The ________ stages of constructive conflict is marked by what Gottman calls agenda building
A) ?early
B) ?middle
C) ?later
D) ?exit
E) ?imaginary
B
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Sound argument and evidence are frequently combined with appeals to common values.
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
"Conflict serves the system in some way." What does this statement mean? How is this different than or similar to how you have perceived conflict up to this point?Sample ConversationDan: That was a blast!Sarah: (stony silence)Dan: (raising his voice) I SAID that was a great party!Sarah: I BET you had a good time. I'm sure the 17 women you danced with had a great time, too.Dan: Oh, I get it. You're pouting. Is that it-You're pouting, aren't you? Well, at least you're consistent, since that's what you were doing all night anyway.Sarah: I had to do SOMETHING while you were making a complete ass of yourself!Dan: Look who's talking. You're such a loser at parties. No wonder no one wants to dance with you.Sarah: I'm not a loser. I've told you a thousand times that parties like that aren't for
people like me, but you never listen. I don't like parties because you drink too much, and I can't stand your friends either. When you're with them, you make me totally miserable.Dan: At least I have some friends. You'd have some, too, if you didn't hang around Christine all the time. You're always on my case about how I screw everything up around the house. You think I'm an idiot.Sarah: How could you screw things up at the house-You're never home! You've been saying for 6 months that you're going to clean out the garage, but you never do. It's either fantasy baseball all summer or hunting every weekend in the fall.Dan: You know why I hunt all the time? Because the animals are more fun than you are. And they don't go looking for fights for no good reason.Sarah: This isn't a fight. It's a discussion. And I hardly went looking for it.Dan: Yeah, good one. And I bet you didn't pick out that $500 worth of clothes you've been hiding in the closet for the last week either.Sarah: Whatever. Let's just drop it. You're drunk. I should know better than to deal with you when you're like this.Dan: Now you want to drop it. You've been at me since we got in the car. You brought it up-let's talk about it. How, exactly, do you think we're going to pay for your little shopping spree? We haven't paid for the last one yet. Obviously, I'm not going to get any help from you, since you're the "struggling student" with no job.Sarah: How did you know about those clothes anyway? Besides, I was going to take them back on Monday.Dan: Christine told me.Sarah: WHAT!?!?!? You are such a jerk. And she's a real piece of work, that one, too. She's the one who said I should buy them in the first place.Dan: Maybe she just finds me a little more interesting than you. She probably felt sorry for you.Sarah: That's it. I'm done. I'm so over this. I'm getting my own apartment. What will be an ideal response?
When writers make errors, ______.
A. they make it harder for readers to trust them B. they don’t really do any damage to their reputations C. it has no effect on their publications D. readers rarely notice
Our ability to manage how we appear is called facework.
a. True b. False