Effective Communication - ATP Flight School Flashcards

1
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

What is communication?

A

When one person transmits feelings or ideas to another person or group of people.

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2
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

What are the basic elements of communication?

A

Source, symbol, and receiver

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3
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

What is a source?

A

The sender of an idea or feeling: speaker, writer, instructor, musician, filmmaker, etc.

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4
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

What is a symbol?

A

An oral or visual cue: spoken word, written word, facial gesture, body language, lyric, etc.

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5
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

What is a receiver?

A

The recipient of an idea: listener, reader, student, audience, etc.

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6
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe the communication cycle.

A

The source sends a symbol to the receiver to communicate an idea. The receiver interprets the symbol and sends a symbol back to the sender to verify accurate interpretation. This is called feedback. This cycle continues until the sender and the receiver have an equal understanding of the idea.

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7
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

What is a barrier to effective communication?

A

A misunderstanding between the sender and receiver.

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8
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

What are the primary barriers to effective communication?

A

Lack of common experience, confusion between the symbol and the symbolized object, overuse of abstractions, and interference.

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9
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe lack of common experience.

A

When two people with different life experiences do not share a common vocabulary. People assign meaning based on past experience, so a word can mean different things to the speaker vs. the listener.

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10
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe confusion between the symbol and the symbolized object.

A

Failure to distinguish between a word and what it represents, and to choose words accordingly. Leads the speaker to use words the student can assign the wrong meaning to.

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11
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe overuse of abstractions.

A

Abstractions are general words standing for ideas that cannot be directly experienced. They do not call forth specific mental images. If they are not linked to specific experiences through examples or illustrations, the student can assign the wrong meaning to them.

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12
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe interference.

A

Interference prevents clear communication from taking place because of external factors that include physiological, environmental, and psychological interference.

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13
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe physiological interference.

A

Biological problems that inhibit symbol reception, such as hearing loss, poor vision, motion sickness, etc.

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14
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe environmental interference.

A

Something about the location where the communication is taking place is distracting, such as the high noise level in a cockpit.

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15
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe psychological interference.

A

Lack of commitment (by the instructor or the student) to the communication process. For example, a student who doesn’t trust their instructor’s credibility may not try to engage in communication.

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16
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Why is developing communication skills important to CFIs?

A

People aren’t born as natural communicators, and therefore communication skills must be developed through practice and experience.

17
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

What tools can instructors use to become better communicators?

A

Role playing, instructional communication, listening, questioning, and instructional enhancement.

18
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe role playing.

A

Practicing a lesson with other, more experienced CFIs who are playing the role of students. This allows the new CFI to develop the skills to teach a lesson and answer questions before having real students.

19
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe instructional communication.

A

Instructional communication has occurred when the instructor’s desired results have occurred. Instructors are encouraged to use personal experience to illustrate concepts. A student should understand both how and why something should be done.

20
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe listening.

A

Listening is hearing with comprehension. Instructors who listen to their students to understand their background, experience, vocabulary, and goals will be more effective.

21
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe questioning.

A

Questioning is used to determine how well a student knows what has been taught, i.e., how effective the communication was. Using open ended questions instead of yes/no questions will help the instructor make this assessment.

22
Q

ATPFlightSchool.com

Describe instructional enhancement.

A

The aviation industry is constantly changing, so the professional instructor needs to constantly be learning to stay up to date with industry practices and procedures. The more an instructor knows about a subject, the better they will be able to teach.