- Verbal and non-verbal feedback in active listening
- Distractions to the speaker
- Barriers to listening
- Proof that you are not listening
Category: SST Test MCQs
No. | Topics. | No. | Topics. |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Communication Skills | 2. | English |
3. | English Grammar | 4. | General science + Maths |
5. | GK Pak-studies+Islamiat | 6. | pedagogy |
- Providing feedback
- Asking clarifying questions
- Forming a response while the other person is still talking
- Maintaining eye contact
- Thinking about something else
- Attentive and engaged in the communication process
- Silent throughout the conversation
- Focused on finding faults in the speaker's argument
- Passive listening
- Selective listening
- Active listening
- Appreciative listening
- One-way process from teacher to student
- Two-way process involving active participation from both teacher and students
- Process that relies solely on written materials
- Process that should be minimized
- Make the lesson more complicated
- Reinforce verbal information and cater to visual learners
- Distract students from the main topic
- Replace the need for a teacher
- A formal lecture
- Encouraging student discussion and interaction
- Individual silent work
- A teacher-centered approach
- Make the lesson difficult to understand
- Maintain student engagement and interest
- Show nervousness
- Finish the curriculum faster
- Create a positive and encouraging learning environment
- Show that they are not listening
- Confuse the students
- Maintain a strict atmosphere
- Ignore the student completely
- Shout at the student in front of the class
- Address the behavior calmly and privately if possible
- Send the student out of the class immediately
- Be vague to encourage creativity
- Use complex and ambiguous language
- Provide clear, step-by-step, and verifiable instructions
- Assume all students already know what to do
- Test students' memory
- Encourage critical thinking and discussion
- Limit student participation
- Finish the lesson quickly
- Show disinterest
- Build rapport and hold their attention
- Intimidate the students
- Distract the teacher
- To use complex vocabulary to impress students
- To encourage a one-way flow of information
- To be clear, concise, and encourage student feedback
- To speak only in a monotone voice
- Physical
- Sociocultural
- Semantic
- Technical
- Physical
- Psychological
- Semantic
- Cultural
- Cultural barriers
- Physical barriers
- Listening barriers
- Language barriers
- Perceptual barrier
- Physical barrier
- Language barrier
- Technical barrier
- Emotional barrier
- Physical barrier
- Semantic barrier
- Language barrier
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