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“We have two-ears and only one tongue in order that we may hear more and speak less.” Diogenes Laertius

Listening comprehension

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Page 1: Listening comprehension

“We have two-ears and only

one tongue in order that we may hear more and

speak less.”

Diogenes Laertius

Page 2: Listening comprehension

The first and the foremost communication skill that we learn in our lives is nothing but LISTENING:

Listening comes first

LISTENING

SPEAKING

READING

WRITING

Page 3: Listening comprehension

Listening is a receptive skill that involves:• Receiving• Interpreting • Responding

LISTENING

Page 4: Listening comprehension

Process of Listening

Receiving (Stimuli)

Understanding (assign meaning)

Evaluating (+ve or –ve)

Responding (back

channeling or Feedback

Page 5: Listening comprehension

• Speaking rate - 120 to 150 words per minute

• Brain capability of processing- 500 to 700 words a minute

**Most of the brain is idle, thus attention deviates and listening gets affected.

Facts about Listening

Page 6: Listening comprehension

Passive vs. active Automatic vs. conscious activity Only hearing vs. hear-analyze-judge and

conclude One-way process vs. two-way interactive

process

Hearing Vs. Listening

Page 7: Listening comprehension

• Appreciative Listening

• Emphatic Listening

• Comprehensive/ active Listening

• Critical/ Analytical Listening

Types of Listening

Page 8: Listening comprehension

Listening for pleasure and enjoyment,as when we listen to music, comedy routine or to an entertaining speech.

Appreciative Listening

Page 9: Listening comprehension

Listening to provide emotional supportfor the speaker, as when a psychiatrist listens to a patient or when we lend a sympathetic ear to a friend.

Emphatic Listening

Page 10: Listening comprehension

Listening to understand the Message of a speaker, as when we attend a classroom.

Comprehensive or Active Listening

Page 11: Listening comprehension

Listening to evaluate the messagefor the purposes of accepting or rejecting it as when we listen to the campaign speech of A political candidate.

Critical/ Analytical Listening

Page 12: Listening comprehension

Listening; 53

Reading; 17

Speaking; 16

Writing; 14

Proportion of time spent by students on communication skills

Page 13: Listening comprehension

Barriers to listening

Physical Barriers

Psychological Barriers

Linguistic Barriers

Cultural Barriers

Noise Emotional Disturbance

Improper message decoding

Cultural differences

Physical discomfort

Anxiety Ambiguous language

Different values

Physical distractions

Over arousal of emotions

Jargon Different social norms

Distance

Page 14: Listening comprehension

L – Look interested- get interested

I – involve yourself by responding

S – stay on target

T – test your understanding

E – evaluate the message

N – Neutralize your feelings

How to overcome

Page 15: Listening comprehension