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[0.000 --> 7.100] Hello friends, my name is Jessica and I am an Asha certified speech and language |
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[7.100 --> 12.600] pathologist and I am obsessed with learning about all things social |
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[12.600 --> 17.200] communication. I am also obsessed with teaching others about them which is why |
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[17.200 --> 23.680] we're here on YouTube. Yay! So today I want to talk to you about non-verbal |
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[23.680 --> 30.920] communication. Nonverbal communication can be really tricky to teach. Most of us |
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[30.920 --> 36.920] have learned these skills naturally so identifying what they are and how to |
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[36.920 --> 40.600] break them down and teach them in a strategic way can actually be quite |
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[40.600 --> 45.720] challenging. So today we are going to talk about some ways that we can teach |
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[45.720 --> 53.440] our students about nonverbal communication and nonverbal language. |
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[53.680 --> 60.160] Now first I'm going to talk to you a little bit about nonverbal communication. |
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[60.160 --> 67.680] There are seven or eight-ish types of nonverbal communication. They are facial |
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[67.680 --> 81.280] expressions, body language, gestures, tone of voice, touch, eye contact and personal |
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[81.280 --> 87.360] space. Okay, you like those gestures? I just made them up on the fly. Alright, so |
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[87.360 --> 91.520] those are the seven areas of nonverbal communication. I said eight because |
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[91.520 --> 97.280] personal hygiene or personal appearance, sorry, can also be considered a type of |
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[97.280 --> 102.160] nonverbal communication. How we are choosing to appear physically does communicate |
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[102.160 --> 107.960] a lot about us. Okay, so let's break this down a minute and now you know the |
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[107.960 --> 111.920] different kinds of nonverbal communication. Let's talk about what nonverbal |
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[111.920 --> 118.160] communication is. It is any kind of communication that occurs without words. It is |
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[118.160 --> 123.920] not verbal, right? See how that works. So like I said, it includes the following |
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[123.920 --> 129.480] areas, facial expressions, body language, gestures, tone of voice, touch, eye |
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[129.480 --> 134.840] contact, personal space and physical appearance if you want to include that. It is |
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[134.840 --> 141.400] very common for individuals to struggle with nonverbal communication. If your |
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[141.400 --> 146.080] child has been diagnosed with autism, that means or your student, that means that |
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[146.080 --> 151.020] they have some trouble understanding and using nonverbal communication. So the |
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[151.020 --> 156.520] skill is extremely important to teach and learn because learning how to |
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[156.520 --> 162.080] understand nonverbal communication helps us to interact socially with others and |
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[162.080 --> 167.840] it helps us to communicate better with others. Okay, so now we're going to break |
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[167.840 --> 174.720] down each of the seven or eight sections of nonverbal communication. We're |
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[174.720 --> 177.960] going to break them down. We're going to talk about them. We're going to define |
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[177.960 --> 182.360] them and I'm going to give you some ideas on how you can teach your student to |
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[182.360 --> 187.220] understand each of these different kinds of nonverbal communication. So the |
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[187.220 --> 191.200] first one we're going to talk about is facial expressions. I am looking off my |
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[191.200 --> 194.700] computer if you keep seeing my eyes start away. I just full disclosure. I need my |
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[194.700 --> 200.800] notes because I want this to be good and helpful for you and I can't do that if |
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[200.800 --> 207.440] I'm doing this all my memory. So I hope you understand. Also, before we dive in |
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[207.440 --> 212.120] and I go any further, thank you for being here. Thank you for taking the time to |
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[212.120 --> 216.720] learn something new that will hopefully help you teach your students a skill |
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[216.720 --> 221.480] that they're struggling with. That is just absolutely awesome and amazing and |
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[221.480 --> 225.280] I thank you for choosing to spend your time with me. So before I go any further, |
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[225.280 --> 228.480] if you've not already gotten something to take notes with, I would really |
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[228.480 --> 233.640] recommend getting some pen and some paper and jotting down some things to |
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[233.640 --> 237.200] help you remember what we're talking about. Okay, so let's jump in. The first |
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[237.200 --> 243.960] type of nonverbal communication we're going to talk about is facial expressions. |
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[244.640 --> 253.120] Right? There are six main facial expressions that people make. Now each facial |
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[253.120 --> 261.400] expression is related to an emotion. Each type of facial expression has a very |
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[261.400 --> 267.000] specific characteristics. They will help you know what emotion the person is |
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[267.000 --> 271.960] feeling. Okay, so let's think about this. We're gonna break it down a little bit |
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[271.960 --> 279.200] more. There are six types of facial expressions. Happy, sad, angry, fear, |
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[279.200 --> 286.120] disgust, and surprised. Scientists tell us that these are the basic emotions |
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[286.120 --> 294.560] that we all experience. Every other emotion is a root or a different form of |
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[294.560 --> 301.360] these basic emotions. So our facial expressions, we can say we're happy. |
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[301.360 --> 314.280] We're sad, angry, scared, disgusted. We're surprised. Okay, each of these six |
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[314.280 --> 321.840] basic emotions have very distinct characteristics of the face. Okay, so going |
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[321.840 --> 329.880] back through them. When you feel happy, you have a wide smile and open now. You |
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[329.880 --> 335.720] can see that some teeth. You can see wrinkles around the eyes and the cheeks |
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[335.720 --> 343.720] are raised and the eyes are slightly slightly squinted. Did you see all this in my |
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[343.720 --> 349.080] face? Can you see them? Can you see my wrinkles? My high raised cheeks. My teeth |
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[349.080 --> 356.560] are my smile. I'm happy. I'm happy to be here. So that is happy. Second facial |
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[356.560 --> 364.480] expression that we can see is sad. Okay, the corners of the lips point it down. |
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[364.480 --> 373.600] The inner eyebrows are raised up. My eyebrows apparently don't move like that. |
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[374.680 --> 382.600] But you know what's that face when you see one. Okay, next, angry. There's tension in |
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[382.600 --> 389.000] the face. There's these closed, V-shaped eyebrows. The mouth, if the mouth is open, |
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[389.000 --> 395.800] it's square shaped. Square shaped, if you couldn't understand that. If the mouth is |
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[395.800 --> 402.800] closed, there's tightness in the chin and jaws. Do you see all those characteristics? |
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[403.760 --> 412.640] Alright, fear. Slanted and raised eyebrows. Eyes are open very wide. |
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[414.560 --> 420.000] Just saw a bug crawl across my table. I don't know. Right? You know what fear looks like. |
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[421.040 --> 428.320] Disgust. A wrinkled nose. Lowered eyebrows. The mouth is tight and curved downward in the upper |
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[428.320 --> 436.800] lips go up. Big one across my table. Yeah, I bug really didn't go across my table just now. |
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[436.800 --> 443.680] I'm just using that as an example. And last is surprised. Raised and curved eyebrows. |
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[443.680 --> 449.120] Horizontal wrinkles on the forehead. Open lips. Dropped jaw. Eyes open wide. |
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[449.120 --> 458.480] You see my wrinkles? Horizontal? Eyes? mouth? I have a surprised face. So like I said, |
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[458.480 --> 466.720] I start by teaching my students these physical characteristics to look for when trying to interpret |
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[466.720 --> 475.440] a facial expression. Now an interesting tip is students with autism. We know that they struggle with |
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[475.840 --> 481.040] eye contact. So part of the reason that they struggle with understanding emotions is because |
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[481.040 --> 488.080] they are focusing on this lower third of the face. So a lot of these cues, like we talked about |
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[488.080 --> 494.800] the horizontal wrinkles. This wrinkles around my eyes. Those are occurring in the top third of my face. |
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[494.800 --> 501.360] So a child or individual who does not focus on this top third is missing a lot of cues that's |
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[501.360 --> 508.560] going to help them learn to read and understand facial expressions. So to teach facial expressions, |
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[508.560 --> 515.440] to teach my students how to understand them, we again, I go over each of those definitions, |
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[515.440 --> 522.560] model them like I did for you. And they try and draw them so that they're having, you know, |
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[522.560 --> 527.680] an interactive process. And then we'll probably look at maybe some video clips or some pictures |
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[527.680 --> 535.280] or things to talk about those basic facial expressions. Again, really focus on this top third of |
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[535.280 --> 540.880] the face because we're getting a lot of cues there that if a child is not looking at somebody's |
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[540.880 --> 546.000] eyes or their top third of the face, they're going to miss those cues. Now we know there are more |
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[546.000 --> 554.080] emotions beyond happy, sad, mad, disgust, surprised, and angry. But we talk about these different |
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[554.080 --> 560.720] more complex emotions and how the same facial expressions are generally going to be used to convey |
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[560.720 --> 567.840] those complex emotions. So what we will do is we will, I'll give them a list of say, of some words. |
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[567.840 --> 579.680] For example, nervous, satisfied, amused, annoyed, love, revulsion. We're going to target, first of all, |
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[579.680 --> 586.240] some really good vocabulary words. But we're going to talk about what basic emotion these complex |
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[586.240 --> 593.600] emotions are the most like. And then talk about kind of how the face is going to model those similar |
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[594.320 --> 602.720] facial expressions for the complex emotions as they do the basic emotions. All right, gestures. |
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[603.680 --> 609.680] Gestures are movements that we make with our bodies that are used to communicate a message. |
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[610.240 --> 616.080] We miss frequently, use our hands to gesture, but other parts of the bodies can be used as well. |
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[617.280 --> 623.600] Now, there are three types of gestures. Gestures that indicate nervousness such as |
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[623.600 --> 631.840] fidgeting with objects or my personal is playing with my hair. Gestures with a specific meaning, |
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[631.840 --> 636.880] such as a thumbs up. We know that means good job. It has a meaning. And gestures that go with a |
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[636.880 --> 641.280] verbal message, such as me, using my hands as I'm talking and telling you a story. |
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[642.800 --> 648.640] So when I'm teaching these, I focus mostly on teaching gestures with a specific meaning. |
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[648.640 --> 655.920] Think of these like gestures as a vocabulary word. We will talk about different kinds of gestures, |
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[655.920 --> 660.640] and then we will define it. For example, we will talk about the beckoning gesture. |
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[662.320 --> 666.720] And we'll talk about what it means. It means come here. We'll talk about the talking gesture. |
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[669.120 --> 674.640] What does that mean? She's talking and she needs to be quiet and tired of it. Or we'll talk about a |
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[674.640 --> 681.280] fist bump. Or we'll talk about the hitchhiking thumb. How that's different than a thumbs up. |
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[681.600 --> 687.520] Right? Gestures like vocabulary words. We teach gestures and I teach their meanings so that my |
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[687.520 --> 692.720] students are able to see someone using a gesture and define it like they would have a vocabulary word. |
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[694.880 --> 699.840] In my nonverbal communication teaching guide, I have a whole list of different gestures |
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[701.520 --> 707.040] that you can use to know some gestures to teach. You can also find lists on the internet |
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[707.120 --> 713.280] if you're wanting to kind of DIY it yourself. All right, move and write along to touch. I believe |
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[713.280 --> 720.640] that was my gesture I used in the beginning. Touching someone is when you physically touch |
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[720.640 --> 728.560] another person. There are four different kinds of touching. There's actually five, but one of them |
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[728.560 --> 735.520] is inappropriate, so we're not going to talk about it here. There are four different kinds of touch. |
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[735.760 --> 746.480] Functional professional. Social polite, friendship, warmth, and love intimacy. Okay, let's talk about |
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[746.480 --> 753.760] what each of these are. A functional professional touch is the touching that occurs when a professional |
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[753.760 --> 759.520] must touch you to do his or her job. For example, the dentist has to touch your mouth. The hair lady |
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[759.520 --> 766.000] has to touch my hair. It's professional. I'm expecting her to touch me and she's doing it to do |
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[766.000 --> 774.000] her job. Second one is social polite, and this is touching that occurs in social routines. They're |
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[774.000 --> 783.200] usually very brief and they, let's see, sorry, I lost my spot. And they include things like a hand |
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[783.200 --> 788.160] shake, a pad on the back, or a quick side hug. They're not going to last very long. We're just being |
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[788.160 --> 793.360] polite. I'm going to shake your hand and then we're done touching. Number three is friendship or |
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[793.360 --> 798.000] warmth, and this is touching that occurs between two people who are familiar with one another. |
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[799.840 --> 805.840] Now, when you teach this or you know, you need to be very careful because this type of touch can |
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[805.840 --> 811.920] easily be confused with the next type, which is love intimacy. So you need to make sure that your |
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[811.920 --> 817.920] level of touch in this stage matches your partner so that you don't make that other person uncomfortable, |
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[817.920 --> 823.040] or you need to teach your student to make sure their level of touch matches their partners so |
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[823.040 --> 830.160] they don't make somebody uncomfortable. So friendship, warmth touching includes things like longer hugs, |
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[830.160 --> 836.720] putting your arms around the shoulders of somebody, or holding hands. Well, holding hands can |
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[836.720 --> 842.800] also be in love intimacy. So if you're a good friend, you might give them a longer hug, but if I hug |
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[842.800 --> 849.040] you it too long, now I'm thinking, well, are we friends? Or is this like you being intimate with me? |
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[849.760 --> 858.080] So it's kind of that in between a social polite and intimacy. So the fourth one is love intimacy, |
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[858.080 --> 865.680] and this occurs between two people who are very close. This includes family, very close friends, |
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[865.680 --> 873.440] and significant others. You need to teach your students to be very careful to use these touches |
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[873.440 --> 878.800] with the appropriate people. Holding hands and touching someone's hair and cuddling are all |
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[878.800 --> 884.400] examples of love intimacy touching. So to teach this kind of nonverbal communication touch, |
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[885.520 --> 892.480] we just make a graph and we talk about different, you know, I label, I make four different squares. |
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[892.480 --> 896.880] One is functional professional, one is social polite, friendship warmth and love intimacy, |
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[896.880 --> 902.240] and we make a list of the people who I would expect a functional professional touch with, |
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[902.240 --> 907.920] who I could expect a love intimacy touch with, who would be a good person to use friendship |
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[907.920 --> 913.520] warmth touch with, who should I use a social polite touch with. So we just sort people that we know |
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[913.520 --> 921.840] into the different categories of appropriate ways to touch them. Okay, next nonverbal communication |
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[921.840 --> 932.480] is proximics, aka personal space. So if somebody is too close to you, they're in your personal space, |
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[932.480 --> 939.440] and that's a type of nonverbal communication. Now, there are different kinds. There is a |
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[942.480 --> 950.640] scientific formula for what is appropriate as far as proximics goes. So proximics commonly called |
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[950.640 --> 957.680] personal space is the distance between you and another person. There are four levels intimate space, |
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[959.200 --> 965.280] personal space, social space, and public space. So we'll start from the middle and we'll work our |
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[965.280 --> 974.080] way out. Intimate space is anything that goes from touching your body to about 18 inches from |
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[974.080 --> 980.080] yourself. This is the space where you allow people with whom you are very close. So this could be |
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[980.080 --> 985.920] very close family members, very close friends, and significant others are probably the only people |
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[985.920 --> 994.000] you will allow in this space. Personal space is about 18 inches to four feet from your body. We will |
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[994.000 --> 1001.200] often allow friends and people we like in this space. Moving out again, we have social space. This |
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[1001.200 --> 1007.200] is four to ten feet from your body. This space is for people we don't know well, or for people with |
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[1007.200 --> 1014.480] whom we have no close relationship. Then last, the biggest ring is public space, which is what it |
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[1014.480 --> 1020.400] sounds like. Anything beyond ten feet from your body, where the rest of the public is, it contains |
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[1020.400 --> 1026.560] strangers and people who are not comfortable with. So this is important because it lets us know how close |
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[1026.560 --> 1032.720] it's appropriate to be to other people. And like I said, if somebody gets too close to me, that makes me |
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[1032.720 --> 1038.080] really uncomfortable if you're not one of my intimate people. At the same time, if you're |
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[1038.080 --> 1044.240] away out here in public space, but I think we're buds, that feels a little off to me too. So to teach |
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[1044.240 --> 1050.240] this, while I teach my students about these definitions, and then I like to get like masking tape, |
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[1050.240 --> 1057.360] and we measure this out on the ground to give an idea of what these spaces look like visually. |
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[1058.320 --> 1064.640] And then we'll do kind of that same activity that we did before, where we'll get the four squares, |
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[1064.640 --> 1071.680] and we will say, who are some people that I would allow in my intimate space? Who are some people I |
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[1071.680 --> 1076.480] would allow in my personal space? Who are people that might be in my social space? And who are some |
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[1076.480 --> 1083.760] people who would be in my public space? And we just think about our space and our personal space |
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[1083.840 --> 1090.800] and how we're sharing it and where people should be within that space. Okay, the next type of |
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[1090.800 --> 1098.160] nonverbal communication is whole body language. Our body language is the way we position our head |
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[1098.160 --> 1103.600] and our body to send a message to the people around us. When we tilt our head to the side, it means |
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[1103.600 --> 1109.600] I'm interested in what you're saying to me. If we lower our head, it means we're probably unhappy. |
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[1109.680 --> 1114.320] If our head stays upright, it means we're happy and we're in a good mood, or we're in a neutral |
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[1114.320 --> 1120.080] mood that is neither happy nor unhappy. If we lean our body towards someone, it means we're interested |
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[1120.080 --> 1124.800] in what they have to say. And if we pull our body away from them, it means we're not comfortable |
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[1124.800 --> 1130.400] speaking to that person or that maybe we don't like them. If you sit with an open posture like I am |
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[1130.400 --> 1136.720] now, then it comes across as very welcoming and friendly. If you close yourself up and you sit in |
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[1136.720 --> 1143.040] the closed posture, then that is closed off. It's not as welcoming and it doesn't look as friendly. |
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[1144.240 --> 1150.800] So body language is also usually used with gestures and facial expressions and tone of |
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[1150.800 --> 1156.080] waves. All kind of combined together to give you a clue as to what the other person is thinking. |
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[1156.720 --> 1165.120] So to teach this skill, I will use video clips or maybe look at pictures from a book and I will |
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[1165.120 --> 1172.160] not do the audio if I can. Like if it's some of the Disney shorts are really good for not having |
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[1172.160 --> 1178.720] audio and you can just look at the body language. But we'll look at the picture or the video clip |
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[1178.720 --> 1183.040] and we'll describe the body language of the person that's in it. And then we'll talk about what |
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[1183.040 --> 1188.160] do we think that body language is communicating. And we'll do that three or four times. |
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[1188.880 --> 1197.520] Okay, the next type of nonverbal communication is vocalics which we commonly refer to as tone of |
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[1197.520 --> 1207.840] voice. This is how we use our voice, not our words, but our voice to convey a message. So think of |
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[1207.840 --> 1213.680] the tone of voice as the background to your words. Your tone of voice is going to change a lot |
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[1213.760 --> 1218.640] based on different situations. For example, you would use a different tone of voice at a football |
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[1218.640 --> 1224.000] game than you would in a nice restaurant. Your voice might also sound different in different |
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[1224.000 --> 1229.040] contexts when your emotions are changing. For example, your voice sounds different when you're |
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[1229.040 --> 1235.520] nervous versus in a situation where you're comfortable. And it's important to consider the context |
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[1235.520 --> 1239.440] each situation when trying to understand the meaning of someone's voice. |
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[1242.400 --> 1248.880] Vocal expression is also usually tied to facial expressions. They go hand in hand. So this means if |
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[1248.880 --> 1256.400] somebody's face looks sad, their voice probably sounds sad too. So what I tell my students is if |
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[1256.400 --> 1261.520] they have a hard time understanding the tone of voice to also pay attention to the facial expressions |
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[1261.680 --> 1265.680] and the body language, to give them clues as to how the other person is feeling. |
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[1267.840 --> 1274.560] Okay, so to teach vocalics or tone of voice, what I will do is I will give my students a context |
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[1274.560 --> 1281.840] and a facial expression and words. And then they will practice using different tones of voice |
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[1281.840 --> 1289.280] to say that word. So for example, the context could be your brother or sister borrowed your shirt |
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[1289.280 --> 1293.120] and gave it back with a stain on it. The facial expression would be angry and the words would be |
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[1293.120 --> 1301.120] thank you. Thank you. Same words, thank you. This time your mom gave you broccoli for dinner. You hate |
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[1301.120 --> 1309.600] broccoli. Thank you. Same words again. Thank you. Your dad surprised you with a new phone. Thank you. |
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[1311.840 --> 1316.160] Thank you again. Someone hands you a tissue after you've been crying. Thank you. |
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[1317.040 --> 1322.960] So this talks about how different situations and different scenarios are going to sound |
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[1322.960 --> 1327.760] different with different tone of voice even though the words might be exactly the same. Okay, now I |
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[1327.760 --> 1333.600] would be remiss to not talk about eye contact when we're talking about types of nonverbal communication. |
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[1333.600 --> 1339.680] Okay, understanding eye contact will help our students become better nonverbal communicators. |
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[1340.560 --> 1345.520] Remember how I talked about most of our students with autism focus on the lower two thirds of the |
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[1345.520 --> 1353.360] base. A lot is going on in these upper and is upper third. So teaching them why eye contact is |
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[1353.360 --> 1358.800] important or at least why looking at this upper area is important is going to help them become a |
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[1358.800 --> 1364.480] better nonverbal communicator. It also helps with connection and helps us to connect with others |
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[1364.480 --> 1369.680] and feel closer and it helps others feel closer to us. So I explain all of those things when I'm talking |
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[1369.680 --> 1376.240] about eye contact. The last one that we talked about is physical appearance. I again just kind |
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[1376.240 --> 1382.160] of briefly touch on this. I explain what physical appearance is and how sometimes some things in your |
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[1382.160 --> 1389.040] physical appearance you can change and some things you can't. So we talk about how when you change |
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[1389.040 --> 1395.600] your hair color or well, okay, some things like your height and your weight and your natural |
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[1395.600 --> 1400.320] hair color are things you cannot change. But you can change things like how you dress and the |
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[1400.320 --> 1405.920] accessories, how you groom yourself if you wash your hair if you cut your nails, that affects what |
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[1405.920 --> 1411.520] people think about you. So if I come in and my hair is clean and my nails are done, people are going |
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[1411.520 --> 1416.880] to think I'm a clean person. If I come in and I haven't washed my hair in a week and my nails are |
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[1416.880 --> 1422.720] long and dirty, that's going to affect how people think of me. Also how you know we pick our clothes |
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[1422.720 --> 1428.320] based on the type of image we want to portray. I, you know, am trying to choose something |
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[1429.200 --> 1433.600] professional looking as I'm talking to you and I'm not wearing my workout clothes that I usually |
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[1433.600 --> 1438.320] wear all day long because I want you to think of me as a professional and somebody who knows |
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[1438.320 --> 1443.040] what I'm talking about. So physical appearance is a type of nonverbal communication. |
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[1444.800 --> 1449.360] So I hope you learned some new things about nonverbal communication. I hope you have a better |
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[1449.360 --> 1454.880] understanding about what it is, what makes up nonverbal communication. I hope you got some ideas |
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[1454.880 --> 1459.280] on things you can use to teach your kids how to be better nonverbal communicators. |
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[1461.200 --> 1469.360] Now I know that this was a lot of information and I have created a resource, a teaching guide |
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[1469.360 --> 1475.520] that I would love for you to have that walks you through teaching these different types of |
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[1475.520 --> 1481.520] nonverbal communication. I literally was reading off of it today as I was going over it with you |
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[1481.520 --> 1486.640] so you can know what is in it and it's going to give you some words to help you teach. |
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[1487.680 --> 1493.840] It's going to give you some visuals, it's going to give you a strategy and a place to start and |
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[1493.840 --> 1499.520] it's going to help you teach these skills in a really strategic way. So if you're interested in |
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[1500.160 --> 1506.800] purchasing this from me there is a link in the description below. Additionally, I have a whole bundle |
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[1506.800 --> 1513.360] of teaching guides that teach social communication skills. This is included in it and all of my |
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[1513.360 --> 1518.640] teaching guides are included in it. So it helps you, it's full of guides that help you teach things |
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[1518.640 --> 1523.920] like taking someone's perspective, code switching, power relationships, conversation skills, |
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[1523.920 --> 1531.440] friendship making skills. I have teaching guides to help you teach these skills to your students. |
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[1531.440 --> 1538.560] So there's a link for that in the description below as well. Thank you again, thank you for taking |
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[1538.560 --> 1542.800] your time to spend with me. Thank you for taking the time to learn something new. I hope you found |
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[1542.800 --> 1547.920] it helpful. If you'd like to keep getting videos like this or knowing when some new ones come out, |
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[1547.920 --> 1552.960] click subscribe and be a part of our community. Thanks! |
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