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Reflecting needs to combine content and feeling to truly reflect the meaning
of what the speaker has said. For example:
Speaker:
“I just don’t understand my boss. One minute he says one thing
and the next minute he says the opposite.”
Listener:
“You feel very confused by him?”
Reflecting meaning allows the listener to reflect the speaker’s
experiences
and emotional response to those experiences. It links the content and feeling
components of what the speaker has said.
GUIDELINES FOR REFLECTING
• Be natural.
• Listen for the basic message. Consider the content,
feeling and meaning expressed by the speaker.
• Restate what you have been told in simple terms.
• When restating, look for non- verbal
as well as verbal cues
that confirm or deny the accuracy of your paraphrasing.
(Note that some speakers may pretend you have got it right because
they feel unable to assert themselves and disagree with you.)
• Do not question the speaker unnecessarily.
• Do not add to the speaker’s meaning.
• Do not take the speaker’s topic in a new direction.
• Always be non-directive and non- udgemental.
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QUESTIONING
Questions are widely used both to clarify situations,
and more broadly
in communication.
QUESTIONING FOR CLARIFICATION
When you are the listener in a sensitive environment, the right sort of non-directive
questioning can enable the speaker to describe their viewpoint more fully.
Asking the right question at the right time can be crucial and comes with practice.
The best questions are open-ended as they give the speaker choice in how to
respond, whereas closed questions allow only very limited responses.
Some examples of non-directive clarification-seeking questions are:
“I’m not quite sure I understand what you are saying.”
“I don’t feel clear about the main issue here.”
“When you said ... what did you mean?”
“Could you repeat ?”
BROADER
USES OF QUESTIONING
Gathering information is a basic human activity—we use information to learn, to
help us solve problems, to aid our decision-making processes and to understand
each other more clearly.
Questioning is the key to gaining more information and
without it interpersonal
communications can fail. Questioning is fundamental to successful communication.
We all ask and are asked questions when engaged in conversation.
We find questions and answers fascinating and entertaining. Politicians,
reporters, celebrities and entrepreneurs are often successful based on their
questioning skills—asking the right questions at the right time and also
answering (or not) appropriately.
Although questions
are usually verbal in nature, they can also be non-verbal.
Raising of the eyebrows could, for example, be asking,
“Are you sure?”
, and
facial expressions can ask all sorts of subtle questions
at different times and in
different contexts.
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WHY ASK QUESTIONS?
Although the following list is not exhaustive it outlines the main reasons questions
are asked in common situations.
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