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Showing 31 to 45 of 98 results
Rester, Carolyn H. – International Journal of Listening, 2012
This classroom activity allows students to observe how a troubled friend reacts to seven listening responses that are unhelpful in therapeutic contexts (interrupting, unrelated comments, focusing on self, discounting, blaming, evaluating, and giving advice). Students also have the opportunity to experience how probing, feeling responses, and…
Descriptors: Empathy, Verbal Communication, Nonverbal Communication, Listening
Wolvin, Andrew D.; Cohen, Steven D. – International Journal of Listening, 2012
This article proposes the use of a one-page listening inventory sheet that helps students explore five dimensions of listening competency: cognitive, affective, behavioral, contextual, and ethical. After crafting their own responses, students will have the opportunity to engage in a class discussion about the impact of various dimensions of…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Discussion, Competence, Listening
Peterson, Stacey A. – International Journal of Listening, 2012
This exercise is designed to illustrate how challenging it is to listen. Although listening is an activity that people use more than speaking, reading, or writing, it is typically not afforded the same level of instruction and focus (Adler & Rodman, 2011). In addition, humans are subject to such continual and diverse stimuli; most do not even…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Instructional Design, Listening Skills, Listening
Johnson-Curiskis, Nanette – International Journal of Listening, 2012
Hearing levels are threatened by modern life--headsets for music, rock concerts, traffic noises, etc. It is crucial we know our hearing levels so that we can draw attention to potential problems. This exercise requires that students receive a hearing screening for their benefit as well as for making the connection of hearing to listening.
Descriptors: Hearing (Physiology), Screening Tests, Auditory Evaluation, Auditory Tests
Adelmann, Kent – International Journal of Listening, 2012
In ordinary life we are constantly imbued by listening, and we seem to interact in different contextual dimensions of culture and society (Adelmann, 2002; Linell, 1998), both verbally and nonverbally. "Life by its very nature is dialogic. To live means to participate in dialogue," according to the Russian scholar Mikhail M. Bakhtin (1984, p.…
Descriptors: Listening, Listening Skills, Participant Observation, Verbal Communication
Bommelje, Rick – International Journal of Listening, 2012
The Listening Circle is a learning activity that is designed to provide students with the opportunity to connect listening knowledge with observed behaviors and to strengthen student peer feedback. Not knowing how to give feedback can result in messages that are confusing, tactless, and counter-productive. Many feedback messages leave the receiver…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Peer Evaluation, Listening, Listening Skills
Jones, Susanne M. – International Journal of Listening, 2011
"Listening" is a multidimensional construct that consists of complex (a) cognitive processes, such as attending to, understanding, receiving, and interpreting messages; (b) affective processes, such as being motivated and stimulated to attend to another person's messages; and (c) behavioral processes, such as responding with verbal and nonverbal…
Descriptors: Cues, Listening, Cognitive Processes, Listening Skills
Berger, Charles R. – International Journal of Listening, 2011
Interpersonal communication researchers have not only tended to ignore the role that listening plays in face-to-face interaction, they have also viewed message production and message processing as distinct processes. The message production-message processing bipolarity is belied by recent research suggesting that mirror neurons subserving speech…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Interpersonal Communication, Speech, Interaction
Bostrom, Robert N. – International Journal of Listening, 2011
Theory about listening has been strongly affected by methodological orientations and institutional pressures. It would help if researchers spent more time on the objects of study rather than method. Traditional listening research has confused listening with general cognitive abilities, such as IQ. Studying listening as memory is a tempting…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Cognitive Ability, Second Language Instruction, Listening Skills
Burleson, Brant R. – International Journal of Listening, 2011
This article develops a constructivist perspective on listening skill. Listening is conceptualized as "a process that involves the interpretation of messages that others have intentionally transmitted in the effort to understand those messages and respond to them appropriately." This definition allows listening to be understood both as a mindful…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Individual Differences, Listening Skills, Information Processing
Edwards, Renee – International Journal of Listening, 2011
Message interpretation, the notion that individuals assign meaning to stimuli, is related to listening presage, listening process, and listening product. As a central notion of communication, meaning includes (a) denotation and connotation, and (b) content and relational meanings, which can vary in ambiguity and vagueness. Past research on message…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Communication Research, Content Analysis, Information Theory
Baurain, Bradley – International Journal of Listening, 2011
Listening pedagogy in language education treats listening proficiency almost exclusively as a function or skill, the purpose of which is to generate products or outcomes desired by language users. Though listening is rhetorically acknowledged to be an active and complex process of making meanings within contexts and relationships, in practice…
Descriptors: Listening, Instruction, Teacher Education, Listening Skills
Jalongo, Mary Renck – International Journal of Listening, 2010
Three general purposes of research in human development are to explain, predict, and modify behavior. Studies of listening during early childhood (birth through age eight) are of particular significance to the field because they enable researchers to describe listening processes from their very origins (explain), they demonstrate the effects of…
Descriptors: Listening Skills, Young Children, Emotional Development, Literature Reviews
Gerritsen, Jan – International Journal of Listening, 2010
This article presents a reanalysis of a previously reported study on the impact of the Tomatis Method of auditory stimulation on subjects with autism. When analyzed as individual case studies, the data showed that six of the 11 subjects with autism demonstrated significant improvement from 90 hours of Tomatis Therapy. Five subjects did not benefit…
Descriptors: Stimulation, Autism, Hyperactivity, Case Studies
Weger, Harry, Jr.; Castle, Gina R.; Emmett, Melissa C. – International Journal of Listening, 2010
Perhaps no communication skill is identified as regularly as active listening in training programs across a variety of disciplines and activities. Yet little empirical research has examined specific elements of active listening responses in terms of their effectiveness in achieving desired interpersonal outcomes. This study reports an experiment…
Descriptors: Listening, Interviews, Undergraduate Students, Interpersonal Communication

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