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Lectures (knowledge clips) of Communication and Leadership UU $4.81   Add to cart

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Lectures (knowledge clips) of Communication and Leadership UU

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English notes of the lectures/knowledge clips of the UU master course Communication and Leadership

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  • October 28, 2024
  • 14
  • 2023/2024
  • Class notes
  • Tom frijns
  • All classes
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Communication and leadership (lectures)
Week 2: Communication, mindset and goals

Lecture 1: Introduction (about the course)

Do it yourself day
 Select a specific topic within the theme of the course
 Create a web lecture or knowledge clip (10-20 min)
 Create and run a workshop around this topic with the members of the other groups
as participants (60 mins)

About this course
 Aim of the course = to combine theory and practice
 Focus on effective interaction/communication
 Interpersonal and (small) groups
 Processes of influence
 Skills in context (person and environment)

Lecture 2: Five axioms of human communication

Pragmatics of human communication
 Syntactics = transmitting information
 Semantics = meaning of communication
 Pragmatics = behavioral effects of communication (= psychology)

Axioms (Watzlawick et al., 1967)
 We cannot not communicate
o For example, ignoring someone is also communicating because it is sending a
powerful message
 Content and relationship level
o Every communication has a content and a relationship aspect such that the
latter classifies the former and is therefore a metacommunication
 Punctuation
o The nature of a relationship is contingent upon the punctuation of the
communicational sequences between the communicants
o “I got mad because you did something wrong” (causality, the sequence of
events)
 Digital and analogic communication
o Human beings communicate both digitally and analogically
o Digital = verbal communication
o Analogical = non-verbal communication
 Symmetrical or complementary
o All communicational interchanges are either symmetrical or complementary,
depending on whether they are based on equality or difference
o Symmetrical = at the same time

, o Complementary = when people with opposing communication styles
converse, e.g. when one person is dominant the other will turn shy)

Lecture 3: Mindset

Fixed mindset = idea that intelligence is a fixed trait that can’t be changed
 Entity theory
 Fixed mindset students adopt performance goals
 Effort is negative, it should come naturally
 “The main thing I want when I do my school work is to show how good I am at it”
 Self-handicapping, feedback avoidance
 Strategy after failure: helplessness, self-serving bias, downward comparison
o “I would spend less time on this subject from now on”
o “I would try to cheat on the next test”
 Feeling smart when seeing something they already know, becomes frustrated when
seeing something attainable, disengages when seeing something unattainable

Growth mindset = intelligence is a malleable quality, a potential that can be developed
 Incremental theory
 Learning is most important
 Work hard, effort is key
 “It’s more important for me to learn things in my class than to get the best grades”
 Strategy after failure: resilient, mastery-oriented, upward comparison
o “I would work harder in this class from now on”
 Feeling bored when seeing something they already know, feels challenged when
seeing something attainable, remains effective when seeing something unattainable

Research effects of intelligence vs. effort praise




 Effort praise works much better than intelligence praise (numbers of problems solved
on IQ test increased)
 Motivation of growth-mindset grows more after intervention than control group

Learning goals:
 I hope to learn about effective forms of communication
 I hope to learn about different styles of leadership

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