Examples of Understanding stage in the following topics:
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- The understanding stage is the stage during which the listener determines the context and meanings of the words that are heard.
- The second stage in the listening process is the understanding stage.
- This is the stage during which the listener determines the context and meanings of the words he or she hears.
- This, in turn, is essential to understanding a speaker's message.
- One tactic for better understanding a speaker's meaning is to ask questions.
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- Understanding the stages of business buying is important to a marketing firm if it is to market its product properly.
- The purchasing process is different in both cases and the following is a list of the stages involved in B2B buying:
- Results become feedback for other stages in future business purchasing decisions
- This 5 step process is mainly used with new-task purchases and several stages are used for modified rebuy and straight rebuy.
- Understanding the stages of business buying and the nature of customers' buying behavior is important to a marketing firm if it is to market its product properly.
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- One way to understand the family's impact on consumer behavior is to identify the decision maker for a purchase.
- Another aspect of understanding the impact of families on buying behavior is the family life cycle.
- Most, though certainly not all, individuals and families pass through an orderly sequence of life stages that can be used to understand their purchasing patterns.
- Consumer behavior and purchasing is different in each of these stages.
- Understanding the family life cycle is beneficial for marketers because it helps in defining target customers.
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- He divided his stages of moral understanding into three levels, each with two stages (creating a total of six stages) .
- Stage 1: Punishment and Obedience - In this stage, children find it hard to distinguish between two separate moral points of view, especially in a moral dilemma.
- Stage 2: Instrumental Purpose - In this stage, children start to understand people can have conflicting moral views in the same situation; however, they view the "right" choice as the choice that has the most benefit for themselves rather than others.
- Stage 4: Social-order maintenance - In this stage, a child begins to look at the bigger picture of the world and how rules impact it.
- Stage 5: Social contract - In this stage, children start to see the flexibility of rules and can imagine alternative situations.
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- The evaluating stage is the listening stage during which the listener critically assesses the information she's received from the speaker.
- This stage of the listening process is the one during which the listener assesses the information she's received, both qualitatively and quantitatively.
- The evaluating stage occurs most effectively once the listener fully understands what the speaker is trying to say.
- This stage of critical analysis is important for a listener in terms of how what she's heard will affect her own ideas, decisions, actions, and/or beliefs.
- Once we understand what we hear, we can focus in on the relevant information.
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- Each stage builds upon knowledge learned in the previous stage.
- Logical thinking is still not present, so children cannot rationalize or understand more complex ideas.
- The first child does not understand conservation (the principle that even though the appearance of substances may change, their key properties remain the same) and is likely in the preoperational stage.
- The second child understands conservation, demonstrating the concrete operational stage.
- The third child fails to show an understanding of conservation, and thus is likely still in the preoperational stage of cognitive development.
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- The stages are as follows:
- The sensorimotor stage is the first of the four stages in cognitive development that "extends from birth to the acquisition of language. " In this stage, infants construct an understanding of the world by coordinating experiences with physical actions–in other words, infants gain knowledge of the word from the physical actions they perform.
- The pre-operational stage is the second stage of cognitive development.
- The third stage is called the "concrete operational stage" and occurs approximately between the ages of 7 and 11 years.
- The final stage is known as the "formal operational stage" (adolescence and into adulthood).
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- The responding stage is when the listener provides verbal and/or nonverbal reactions to what she hears.
- During a training session, a new employee nods and says "okay" to indicate that she understand what her boss is telling her.
- The responding stage is the stage of the listening process wherein the listener provides verbal and/or nonverbal reactions based on short- or long-term memory.
- Following the remembering stage, a listener can respond to what she hears either verbally or non-verbally.
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- Sensorimotor Stage.
- Preoperational Stage.
- Concrete Operational Stage.
- Formal Operational Stage.
- The final stage involves an increase in logic, the ability to use deductive reasoning, and an understanding of abstract ideas.
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- The first stage of the listening process is the receiving stage, which involves hearing and attending.
- The first stage of the listening process is the receiving stage, which involves hearing and attending.
- Paired with hearing, attending is the other half of the receiving stage in the listening process.
- For instance, a train passenger that hears the captain's voice over the loudspeaker understands that the captain is speaking, then deciphers what the captain is saying despite other voices in the cabin.