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- Reflective_listening abstract "Reflective listening is a communication strategy involving two key steps: seeking to understand a speaker's idea, then offering the idea back to the speaker, to confirm the idea has been understood correctly. It attempts to "reconstruct what the client is thinking and feeling and to relay this understanding back to the client". Reflective listening is a more specific strategy than the more general methods of active listening. It arose from Carl Rogers' school of client-centered therapy in counseling theory. Empathy is at the center of Rogers' approach. Dalmar Fisher, an Associate Professor at Boston College, developed a model for Reflective Listening that includes the following elements:[citation needed]- Actively engaging in the conversation, by reducing or eliminating distractions of any kind to allow for paying full attention to the conversation at hand.[citation needed]- Genuinely empathizing with the speaker’s point of view. This doesn’t mean agreeing with the speaker, just viewing things from his/her perspective. The listener encourages the person to speak freely, by being non judgmental and empathetic.[citation needed]- Mirroring the mood of the speaker, reflecting the emotional state with words and nonverbal communication. This calls for the listener to quiet his mind and fully focus on the mood of the speaker. The mood will be apparent not just in the words used but in the tone of voice, in the posture and other nonverbal cues given by the speaker.The listener will look for congruence between words and mood.[citation needed]- Summarizing what the speaker said, using the listener’s own words. This is different than paraphrasing, where words and phrases are moved around and replaced to mirror what the speaker said. The reflective listener recaps the message using his own words.[citation needed]- Responding to the speaker's specific point, without digressing to other subjects.[citation needed]- Repeating the procedure for each subject, and switching the roles of speaker and listener, if necessary.[citation needed]".
- Reflective_listening wikiPageExternalLink reflecti.htm.
- Reflective_listening wikiPageExternalLink H5ReflectiveListening.pdf.
- Reflective_listening wikiPageExternalLink ~fisher.
- Reflective_listening wikiPageID "23127968".
- Reflective_listening wikiPageRevisionID "598081675".
- Reflective_listening hasPhotoCollection Reflective_listening.
- Reflective_listening subject Category:Behavior_modification.
- Reflective_listening subject Category:Counseling.
- Reflective_listening subject Category:Human_communication.
- Reflective_listening comment "Reflective listening is a communication strategy involving two key steps: seeking to understand a speaker's idea, then offering the idea back to the speaker, to confirm the idea has been understood correctly. It attempts to "reconstruct what the client is thinking and feeling and to relay this understanding back to the client". Reflective listening is a more specific strategy than the more general methods of active listening.".
- Reflective_listening label "Reflective listening".
- Reflective_listening sameAs m.064nhbr.
- Reflective_listening sameAs Q7307320.
- Reflective_listening sameAs Q7307320.
- Reflective_listening wasDerivedFrom Reflective_listening?oldid=598081675.
- Reflective_listening isPrimaryTopicOf Reflective_listening.