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Afina-wow [57]
3 years ago
15

When planning his narrative essay, should Noam include a section about how his experience affected him? Yes, he should introduce

the essay by using information about what he learned and if it changed him. No, he should stick to a logical introduction to the essay and avoid information about his thoughts and feelings. Yes, he should include at the end of the essay information about what he learned and if it changed him. No, he should stick to a logical end to the essay and avoid information about his thoughts and feelings.
World Languages
2 answers:
mr Goodwill [35]3 years ago
8 0
Yes, he should include at the end of the essay information about what he learned and if it changed him.

Absolutely so.
velikii [3]3 years ago
3 0

C is the best answer to this question

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Make a list of all the noise you have experienced. Classify them according to types of barriers of communication. What do you th
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Answer:

i think you are referring to this:

Physical Conditions

Sometimes “noise” is just exactly that—loud or distracting sounds that make it impossible to hear or concentrate. Or the general level of background noise can be so intense that it is hard to focus for long on one particular voice. A room may be so hot or so cold that people can’t get comfortable and cannot pay attention. Outside activities may be a distraction to those with a view out windows. Finally, it may be lunchtime or too close to quitting time to keep people focused. Fortunately, with some awareness and advance planning, physical barriers to effective communication are some of the easiest to overcome.

Filtering

Personal and particular experiences color how people view the world and how they communicate. A message sender sees the world through one set of filters (experiences and values) and the receiver sees it through a different set of filters. Each message has to pass, therefore, through at least two sets of filters. The more similar people are in lifestyle, experience, culture, and language, the more similar their mental filters are likely to be and the less distortion should occur. This is why people who come from very different social and economic situations than their audience must work extra hard to say exactly what they mean to avoid confusion. Also, the fewer people involved in the transmission of a message, the greater the chance that it will be received as the sender intended. In business, however, messages may be summarized by a manager and relayed through an administrative assistant who has clarified or edited the message. Messages exposed to many filters should be repeated in various ways to make sure they were understood as the sender intended.

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We have all been in situations when we felt that too much information was coming at us. When this happens, we feel overwhelmed and fear that we will not be able to retain any information at all. Sometimes it is not just the quantity of communication but the level that causes overload. If the message contains information that is new to the receiver, including processes or concepts that are not familiar, then the chances of overload increase greatly. The sender should break up the message into more palatable or digestible bits and reduce the amount of information that has to be absorbed at any one time. One technique is to make a high-level announcement and then follow it up later with more details. The sender has the primary responsibility to check that the receiver has understood the message. This means that a manager may have to adjust a message to reflect the various experiences of the employees. A new employee may need repeated explanations before beginning an operation, whereas an experienced employee may start rolling his eyes at the same old instructions.

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<u>try that!</u>

<u></u>

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