Giving Advice Unhelpfully
In the Exchange publication, Hearing Everyone's Voice: Educating
Young Children for Peace and Democratic Community, editor Susan Hopkins
discusses how giving advice can provide a roadblock to open communications...
"Suggestions of solutions communicate to other people that you are superior
and they are inferior. It communicates lack of confidence in their ability
to work things out for themselves. It also encourages dependency and lack
of ability to think for oneself. This is true even when people ask for
advice. It is most helpful to support the person in discovering his/her
own best solutions through resources such as problem solving and experimenting.
"Logical arguments may follow giving advice. People seldom like to
be shown they are wrong. Often they will defend their position to the
bitter end and will end up learning nothing. Defensiveness, resentment,
and feelings of inadequacy are often the results.
"Interpreting, telling people what their problem is communicates that you
have things all figured out. This is threatening, frustrating, and insulting
and may bring about feelings of embarrassment, resentment, and anger. If
it is so easy for you to figure out, why couldn't they?
"Moralizing (shoulds, shouldn'ts, oughts, musts) make people feel that
their judgment is not to be trusted. Instead they always accept what others
say as right rather than evaluating for themselves."
Hearing Everyone's Voice is on sale this week as the Web Sale of
the Week. This week only, you can purchase this practical curriculum
guide at a 33% discount by going to http://mail.ccie.com/go/eed/0209
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