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TB Contact Investigation Interviewing Skills Course

Day 3: Providing Feedback (13 slides)

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Slide Number508 Compliance Text 
1

(Title Slide). Providing Feedback

2

Why is Feedback Important?

  • Essential to an individual’s learning process
  • Provides the participant information about their performance they may not otherwise see
  • Gives the participant an opportunity to ask specifically how they can improve
  • Boosts confidence for someone who may not realize how good they really are!
3

Giving Feedback

It takes 8 - 9 positive comments to undo the damage of 

1 negative comment

[IMAGE: Nine bars with “Positive Comment” written on each bar with an “equal” sign next to one bar with “Negative Comment” written on it.]

4

Components of Constructive Feedback

  1. Actual behavior
  2. Descriptive
  3. Specific
  4. Nonjudgmental  
  5. Invites a response
5
  1. Actual Behavior

Comment on what the person does (behavior) and not what you think of them

6
  1. Be Descriptive

Use words that describe actions instead of

adjectives about the person

  • Appropriate: “I observed that you rarely paused while speaking”
  • Inappropriate: “You talk way too fast”
  • Appropriate: “I see you tend to keep your eyes on your notes”
  • Inappropriate: “You don’t seem very friendly”
7
  1. Be Specific
  • Aimed at concrete, specific, changeable, behaviors
  • Things which can be focused on:
    • Rate of speech
    • Use of jargon
    • Technique
    • Content
  • Things not to focus on:
    • Speech qualities (e.g., high pitch, accent)
    • Nervousness
    • Physical challenges
8
  1. Nonjudgmental
  • Use “I” statements – not “You…”
    • “I see you have another way of doing it…” vs. “Your technique is wrong.”
    • “I wish you projected more and made eye contact” vs. “You looked depressed.”

 

9
  1. Invite Response
  • How do you think you did?”
  • “Would you have done anything differently?”
10

Order of Feedback

  1. Start off positive: “I liked when…”
     –Emphasize strengths
     –Focus on unique contributions and creativity
     –Mention challenges that were handled well
  1. Transition into areas needing improvement (1-3)
     – State what the improvement could be
  • Example: “I think you have a very pleasant voice.  I wish you could project better so others can hear you.
  1. End with a summary and positive general statement
11

Receiving Feedback

  • Accept feedback without being defensive
  • Listen to comments without interrupting
  • Accept feedback with appreciation – feedback is not easy to provide
  • Request further clarification if needed
12

Concluding Thoughts

  • Everyone brings unique experiences to the interviewing process
  • Your peers are the best teachers you will have – value their feedback
13TB Interview Demonstration by Facilitators

[IMAGE: A woman and a man sitting in chairs and demonstrating a role play.]

 

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