FNB2.FTU
FNB2.FTU
FNB2.FTU
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

FNB2.FTU

A place where you can share your hobbies, business ideas, or anything that you feel interesting...
 
HomeLatest imagesSearchRegisterLog in

Share
 

 CONFLICT STYLES

View previous topic View next topic Go down 
AuthorMessage
bong.nnh94



Posts : 5
Points : 17
Thanked : 0
Join date : 2014-04-21

CONFLICT STYLES Empty
PostSubject: CONFLICT STYLES   CONFLICT STYLES I_icon_minitimeMon Apr 21, 2014 8:36 pm

 
Conflict is often best understood by examining the consequences of various behaviors at moments in time. These behaviors are usefully categorized according to conflict styles. Each style is a way to meet one's needs in a dispute but may impact other people in different ways.

  1. Avoidance (or withdrawal) is a style characterized by denying the conflict, or being non committal, and withdrawing from the situation. Avoiding is a common response to the negative perception of conflict. "Perhaps if we don't bring it up, it will blow over," we say to ourselves. But, generally, all that happens is that feelings get pent up, views go unexpressed, and the conflict festers until it becomes too big to ignore. Like a cancer that may well have been cured if treated early, the conflict grows and spreads until it kills the relationship. Because needs and concerns go unexpressed, people are often confused, wondering what went wrong in a relationship.
  2. Competition (or dominating) is a style in which one's own needs are advocated over the needs of others. It relies on an aggressive style of communication, low regard for future relationships, and the exercise of coercive power. Those using a competitive style tend to seek control over a discussion, in both substance and ground rules. They fear that loss of such control will result in solutions that fail to meet their needs. Competing tends to result in responses that increase the level of threat.
  3. Compromising (or conceding) is an approach to conflict in which people gain and give in a series of tradeoffs. While satisfactory, compromise is generally not satisfying. We each remain shaped by our individual perceptions of our needs and don't necessarily understand the other side very well. We often retain a lack of trust and avoid risk-taking involved in more collaborative behaviors.
  4. Accommodating (or yielding) also known as smoothing, is the opposite of competing. Persons using this style yield their needs to those of others, trying to be diplomatic. They tend to allow the needs of the group to overwhelm their own, which may not ever be stated, as preserving the relationship is seen as most important.
  5. Collaborating (or integrating) is the pooling of individual needs and goals toward a common goal. Often called "win-win problem-solving," collaboration requires assertive communication and cooperation in order to achieve a better solution than either individual could have achieved alone. It offers the chance for consensus, the integration of needs, and the potential to exceed the "budget of possibilities" that previously limited our views of the conflict. It brings new time, energy, and ideas to resolve the dispute meaningfully. 
Back to top Go down
 

CONFLICT STYLES

View previous topic View next topic Back to top 
Page 1 of 1

 Similar topics

-
» Conflict and management styles
» Conflict classification
» Intercultural Conflict
» Conflict Management
» STAGES OF CONFLICT

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
FNB2.FTU :: KEY CONCEPTS OF INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION :: Group 6 - Intercultural Communication and Conflict Management-