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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5-page paper discusses communication in young adults for the first time. It touches on the need for young people to learn how to communicate in a culturally diverse school or workplace; the meaning of speech codes and how they're used by the group; and touches on what parents can to keep lines of communication open for the departing youngster. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVLeave.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
a life of their own. They will face many difficulties, not least learning to function in a much larger world and communicating with a larger group of people.
Well examine some of the issues of communication in this paper. Leaving Home Whether they are leaving for college or simply moving out to "try their wings" with
a new job, young adults will be faced with learning to communicate with others who, in all probability, will be much different. Their fellow students or co-workers will come
from different cultures, different countries, and have different ways of looking at things. How will they cope? First, young adults need to learn respect for the viewpoints of others
(Lankard, 1994). Respect doesnt imply that a young person has to accept the others viewpoint, but he must do more than tolerate it (Lankard, 1994). He should try
to understand it, though he should be free to disagree; understanding doesnt imply approval (Lankard, 1994). Second, young adults in a diverse workplace or school setting need to learn
to communicate effectively, and can develop techniques for doing so (Lankard, 1994). First, they need to learn to separate "facts from cultural assumptions and beliefs about those facts"; they
need to learn to shift their perspective; and they need to differentiate "between personal discomfort and intellectual disagreement" (Lankard, 1994). Generally speaking, young people hold strong opinions, but often
those opinions are learned from their parents; it will be some time until they develop their own belief systems. They are often passionate about these beliefs, and so should
guard against overreacting when someone expresses a differing viewpoint. Young people also must realize that multiculturalism is becoming the norm, rather than the exception. Their success in school or
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