Academic Leadership: Fundamental Building Blocks
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Active Listening: A Core Competency for Leadership
Active listening involves:
- Looking interested through reflective listening – facing the speaker, maintaining
eye contact, staying relaxed, leaning forward slightly and maintaining open posture.
Use verbal and non-verbal signals to illustrate your interest and to encourage
dialogue. Verbal reflective listening examples are things such as “oh”, “tell me
more”, “really!” “interesting”. Non-verbal reflective listening strategies are things such
as head nodding and facial gestures. - Inquiring without question or judgement – Clarify meanings, get the full story. If
you start to disagree, you start to make mental arguments to counter the message
and then of course miss what is being said. - Staying on target – Stick to the point, listen for the central theme, think ahead, wait
for the complete message and don’t interrupt. - Testing your understanding through reflective listening – paraphrase, “can you
rephrase what has just been said?” - Evaluating the message – analyse what is said and expressed:
- reasoning
- fallacies
- generalisations
- cause linked to effect
- emotional appeal
- evidence
- facts or assertion
- information source
- reliability
- language
- jargon
- body language
- voice related indications.
- Your feelings – Stay calm, don’t become emotional and keep an open mind.
Activity
Make a conscious effort to employ active listening at your next meeting. Make some
notes in your journal on:
- what you observed;
- when you did; and
- what you learned from this approach.