Communication & Etiquette

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ACADEMIC SUCCESS PROGRAM Communication & Etiquette

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Academic Success Program: Communication & Etiquette

Transcript of Communication & Etiquette

Page 1: Communication & Etiquette

ACADEMIC SUCCESS PROGRAM

Communication & Etiquette

Page 2: Communication & Etiquette

Communication

Everything you do sends a certain message, verbal or non-verbal.

Sometimes the hardest thing about communicating is to feel comfortable starting.

Communication is one of the best things in life!

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Communicating with your professors

Communication with you professor can and should be: Respectful Well-timed Enjoyable

Use office hours if: If you have questions about how you are doing –

especially if you are behind or know you are going to miss a class for a legitimate reason

If you don’t understand class material You genuinely want to know more about the topics!

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Office Hours

Why going to office hours is a good idea:

One-on-one interaction can’t happen during class Lets your professor get to know you Shows that you care about the class and want to do

well The opportunity to make a personal connection! This

is someone you may want as a mentor, or could be someone who writes you a letter of recommendation in the future. Depending on your future goals, you could even become colleagues one day!

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Some Friendly Advice

Do Don’t

Come prepared: what do you want to discuss?

Ask specific questions

Be on time

Be polite and respectful

Come during office hours or make an appointment

Shake his/her hand

Ask vague or broad questions

Ask questions you could figure out yourself

Be late

Show up 5 minutes before they have to leave

Act like somebody owes you something

Be rude or demanding

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In-Class Communication

Everything you do is sending out some kind of message – including body language, such as:

Slumping in the seat, texting, using your lap top for Facebook (they can tell), not bringing a notebook, avoiding eye-contactPaying attention, taking notes, asking questions if you don’t understand

Professors participation

Etiquette You can speak your mind AND be polite at the same time

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Participation

Some reasons why participating is a good idea:

Participation is often up to 15-20% of your final grade It puts a name to the face It creates a good impression

But… Don’t just talk for the sake of talking

Aim to add valued points to the discussion

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Class Etiquette

No social media

No texting

No sleeping (DUH)

Don’t start packing your bags before your professor is done talking – this may not seem like a huge deal, but it is rude