Education & Research: Steward's Corner
by Robert Wechsler,
Education Director
Listening
to Others
1. Listening is a skill.
Unfortunately, we are far better talkers than we are
listeners. But you can't be a good speaker without beiNg
a good listener. One skill relies on the other.
2. In grievance handling, the shop steward needs to be
able to listen and watch the member and the supervisor.
Much of what you need to know may be conveyed to you
through body language or inference, not in direct
speech. Here are some pointers on how to become a better
listener and observer.
3. Stop talking -- you can't listen while you are
talking.
4. Empathize with the other person -- try to put
yourself in his/her place so that you can see what
he/she is trying to get at.
5. Ask questions -- when you don't understand, when you
need further clarification, when you want to show you
are listening. But don't ask questions that will
embarrass or show the other person up.
6. Don't give up too soon -- don't interrupt the other
person; give him/her time to say what he/she has to say.
7. Concentrate on what is said -- actively focus your
attention on the words, ideas, and feelings related to
the subject.
8.Look at the other person -- face, mouth, eyes, hands
will all help to communicate with you. Helps you
concentrate, too. Makes the other person feel you are
listening.
9.Leave your emotions behind (if you can) -- try to push
your worries, your fears, your problems, outside the
meeting room. They may prevent you from listening well.
10. Control your anger -- try not to get angry at what
is being said; your anger may prevent you from
understanding what is said.
11. Get rid of distractions -- put down any papers or
pencils you have in your hands; they may distract your
attention.
12. Get to the main points -- concentrate on the main
ideas and not the illustrative material. Examples,
stories, or statistics are important, but usually are
not main points. Examine them only to see if they prove,
support, define the main ideas.
13. Share responsibility for communication -- only part
of the responsibility rests with the speaker; you as the
listener have an important part.
14. React to ideas not to the person -- don't allow your
reactions to the person influence your interpretation of
what is said. The ideas may be good even if you don't
like the person.
15.Don't argue mentally -- it is a handicap to argue
with him/her mentally as he/she is speaking. This sets
up a barrier between you and the speaker.
16.Use the difference in rate -- you can listen faster
than he/she can talk, so use this rate difference to
your advantage by: anticipating what he/she is going to
say, think back over what he/she has said, evaluate his
development.
17. Speech rate is about 100 to 150 words per minute,
thinking is 250 to 500.
18. Listen to what is not said -- sometimes you can
learn just as much by determining what the other person
leaves out in his/her discussion as you can by listening
to what he/she says.
19. Listen to how something is said -- we frequently
concentrate so hard on what is said that we miss the
importance of the emotional reactions and attitudes
related to what is said. Attitudes, and emotional
reactions may be more important.
20. Don't antagonize the speaker -- it may cause the
other person to conceal their ideas, emotions, and
attitudes. Try to judge and be aware of the effect you
are having on the other person. Adapt to him/her.
21. Listen for their personality -- one of the best ways
of finding out information about a person is to listen
to him/her talk; as he/she talks you can begin to find
out what he/she like and dislikes, what his/her
motivations are, what his/her value system is and what
makes him/her tick.
22. Avoid jumping to assumptions -- they can get you
into trouble. Don't assume that the speaker uses words
the same way you do; that he/she didn't say what he/she
meant, but you understand what he/she meant; that he/she
is avoiding looking you in the eye because he/she is
telling a lie; that he/she is distorting the truth
because what he/she says doesn't agree with what you
think; that he/she is unethical because he/she is trying
to win you over to his point of view. Assumptions like
these may turn out to be true, but more often they just
get in the way of your understanding and reaching
agreement or compromise.
23. Avoid classifying the speaker--too frequently we
classify a person as one type of person and then try to
fit everything he/she says into what makes sense coming
from that type of person. He/she is a Republican.
Therefore, our perceptions of what he/she says or means
are all shaded by whether we like or dislike
Republicans. People have the trait of being
unpredictable and not fitting into their
classifications.
24. Avoid hasty judgments -- wait until all the facts
are in (or at least most of them) before making any
judgments.
25. Recognize your own prejudices -- try to be aware of
your own feelings toward the speaker, the subject, the
occasion, and allow for these pre-judgments.
26. Identify the type of reasoning -- frequently it is
difficult to sort out good and faulty reasoning when you
are listening. Nevertheless, it is so important a job,
that a listener should bend every effort to learn to
spot faulty reasoning when he/she hears it.
27. Evaluate facts and evidence -- as you listen, try to
identify not only the significance of the facts and
evidence, but also their relation to argument.
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