Deck 31: Genderlect Styles

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Question
Tannen says that, more than anything else, women seek:

A) control.
B) human understanding.
C) human connection.
D) status.
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Question
Tannen says that, more than anything else, men are concerned mainly with:

A) control.
B) human understanding.
C) human connection.
D) status.
Question
In her book Gendered Lives, Julia Wood draws upon research with children to highlight the different rules that girls and boys learn as they grow up. Identify a key rule that boys learn.

A) Use talk to solve problems or develop a strategy.
B) Involve others in conversations and respond to their ideas.
C) Use communication to create and maintain relationships.
D) Show sensitivity to others and to relationships.
Question
In her book Gendered Lives, Julia Wood draws upon research with children to highlight the different rules that girls and boys learn as they grow up. Which of the following is a key rule that girls learn?

A) Communicate to assert their ideas, opinions, and identity.
B) Use communication to create and maintain relationships.
C) Use talk to solve problems or develop a strategy.
D) Speak in a way that attracts attention to themselves.
Question
Women listening to a story or explanation tend to:

A) avoid eye contact so as not to embarrass the speaker.
B) offer head nods.
C) avoid putting themselves in a submissive stance.
D) avoid eye contact and offer head nods.
Question
In the context of a research study conducted by Deborah Tannen, identify a true statement about cooperative overlap.

A) From a woman's perspective, it is a sign of a competitive ploy to control conversations.
B) From a man's perspective, it is a way of putting himself in a submissive stance.
C) From a woman's perspective, it is a sign of rapport.
D) From a man's perspective, it is a way of annoying women during conversations.
Question
Women ask questions to:

A) solicit information.
B) establish a connection with others.
C) change the topic of a conversation.
D) show competence.
Question
When studying the interactions between moms and kids during a free-play session, Louise Cherry Wilkinson and her colleague Michael Lewis found that mothers of boys, unlike mothers of girls, ________.

A) talked more
B) used longer sentences
C) were more likely to use directives
D) were more likely to acknowledge their children's comments
Question
According to Tannen, the first step in overcoming destructive responses is to:

A) understand each other's style and the motives behind it.
B) learn to talk as the other gender.
C) alter the destructive communication pattern of males.
D) teach women to be more assertive and men to be more sensitive.
Question
Carol Gilligan's book In a Different Voice presents a theory of moral development claiming that women tend to think and speak in an ethical voice different from that of men. Gilligan is convinced that:

A) men's moral reasoning is more likely to reflect Martin Buber's call for genuine I-Thou relationships than Immanuel Kant's categorical imperative.
B) men base their ethical decisions on a strong sense of responsibility to prevent pain and alleviate suffering.
C) most men regard their ultimate ethical responsibility as one of "care."
D) most men seek autonomy and think of moral maturity in terms of "justice."
Question
Tannen claims that conversations between men and women reflect men's conscious efforts to dominate women.
Question
Tannen believes that male-female conversation is inherently cross-cultural communication.
Question
According to Julia Wood, girls learn to involve others in conversations while boys learn to use communication to assert their own ideas and draw attention to themselves.
Question
Tannen believes that both men and women are primarily interested in human connection.
Question
Women value report talk, whereas men value rapport talk.
Question
Tannen's research indicates that women talk less than men do in private conversations.
Question
Women tell more stories and jokes than men do.
Question
Deborah Tannen notes that when women state their opinions, they often tag them with a question at the end of the sentence.
Question
According to Tannen, women who verbally share problems with men are looking for the gift of understanding and they do not want advice.
Question
"Tag questions" soften the sting of potential disagreements that are likely to drive people apart.
Question
________ is defined as a term suggesting that masculine and feminine styles of discourse are best viewed as two distinct cultural dialects.
Question
When a woman who is listening starts to speak before the other person is finished, she usually does so to add a word of agreement, to show support, or to finish a sentence with what she thinks the speaker will say. Deborah Tannen labels this ________.
Question
A subjective standard ascribing validity to an idea when it resonates with one's personal experience is called ________.
Question
Compare and contrast the way men talk with the way women talk. Which is better? Why?
Question
Tannen does not believe that there is a male plot to dominate women. Do you agree or disagree with her?
Question
Does knowledge of Tannen's theory make us better or worse communicators? Explain briefly.
Question
In what way could Tannen's theory become self-fulfilling prophecy? Is this good or bad?
Question
What is Tannen's training/discipline? How does that impact her theory?
Question
How might Tannen critique Ting-Toomey's face-negotiation theory?
Question
Tannen claims that "male-female conversation is cross-cultural communication." If this is so, then the three theories presented in the intercultural section of this textbook should shed light on the ways in which men and women talk to each other. What do you think?
Question
If the two genderlects are truly equal, would Tannen favor any form of accommodation or divergence in keeping with Giles' assumptions about the need for inclusion or distinctiveness?
Question
Compare Tannen's approach to relational communication with that developed by Baxter and Montgomery.
Question
Do you believe that differences in gender has a greater impact on communication than differences in culture do?
Question
What might Mead and his followers have to say to Tannen?
Question
Do cultural factors complicate Tannen's findings? In other words, how might the interaction of culture with gender potentially challenge some of Tannen's conclusions? If possible, give an example from your experience, literature, or film to support your response.
Question
Based on Fisher's standards, does Tannen tell a good story regarding the communicative experiences of men and women?
Question
From Deborah Tannen's perspective, the desire for connection is a female trait. If this is the case, what other theories might be characteristically more feminine and what theories, where status is important, might be classified as masculine?
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Deck 31: Genderlect Styles
1
Tannen says that, more than anything else, women seek:

A) control.
B) human understanding.
C) human connection.
D) status.
C
2
Tannen says that, more than anything else, men are concerned mainly with:

A) control.
B) human understanding.
C) human connection.
D) status.
D
3
In her book Gendered Lives, Julia Wood draws upon research with children to highlight the different rules that girls and boys learn as they grow up. Identify a key rule that boys learn.

A) Use talk to solve problems or develop a strategy.
B) Involve others in conversations and respond to their ideas.
C) Use communication to create and maintain relationships.
D) Show sensitivity to others and to relationships.
A
4
In her book Gendered Lives, Julia Wood draws upon research with children to highlight the different rules that girls and boys learn as they grow up. Which of the following is a key rule that girls learn?

A) Communicate to assert their ideas, opinions, and identity.
B) Use communication to create and maintain relationships.
C) Use talk to solve problems or develop a strategy.
D) Speak in a way that attracts attention to themselves.
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Unlock for access to all 37 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
5
Women listening to a story or explanation tend to:

A) avoid eye contact so as not to embarrass the speaker.
B) offer head nods.
C) avoid putting themselves in a submissive stance.
D) avoid eye contact and offer head nods.
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Unlock for access to all 37 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
In the context of a research study conducted by Deborah Tannen, identify a true statement about cooperative overlap.

A) From a woman's perspective, it is a sign of a competitive ploy to control conversations.
B) From a man's perspective, it is a way of putting himself in a submissive stance.
C) From a woman's perspective, it is a sign of rapport.
D) From a man's perspective, it is a way of annoying women during conversations.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Women ask questions to:

A) solicit information.
B) establish a connection with others.
C) change the topic of a conversation.
D) show competence.
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Unlock for access to all 37 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
When studying the interactions between moms and kids during a free-play session, Louise Cherry Wilkinson and her colleague Michael Lewis found that mothers of boys, unlike mothers of girls, ________.

A) talked more
B) used longer sentences
C) were more likely to use directives
D) were more likely to acknowledge their children's comments
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 37 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
According to Tannen, the first step in overcoming destructive responses is to:

A) understand each other's style and the motives behind it.
B) learn to talk as the other gender.
C) alter the destructive communication pattern of males.
D) teach women to be more assertive and men to be more sensitive.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 37 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Carol Gilligan's book In a Different Voice presents a theory of moral development claiming that women tend to think and speak in an ethical voice different from that of men. Gilligan is convinced that:

A) men's moral reasoning is more likely to reflect Martin Buber's call for genuine I-Thou relationships than Immanuel Kant's categorical imperative.
B) men base their ethical decisions on a strong sense of responsibility to prevent pain and alleviate suffering.
C) most men regard their ultimate ethical responsibility as one of "care."
D) most men seek autonomy and think of moral maturity in terms of "justice."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 37 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Tannen claims that conversations between men and women reflect men's conscious efforts to dominate women.
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k this deck
12
Tannen believes that male-female conversation is inherently cross-cultural communication.
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k this deck
13
According to Julia Wood, girls learn to involve others in conversations while boys learn to use communication to assert their own ideas and draw attention to themselves.
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k this deck
14
Tannen believes that both men and women are primarily interested in human connection.
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15
Women value report talk, whereas men value rapport talk.
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16
Tannen's research indicates that women talk less than men do in private conversations.
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k this deck
17
Women tell more stories and jokes than men do.
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18
Deborah Tannen notes that when women state their opinions, they often tag them with a question at the end of the sentence.
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19
According to Tannen, women who verbally share problems with men are looking for the gift of understanding and they do not want advice.
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20
"Tag questions" soften the sting of potential disagreements that are likely to drive people apart.
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k this deck
21
________ is defined as a term suggesting that masculine and feminine styles of discourse are best viewed as two distinct cultural dialects.
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Unlock for access to all 37 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
When a woman who is listening starts to speak before the other person is finished, she usually does so to add a word of agreement, to show support, or to finish a sentence with what she thinks the speaker will say. Deborah Tannen labels this ________.
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k this deck
23
A subjective standard ascribing validity to an idea when it resonates with one's personal experience is called ________.
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k this deck
24
Compare and contrast the way men talk with the way women talk. Which is better? Why?
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25
Tannen does not believe that there is a male plot to dominate women. Do you agree or disagree with her?
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26
Does knowledge of Tannen's theory make us better or worse communicators? Explain briefly.
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k this deck
27
In what way could Tannen's theory become self-fulfilling prophecy? Is this good or bad?
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k this deck
28
What is Tannen's training/discipline? How does that impact her theory?
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k this deck
29
How might Tannen critique Ting-Toomey's face-negotiation theory?
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k this deck
30
Tannen claims that "male-female conversation is cross-cultural communication." If this is so, then the three theories presented in the intercultural section of this textbook should shed light on the ways in which men and women talk to each other. What do you think?
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Unlock for access to all 37 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
If the two genderlects are truly equal, would Tannen favor any form of accommodation or divergence in keeping with Giles' assumptions about the need for inclusion or distinctiveness?
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Unlock for access to all 37 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
32
Compare Tannen's approach to relational communication with that developed by Baxter and Montgomery.
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k this deck
33
Do you believe that differences in gender has a greater impact on communication than differences in culture do?
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34
What might Mead and his followers have to say to Tannen?
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35
Do cultural factors complicate Tannen's findings? In other words, how might the interaction of culture with gender potentially challenge some of Tannen's conclusions? If possible, give an example from your experience, literature, or film to support your response.
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36
Based on Fisher's standards, does Tannen tell a good story regarding the communicative experiences of men and women?
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37
From Deborah Tannen's perspective, the desire for connection is a female trait. If this is the case, what other theories might be characteristically more feminine and what theories, where status is important, might be classified as masculine?
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Unlock for access to all 37 flashcards in this deck.