Transcript Slide 1
Contents
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Chapter 1 ■ Your Personal Strengths
Chapter 2 ■ The Roles You Play
Chapter 3 ■ Why We Work
Chapter 4 ■ Exploring the Career Clusters
Chapter 5 ■ Think Like an Entrepreneur
Chapter 6 ■ Skills for Success
Chapter 7 ■ Academic Planning
Chapter 8 ■ Communicating with Others
Chapter 9 ■ Building Relationships
Chapter 10 ■ Basic Math Skills
Chapter 11 ■ Technology and Your Career
Chapter 12 ■ Career Planning
Chapter 13 ■ Managing a Job Search
Chapter 14 ■ Getting Started in Your
Career
Chapter 15 ■ Being Productive in Your
Career
Chapter 16 ■ Living a Healthy and
Balanced Life
Chapter 17 ■ Starting Your Own Business
Chapter 18 ■ Planning Your Own Business
Chapter 19 ■ Managing Your Business
Chapter 20 ■ Personal Money
Management
Chapter 21 ■ Personal Financial Planning
Chapter 22 ■ Basic Economics
Chapter 23 ■ Basic Business Financial
Management
Chapter 24 ■ Financial Calculations for
Business
Reading and Writing
Many historians consider the printing press as the most
important invention of all time due to its impact on
spreading written communication.
Reading will be essential for your career. Reading allows
you to learn on your own.
Passive reading is the kind of reading you do for entertainment.
Critical reading happens when you are actively engaging the
subject being written about.
Reading and writing go together—you cannot do critical
reading without also writing.
Learning to write is an ongoing process. You should
always expect to get better.
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Using Written Communication
Constructive criticism are suggestions from others on
how to improve your writing.
Like reading, writing well will be essential in almost any
career you choose.
Even before you begin work, you will usually have to
write:
A resume
A cover letter to accompany your resume
A follow-up letter to demonstrate your interest in the job
While you are employed, you will have regular writing
tasks such as customer letters, written reports, or writing
memos.
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Using Verbal Communication
Mastering the art of verbal communication is a very important
part of getting the career you want.
Communicate effectively by using a six-step process:
1. Be clear
2. Be personal
3. Be positive
4. Get to the point
5. Listen to the response
6. Think before you respond
You use different types of verbal communication when
speaking to your friends, parents, and people with whom you
relate on the job.
When communicating with customers, remember the old saying,
“the customer is always right.
If you supervise others in the company, communicate with them
using the respect that is due to any worker.
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Using Your Speaking Skills
The best way to think something through is often to talk about
it with someone else—doubling the brainpower.
Talking or debating something is a great way to problem-solve
in the workplace.
Thinking critically about a difficult problem.
Take sides, debate, and solve the problem.
When debating a problem, strike a balance between caring too
much or too little about the topic.
To becoming a great speaker:
Know your audience.
Know what you are talking about.
Never stop learning! The greatest speakers are always learning.
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Developing Listening Skills
There is a big difference between hearing and actively
listening:
If you are involved with the words you hear, you are actively
listening; If the they go into in and out of your head, then you are
merely hearing.
Hearing is passive (something that happens to you); listening is
active (something you actually do).
Active listening is an important part of effective
communication. When you are an active listener, you pay
attention to the speaker and make sure you hear and
understand the message.
Listening is important to your career—the better you are at it,
the more successful you will be.
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Identifying Nonverbal
Communication
Sign language is just as powerful as spoken
language—You can communicate everything you would
with speech, without saying a word.
Body language can be either positive or negative.
You can also communicate is through visual aids, such
as pictures, graphs, or charts.
Some other ways you can communicate using positive
body language:
Chapter
Watch your posture.
Open arms communicate an open mind
Active hand gestures indicate active debate
Maintain adequate eye contact
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Body Language and
Graphical Representation
Negative body language can portray you as hostile,
combative, and unwilling. Here are some examples of
negative body language you should be wary of.
Avoid unnecessary movements
Avoid closed or folded arms
Don’t stare intently
Don’t signal that you’ve stopped paying attention
A graphical representation—conveying information
without words—can be a great way of communicating
ideas without saying them directly.
In your career, you might sometimes find that using visual
aids will be the most effective way to communicate.
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Recognizing Obstacles to
Communication
Differences in culture, values, and personal
characteristics can affect communication.
Being sensitive to communication obstacles, and being
able to avoid problems caused by miscommunication,
will make you a great candidate in any career field.
Diversity describes an environment which includes
variety, such as people of different ages, cultural
backgrounds, and race.
You can learn from people who are different from you,
because they can bring different perspectives to your
attention.
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Overcoming
Communication Barriers
Differences in communication can become obstacles to
effective communication, called communication barriers:
Language barriers
Cultural barriers
Gender barriers
Value/belief barriers
Recognize communication barriers, and try to overcome it.
Change your tone of voice to be more neutral or passive can
overcome the barrier.
Change your body language is another way to overcome a
communication barrier
Recognize value/belief barriers and figure out the common
ground and restart the conversation from there.
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Chapter Review
Reading and writing well will be essential to your career.
Mastering the art of verbal communication is a very
important part of getting the career you want.
When you actively listen, you pay attention to the speaker
and make sure you hear and understand the message.
Sign language is just as powerful as spoken language.
Negative body language can portray you as hostile,
combative, and unwilling.
You can also communicate is through visual aids, such as
pictures, graphs, or charts.
Differences in communication can become obstacles to
effective communication, called communication barriers.
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