is because language is restricted. In other words, it has limitations. Language is Abstract Language is abstract as it represents generalized ideas of things or thoughts. The idea which the word represents is different every time. A ‘table’ can be of different shapes and sizes, and still be called a table. This happens because meanings get associated with symbols and users keep expanding the range of meanings. Language is Arbitrary There is no direct relationship between a word and the idea or object it represents because language keeps on changing to include new concepts and words can attach a number of specific and arbitrary meanings. 4 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 4 of 23 Language is Creative Language is very creative and it can create wonder. Every year number of words can be added; taken from different languages through the following processes: 1. Borrowing - taking over words from other languages like ‘alcohol’ form ‘Arabic’ 2. Constructing Portmanteau Words – words made by combining the sound and meaning of two different words (netiquette = net + etiquette) 3. Back Formation – where a word of one type, usually a noun is reduced to a word of another type, usually a verb like ‘opt’ from ‘option’ Language is Repetitive Any language has characteristic of repetition and redundancy. This may make or spoil the communication. Moreover excessive and unnecessary repetition may lead to verbosity or wordiness without contributing to the meaning. Language is Recursive Recursiveness is the characteristic of language which enables you to generate any number of sentences using the same basic grammatical templates. It also allows you to express any idea, thought or feeling using the same finite vocabulary. 5 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 5 of 23 LEVELS OF COMMUNICATION Human communication takes place at various levels 1. Extrapersonal Communication It is a communication between human beings and non human entities. This requires perfect coordination between sender and receiver. When your pet dog comes to you wagging its tail; as soon as you return home is an example of extrapersonal communication. 2. Intrapersonal Communication This takes place within the individual. For example when you “feel hot”, the information is sent to brain and you may decide to “turn on the cooler”, responding the instructions sent from brain to hand. Here relevant organ is sender, electrochemical impulse is message and brain is receiver. Next the brain assumes the role of sender and sends the feedback that you should switch on the cooler. So this process can be termed as intrapersonal communication. 3. Interpersonal Communication It is a sharing of information among people. It includes a few participants who are close to one another. Here many sensory channels are used and immediate feedback can be obtained. Also, the roles of sender and receiver keep alternating. Interpersonal communication can be formal and informal. 4. Organizational Communication Communication in an organization takes place at different levels. Since a large number of employees are involved in several activities, the need to communicate becomes greater in an organization. This communication can further be divided into: Internal – operational External – operational Personal 5. Mass Communication 6 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 6 of 23 There are several mass media such as journals, television, newspapers, internet which mediate such communication to the large audience. Here audience is heterogeneous and anonymous with impersonal approach. This type of communication is more persuasive in nature than any other form of communication and requires greatest care on the part of sender. THE FLOW OF COMMUNICATION The information flows in an organization both formally and informally in various directions. 1. Downward Communication Downward communication flows from a manager down the chain of command. When he informs, instructs, or advises his subordinates, the communication flows in a downward pattern. It is used to convey routine information, new policies or procedures, etc through memos, notices, interactions and so on. 2. Upward Communication When subordinates send reports to their superiors, the communication flows upward. This type of communication keeps managers aware of how employees feel about their jobs, colleagues and organization. Managers rely on upward communication form making certain decisions or solving problems. 3. Lateral or Horizontal Communication This form of communication takes place among peer groups or hierarchically equivalent employees. Such communication is often necessary to facilitate coordination, save time, and bridge the communication gap among various departments. 4. Diagonal or Cross-wise Communication This flows in all directions and cuts across functions and levels in an organization. This process is quick and efficient. When a sales manager communicates directly with VP (production), they set an example of diagonal communication. The 7 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 7 of 23 increased use of emails encourages cross-wise communication. There is no doubt that it is quick and efficient. COMMUNICATION NETWORKS Communication Networks emerge out of combination of vertical and horizontal channels Formal Network Models There are five communication networks that come into play in formal communication networks. 1. The Chain Network represents vertical hierarchy in which communication can flow only upward or downward. 2. The Y Network is at multilevel hierarchy and a combination of horizontal and vertical flow of communication. 3. The wheel network refers to several subordinates reporting to a superior. This is a combination of horizontal and diagonal flow of communication. 4. The circle network allows employees to interact with adjacent members. 5. The all-channel network, which is least structure, enables each employee to communicate freely with others. Informal (grapevine) Network Models Informal network is very active in almost every organization. It can broadly be classified in four patterns. 1. In the pattern of single strand, message is passed from one person to another through single strand. 2. In the gossip network one person passes information to all others. 3. In t0he probability type of network, each person tells others at random. 8 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 8 of 23 4. The cluster refers to that flow of information in which some people tell a selected few of the others. It is most popular pattern of grapevine communication. THE IMPORTANCE OF TECHNICAL COMMUNICATION Technical communication plays very important role in an organization. All the managerial and administrative activities involve different levels and networks of communication. The success of any organization is largely recognized by the quality and quantity of information flowing through its personnel. Technical communication can be divided into two parts: oral and written with due importance. The forms of both are tabulated below: Oral Forms Face to face conversations Meetings Conferences Instructions GD Video Conferences Telephone Conversations Seminars Dictation Presentations Interviews Voice conferences Written Forms Memos Letters Emails Notices Newsletters Research Papers Bulletins Faxes Circulars Reports Proposals In house journals In brief communication enables employees to work together. It is a vehicle through which management performs all its functions. Therefore its importance can never be ignored. Possible Questions What is the process of communication? Explain communication cycle. What is noise? Explain the difference between general and technical communication. Describe language as a tool of communication. What are levels of communication? 9 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 9 of 23 Explain the flow of communication. Explain in brief the communication networks. What is the importance of technical communication? 2. VERBAL AND NON-VERBAL COMMUNICATION INTRODUCTION Communication is effective only if it creates the desired impact on the receiver through verbal and non-verbal mode. But many elements cause hindrances in its effectiveness. What is Noise? Any interference in the message sent and message received leads to the production of “noise”. Noise here does not mean disharmony, but a break in the communication process. The term communication barrier is an expansion of the concept noise. A noise is a break in the communication process. CLASSIFICATION OF BARRIERS Communication barriers can create many gaps in our written and spoken communications. They are: 1. INTRAPERSONAL BARRIERS Individuals are unique because of their idiosyncrasies. This is because of differences in experience, education, value and personality. Each of us interprets the same information in different ways as our thinking varies. Following are the causes lead to these interpersonal barriers: Wrong Assumptions Many barriers branch from wrong assumptions. Wrong assumptions are made because the sender or the receiver does not have adequate knowledge about each other’s background or entertains certain false concept. A skilled 10 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 10 of 23 communicator keeps these issues in mind to prevent them from becoming barriers. Varied Perceptions Varied perceptions lead to much confusion among the sender and receiver because individuals in an organization also perceive situations in different ways. So the best way to overcome this barrier is to step back and take a wider perspective of the issue. Differing Background No two personas have a similar background. Even siblings differ in their genetic inheritance. People vary in terms of their education, culture, language, environment, age, sex, financial status etc. To enhance your communication skills, it is necessary to know the background of your audience. You can accordingly use that information to construct your message. Wrong Inferences Wrong inferences take place when there is a failure in understanding what actually exists and what actually assumed. Inferences are more dramatic than facts, so they give more scope for gossip and rumor to society. So inferences supported by facts are essential for all. Impervious Categories In general, we react positively to information only if it is in consonance with our own views and attitudes. Conversely, when we receive information that does not conform to our personal views, habits and attitudes, or appears unfavorable to us, we tend to react negatively or even disbelieve. So people who are very rigid in their opinions may face problems in communicating effectively. Categorical Thinking People who feel that they “know it all” are called pansophists. This type of thinking exists in people who feel that they know everything about a particular subject, and therefore refuse to accept any further information on 11 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 11 of 23 that topic. This type of thinking can pose a major barrier, leading to a failure in communication. In brief the good communicators should Be non-judgmental Be empathetic Do not assume anything Stick to the subject Listen and above all paraphrase 2. INTERPERSONAL BARRIERS Intrapersonal barriers stem from an individual’s attitudes or habits, whereas interpersonal barriers occur due to the inappropriate transaction of words between two or more people. Interpersonal barriers creep in as a result of the limitations in the communications sills of encoder or decoder, or both. The most common reasons for interpersonal barriers are: Limited Vocabulary An inadequate vocabulary can be a major hindrance in communication. Therefore, one should make constant efforts to increase one’s vocabulary by regularly reading a variety of books and listening to native speakers of the language. Incongruity of verbal and nonverbal messages Misinterpreted non-verbal communication acts as another barrier to effective information gathering. Non verbal communication usually enhances and enlivens verbal communication. Non verbal cues provide a deeper insight into the sender’s message. Physical appearance often serves as one of the most important non-verbal cues. It can be improved by 12 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 12 of 23 Dress according to the occasion Wear neat and clean cloths Choose an appropriate hairstyle Wear clean and polished shoes. Emotional outbursts Emotions are an integral part of our being, whether in business or personal encounters. By sharpening self-awareness, intuition, and empathy, emotions can help in developing an environment highly conducive to good communication. It is important to maintain one’s composure in all kinds of communications. Viewing issues from different perspectives helps develop objectivity and rational thinking, which in turn can eliminate many of the causes of hostility or defensiveness. Communication selectivity If you are the receiver in a communication process, and you pay attention only to a part of the message, you are imposing a barrier known as communication selectivity. You do this because you are interested only in that part of the message which may be of use to you. In such a situation, the sender is not at fault. It is the receiver who breaks the flow of communication. Cultural variations This is one of the main factors in communication failure. To compete successfully in today’s globalized business environment, we must overcome the communication inadequacy arising from different languages and cultures. Poor listening skills A common obstacle to communication is poor listening habits. The various distractions that hinder listening can be emotional disturbances, indifference, aggressiveness, and wandering attention. Listening requires careful attention and accurate decoding of the signals received from the speaker so as to improve listening skills. 13 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 13 of 23 Noise in the channel Noise interferes greatly in the transmission of signals. Noise is any unwanted signal which acts as a hindrance in the flow of communication. It is not necessarily limited to cacophony, but also occurs in visual, audio-visual, written, physical or psychological forms. All these forms of noise communicate extraneous matter which may relieve the receiver’s interest in the message. 3. ORGANIZATIONAL BARRIERS Communication barriers are not only limited to an individual or two people but exist in entire organizations. Every organization has its own communication techniques and nurtures its own communication climate. In organizations with many levels of communication, messages have a greater chance of being distorted. This occurs due to poor listening, lack of concentration or a person’s tendency to leave out part of the message. The main organizational barriers are enumerated below: Too many transfer stations The more links there are in a communication chain, the greater are the chances of communication failure. Fear of superiors In rigidly structured organizations, fear or terror of the superiors prevents subordinates from speaking frankly. An employee may not be pleased with the way his boss works but is unable to put his point across because of losing his boss’s goodwill. An open environment is conducive to increasing the confidence and goodwill of a communicator. 14 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 14 of 23 Negative Tendencies Many organizations create work groups. Nevertheless, on some occasions, it is possible to have a communication barrier due to confliction of ideas between members and non-members of a group. This sometimes generates the negative mindset which can be avoided with open discussion. Use of Inappropriate Media Some of the common media used in organization are telephones, facsimile machines, emails, computer presentation, teleconferencing, video conferencing. While choosing the medium to send messages consider the following factors: Time Cost Type of message Intended audience So usually a mix of media is best for effective communication. Information Overload One of the major problems faced by organizations today is the availability of huge amounts of data which are difficult to channelize. Information overload brings fatigue, and disinterest. So quality information should be given more important than quantity. Moreover screening of information would reduce the burden of information. Keeping mind the following measures one can improve upon verbal and non verbal communication: Create an open communication environment Always keep the receiver in mind Avoid having too many transfer stations Do not communicate when you are emotionally disturbed Be aware of diversity in culture, language etc. Use appropriate non verbal cues Select the most suitable medium Analyze the feedback 15 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 15 of 23 ___________________________________________________________________ ___________ Possible Questions 1. What are intrapersonal barriers? 2. Describe interpersonal barriers. 3. Explain organizational barriers. ___________________________________________________________________ A S Chauhan 3. LISTENING SKILLS Introduction Communication includes four different skills: Listening, Speaking, Reading and Writing. We must have good command over all the skills so as to improve our communication. Listening is one of the neglected skills. We listen to a lot but never carefully. It is rightly said by Hemingway that “I like to listen, I have learned a great deal from listening carefully”. Types of Listening Following is the list of listening with brief description of each: 1. Active Listening : It shows interest and encourages continued speaking 2. Appreciative Listening : Listening to any piece that likes you to listen falls under this 16 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 16 of 23 3. Attentive Listening : includes the listening with great concentration so as to learn and get something 4. Biased Listening : It is listening to something through the filter of personal bias 5. Casual Listening : is without showing much interest 6. Comprehension & Content Listening : is to understand and learn something 7. Critical & Evaluating Listening : is to evaluate, criticize or to pass the judgment on what someone says 8. Deep Listening : aims to understand the deep or hidden meanings of spoken language 9. Dialogue Listening : targets the understanding of meaning when two or more are communicating with one another 10. Discriminative Listening : is when one listens to for only some specific reason and not for anything else 11. False Listening : shows that listener is pretending to listen and in real his attention is somewhere else 12. Total Listening : includes the listening to with interest, attention and try to understand the deeper meaning also 17 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 17 of 23 ACTIVE LISTENING V/S PASSIVE LISTENING In English language we often use two words – hearing and listening. Hearing is a physiological activity while listening is a mental one. Hearing doesn’t require any conscious effort while listening requires great efforts from the mind. In brief, listening is very important part of communication and a means and active process of gathering information. Listening – as a process Listening is a process of hearing, filtering, interpreting, responding, and remembering. Listening is a habit that needs to be cultivated. Active listening is one in which the listener shows keen interest to listen to something. During passive listening, the listener pretends as a good listener but in fact he listens to nothing. His attention is always diverted and creates hurdle in listening process. So listening is an active process for many reasons like: To gain information To receive instruction To hear complaint To enjoy entertainment To show respect Active listening can also be identified by perceptive listening. Passive Listening is little more than hearing. It is a listening to music, storytelling, television etc. People speak at 100 to 175 words per minute but can listen 18 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 18 of 23 intelligently at 600 to 800 WPM. Since only a part of our mind is paying attention, it is easy to go into mind drift – thinking about other things while listening to someone. The cure for this is “Active Listening” which involves listening with a purpose. It requires the receiver to hear the various messages, understand the meaning and then verify the meaning by offering feedback. 19 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 19 of 23 EMPATHETIC/ACTIVE/REFLECTIVE LISTENING How to listen with empathy? Empathetic listening is also called active or reflective listening. It has many advantages which are listed below: Advantages Empathetic listening is a way of listening and responding that improves mutual understanding. Listening enables the listener to receive and interpret the speaker’s message so as to provide the response because response is an integral part of listening process. It always builds trust and respect enables to release the emotions reduces the tensions encourages the surfacing of information helps in better understanding & concentration strengthens the interpersonal communication develops attentiveness towards speaker increased the speaker’s self esteem gains the speaker’s cooperation builds teamwork helps us to obtain the objective information Guidelines for good empathetic listening Following suggestions and guidelines would help you for better listening: Be attentive & interested & alert Create positive atmosphere with non verbal behavior Do not ask a lot of questions Be critical of what speaker is saying and you understand Motivate the speaker through your gestures and postures Do not interrupt Don’t give advice 20 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 20 of 23 Don’t teach Give positive reactions Provide undivided attention to speaker Don’t give any judgment Read the speaker These are some of the points and observations which can make one a good listener. TRAITS OF A GOOD LISTENER It is good to be a speaker but difficult to be a good listener. If listening is done carefully it can help us learn a lot. Following are the traits of a good listener: Adequate hearing Recognition of problems that +involve listening Relationship between listening and vocabulary Judging well what is heard Readiness to listen to others Ability to discriminate among sounds and ideas Ability to supply meanings to symbols Evaluating medium and manner of speaker Willingness to disregard prejudices BARRIERS IN EFFECTIVE LISTENING There are some barriers which hinder the effective listening. Thinking is the biggest obstacle in listening process which diverts the listeners from what speaker is saying. The barrier are: 21 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 21 of 23 1. Physical Barriers : Rigidity, prejudice, poor retention, premature evaluation, hurried conclusions, impatience, status, incorrect articulation etc. 2. Psychological Barriers : Ambiguity in thoughts, illusion, complexity, closed mind, cognitive dissonance etc. 3. Language Barriers : Ambiguous language, poor knowledge, excessive use of dialects, poor pronunciation etc. 4. Nonverbal Distractions : Improper gestures and postures, uncommon signs and symbols, eye contact etc. 5. Grandstanding : It is pretending of speaker that he knows everything and commit the mess TIPS FOR EFFECTIVE LISTENING Listening skill is not complex. It can be developed through following observations or tips: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Spend more time on listening than talking Do not finish the sentences of others Do not answer the questions with questions BE aware of biases. Do not bring them in when listening Never daydreams. Concentrate. Let the speaker talk. Do not try to dominate the conversation or discussion Provide feedback but let the speaker complete his talk or lecture Be objective in analysis Take brief notes Be interested 22 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 22 of 23 The above tips are very much useful for improving listening skills because hearing is feeling, listening is interpretation. ________________________________________________________ POSSIBLE QUESTIONS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. What is listening? Explain the types of listening. How do you differentiate active/passive listening? Explain empathetic listening? What are the main features of good listener? What the barriers of effective listening? 6. Discuss the steps or tips to be considered or taken for effective listening? 23 www.gtucampus.com Engg-Sem-I : Communication Skills Chep-1,2,3 Page 23 of 23