Sunday, March 31, 2013

Communication Assessment

I was very surprised that the two people that evaluated me coincide with their evaluation in the three areas.  They were coinciding with my own self-assessment, but the verbal aggressiveness.  I considered myself to be in the range of moderate, and they both considered that I was in the range of significant.  I never in the world thought that I was in that range so now I have to be more careful and how I respond to others.  Through this exercise,  I learned that is important how other perceive you as a communicator and that you are not always projecting what you think.

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Communicating Differently

Every day I communicate with people from different groups and culture.  As an early childhood professional, I communicate with children, families, and colleagues.  Also in my personal life I also communicate with different groups of people.  First my husband is from a different culture than mine, my son is from a different age group, my sister practices a different religion than me and my friends are all different.  One of the things I learned about communication and that I confirmed while studying this course is that listening is essential for effective communication, but also that you cannot communicate with everyone in the same way.  What I personally do is to learn people and talk to them how they want to be treated.  I was very surprised this week, when I learned about the Platinum Rule because I was practicing the Platinum Rule while communicating with others, but I did not even know that such of rule existed.  Besides the Platinum Rule,  I also communicate different when I am in my professional role.  When I am communicating with colleagues and parents my communication is always more serious, concise and  I use vocabulary related to my profession.  When I am, communicating with children my tone of voice changes I tend to be more soft and sweet when talking with children.  Then when talking with family and friends communication is more casual.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Competent Comunicator

The competent communicator I want to talk about is the person that inspired me to return to school to complete my M.S. degree in early childhood.  He is also a graduate student from Walden University.  I met him when he came to provide my program with training and technical assistance.  From the moment,  we sat on his training he was able to capture everyone’s attention.  It was not only his words that made everyone tuned into him, but his smile, his tone of voice, his whole demeanor.  In addition to that,  he was very well prepared; he was knowledgeable of the topic in discussion and very organized.  While he was doing the training occasionally, he was able to make people laugh.  I remember that some of the training attendees had limited English skills. When the training ended  some came to me and expressed that they were able to understand everything that he was teaching because he was calm and clear.  During the training session,  he allowed the teachers ask questions, and he was very concise and clear with his answers.  He was able to identify when people had a hard time understanding a concept that he was trying to explain.  What  he would do is rephrase his explanation or use other examples to ensure that the information the teachers were obtaining was accurate.  Also, that they understood the answer and/or the concept.  At the end of the training,  many people congratulated him on the training.  Teachers were very happy and pleased with his presentation.  I personally now been in other training events conducted by him, and I can testify that he always obtains the same results in his trainings.  Usually when he presents in conferences his room is always packed, and you have to rush from one room to his room to ensure that you make it on time to get a seat.

As an early childhood professional, I am interested in the area of training and professional development.  I am inspired by his work, and I plan to incorporate many of the communication techniques that I have observed on him, as well as, developing my own skills and tech

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Professional Hopes and Goals




One hope that you have when you think about working with children and families who come from diverse backgrounds
Working with children and families who come from diverse backgrounds is one of my passions.  My hope is that in, the future teachers, at all levels and administrators are better prepared to serve a diverse population.  Also, I hope that all families and children are respected and accepted as unique and that services are individualized to all families.  I hope to see the diversity topic included in all teachers’ degree programs around the United States, and also many opportunities for professional development in this area.

One goal you would like to set for the early childhood field related to issues of diversity, equity, and social justice
If I were going to set a goal related to issues of diversity; I would like to say that all early childhood teachers are trained and educated in this topic before they start working with children and families.  In many states such as Florida early childhood teachers regardless of their degree have to comply with certain training hours such as health and safety, developmentally appropriate practices, child abuse and state mandates.  I think that diversity can be included in this mandates.

A  Thank you note  to all my colleagues for taking the time to read my blogs and reply thoughtful messages.  I appreciated all your inspirational and motivational messages and replies.  I wish you all success in your up coming courses.