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Test your basic knowledge |
Professional Communication Skills Vocab
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
soft-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Our public selves that make up who we want to be seen as
authoritarian leadership
utilitarianism
mindful communication
face
2. Just because you are not talking does not mean you are not sending a message. Name the basic proposition of communication that explains this concept
cognitive therapy
you cannot not communicate
attitudes
decoding
3. The substantive aspect of a message
low-context culture
dispositional communication anxiety
task leader
content
4. Audience members' likes and dislikes
jargon
fields
attitudes
receiver
5. The extent to which the message after transmission is similar to the message originally transmitted
learned helplessness
utilitarianism
values
fidelity
6. The general predisposition to avoid situations that require communication
self-interest
you cannot not communicate
communication apprehension
relationship
7. A leadership style in which the leader is hands-off and allows members to make decisions on their own
inadequate positive reinforcement
laissez-faire leadership
receiver
two-pizza team
8. A type of newspaper article - written either by editors of the newspapers or approved guest writers - that expresses an opinion rather than delivering neutral reports on the news
low cues
Editorial columns (opinions pieces)
affordances
direct quoting
9. Proactively and systematically gathering and reviewing information about those whom you will be presenting your message in an effort to increase presentation effectiveness
incremental plagiarism
message
cognitive therapy
audience analysis
10. What are the two levels/types of meaning every message transmits?
qualities that define communication
content and relationship
encoding
flexible intercultural communication
11. This theory of audience analysis argues that audience members have a variety of needs that range from physiological needs to self-actualization needs
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12. In postmodern ethics - the obligation to respond to the actions of others
receiver
responsibility
ethics
logos
13. Theory of the perfect team size according to Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos
two-pizza team
relationship
multiple submissions
labeling
14. The interplay between encoding and decoding messages
feedback
face
transactional leadership
edited books
15. One feature of many online communication technologies - particularly text-based. Communication and messages are logged or achieved in one or more places and can be accessed later
labeling
permanence of records
flexible intercultural communication
self-interest
16. Two or more people working together to produce a result they could not have produced on their own
audience analysis
nominal group technique
responsibility
synergy
17. An assumed name. In the case of mediated communication - this could be an email address - screen name - or the name of a video game character
listen
you cannot not communicate
pseudonym
low-context culture
18. Stage of the five-step - active-listening model involves answering and giving feedback.
situational anxiety
postmodern ethics
interpret
responding
19. Cultures that view conflict as natural and potentially positive
message
responding
low cues
weak uncertainty avoidance
20. When employers use internet searches and social networking sites to find out information or screen potential hires
beliefs
cybervetting
Editorial columns (opinions pieces)
self-interest
21. 'Learning' through experience that you can't change a situation
high-context culture
cognitive therapy
learned helplessness
permanence of records
22. A type of therapy that helps alleviate people's fears through directed conversation
cognitive therapy
relationship
plagiarism
disclosure
23. Many digital communication technologies - particularly text-based technologies - lack much of the information we have face-to-face interactions
punctuation
social loafing
low cues
strong uncertainty avoidance
24. The perspective that the ethical quality of an action is determined by the intentions and virtue of the actor
virtue ethics
jargon
audience adaptation
co-located
25. Modifying or changing the structure - design and/or delivery of your speech to your listeners to enhance message clarity - as well as making your examples and illustrations specifically applicable to your audience to help achieve and maintain audienc
audience adaptation
values
systematic desensitization
conflict of interest
26. Communicators who are located in physical proximity (such as the same room)
content
co-located
interpret
visualization
27. The organization style used for referencing citations in your actual presentation
oral citations
audience analysis
task leader
intercultural communication
28. Revealing personal or intimate information to an online audience
disclose
labeling
message
stage fright
29. Specialized and complicated terminology used by a particular discipline
groupthink
jargon
demographic profile
disclose
30. A response that shows you care about the person and value what they have to say
noise
least group size
confirming response
synergy
31. A therapeutic technique that helps people who are anxious reduce their fears by changing unrealistic beliefs to more realistic ones
interpret
culture
visualization
cognitive reconstructing
32. Those upon whom the ideas - feelings - information - e.g. the message - are presented
disclosure
shyness
audience
strong uncertainty avoidance
33. What audience members hold to be true or false
beliefs
feedback
demographics
virtue ethics
34. Ideas - feelings - information - and the like presented to an audience through a variety of methods as selected by the presenter - and preferably developed at all times with the audience in mind
responsibility
consensus
message
domain
35. Standards for behavior that people don't alter even when the situation warrants
ethical dilemma
rigid rules
encoding and decoding
ethics
36. Having multiple types of connections with another person in your group
incremental plagiarism
multiplexity
direct quoting
decoding
37. Communication that is not occurring in real-time
asynchronous
responsibility
listen
you cannot not communicate
38. Therapeutic technique that helps alleviate people's fear through directed conversation
advantages of working in teams
systematic desensitization
noise
cognitive therapy
39. Mediated communication that occurs with both participants attending message exchange in real-time
synchronous
least group size
mindful communication
pseudonym
40. Understanding that your personal opinions and preferences are only temporary - and you might change your mind if you heard a better idea
ethos
audience-centered presenter
provinsialism
social loafing
41. The changes in culture - the industrialization of work - the shift from villages to towns and cities - the rise of individualism - decline of community - and the technological advances that account for our present social situation
communication apprehension
globalization
psychographic profile
cognitive therapy
42. Communication is a process - the stimulation of meaning - and both verbal and nonverbal
qualities that define communication
visualization
cognitive therapy
relationship
43. Any condition that affects the fidelity of the message being sent (internal or external)
cognitive reconstructing
noise
virtue ethics
fields
44. If in an argument with a friend you may say something you regret but can't take it back
audience
utilitarianism
synchronous
communication is irreversible
45. A way of better understanding your audience by compiling attitudinal information relative to values - beliefs - and ideology of your audience
respond
logos
cybervetting
psychographic profile
46. Refers to audience members' general likes and dislikes in relation to particular subjects
understand
beliefs
remember
attitudes
47. The anxiety a person experiences when speaking in public
stage fright
feedback
domain
content
48. Hierarchical cultures where there is a clear chain of command and communication interactions are dependent on where one's position falls on the hierarchy
virtue ethics
remember
large-power distance
transformational leadership
49. This type of communication apprehension occurs only in particular - and typically stressful - contexts
situational anxiety
authoritarian leadership
interpret
factors that can increase stage fright
50. From the Greek word for 'the word;' it is translated as logic
least group size
globalization
audience analysis
logos