McGraw-Hill OnlineMcGraw-Hill Higher EducationLearning Center
Student Center | Instructor Center | Information Center | Home
Glossary
Small Groups Supersite
Bibliography Formats
Learning Objectives
Chapter Overview
Quiz
Crossword Puzzles
Flashcards
Internet Exercises
Recommended Links
Feedback
Help Center


Wilson: Groups in Context
Groups in Context: Leadership and Participation in Small Groups, 6/e
Gerald L. Wilson, University of South Alabama-Mobile

Communication Processes

Recommended Links

The site http://www.pertinent.com/pertinfo/business/exercises/SayltBetter.html helps you to "Say It Better in All That You Do.'' There is a 20-item quiz that asks you how well you know how to effectively communicate both verbally and nonverbally. The answers may surprise you. On a similar web page, http://www.pertinent.com/pertinfo/business/exercises/nonverbal.html, there is a brief true and false quiz that asks, "How well can you interpret nonverbal cues in communication?''

Students from the University of Massachusetts at Boston developed the site http://www.geocities.com/SouthBeach/Shores/2339/nonverbal.html. The page contains great links to other informative nonverbal websites, including a site about the history of nonverbal communication and a site that gives tips on how to improve your nonverbal skills.