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Explanation:
Answer:
1. Ordering
2. Warning
3. Moralizing
4. Using Logic
5. Criticism
Explanation:
There are various roadblocks to effective communication, some of which include:
1. Ordering: ordering the recipient or using commanding words or tones usually affects the communication. The recipient often feels he is being treated like a kid; hence, he will want to reject the message being communicated.
2. Warning: using warning tones can cause the recipient of a message to reject the message with resentment or a form of resistance.
3. Moralizing: when the message sender is sounding like he is preaching morality, the recipient usually want to resist and reject such message, thereby affecting the communication
4. Using Logic: using logic to pass a message usually sound like an argument. Often the recipient perceives the message as superior content, and in order not to feel inferior, might reject the message out rightly.
5. Criticizing: when a message comes in the form of criticism, the recipient often rejects it as perceived in terms of hostility towards him.
Hello! :)
I’m afraid I can’t really help you with that as you have to use your own wording and knowledge to write a letter to the editor. But here are tips and basics that might get you started and help when writing your letter:
- Basics
• <em>A Letter to the Editor may be written to the editor of a newspaper or a magazine. It is written to highlight a social issue or problem. It can also be written in order to get it published in the said medium. As it is a formal letter, the format has to be followed strictly.</em>
<em>- </em>Tips
• Keep your letter under 300 words. Editors have limited space for printing letters, and some papers have stated policies regarding length (check the editorial page for this).
• Make sure your most important points are stated in the first paragraph. Editors may need to cut parts of your letter and they usually do so from the bottom up.
• Refer to a recent event in your community or to a recent article – make a connection and make it relevant.
• Use local statistics and personal stories to better illustrate your point.
• Make sure you include your title as well as your name – it adds credibility, especially if it's relevant to the topic being discussed. If you are a program director, your title may lend credibility to the letter.
Hope this still helped and wasn’t too late in answering! Sorry if you wanted a different answer.
Have a great day! Good luck and get starting!
~ Destiny ^_^