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Index of Links
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Communication Links
Culture 
A personal web site created to break the cultural stereotypes of the Japanese
Conflict Resolution 
Interpersonal
Global Concept of Love Beverly Fehr's complete list of attributes of the global concept of love. Hosted by the Social and Behavioral Sciences Center at the Institute for Community Networking of California State University-Monterey Bay
Listening
Active Listening Suggested skillbuiding from the Conflict Resolution Network on empathy and listening
Nonverbal 
Body language: In love, in sales, in culture, in animals
Verycomprehensive list of pages, researchers, experiments, etc.
Resumes and Interviews
Employment Opportunities Monster.com. Try punching in "communication" and see how many employment opportunities are available
Self, Perception, Attribution
Other Course Notes
Mark Klinger's notes on Social Psychology from the University of Alabama. Includes discussion of nonverbals, schema, & social perception
Teaching Resources
Teach With The Movies This site helps teachers and parents use a select group of beneficial feature length films to supplement curriculum. Learning Guides to more than 180 films describe the benefits of the movie, possible problems, helpful background, discussion questions, bridges to reading, classroom projects and links to the Internet.
Verbal Communication
Gender Studies Page The Voice of the Shuttle: Genter Studies Page. University of California. Contains a wealth of resources on gender
Subliminal Research 
 Research
Introduction to Statistics This page gives students a basic foundation for the meaning of statistical terms. (mean, median, mode, etc.)
 Speech Making
Tips on Introductions The Pennsylvania State University Department of Speech Communications. Tips on constructing memorable introduction and conclusions
Outline Tips Purdue University Online Writing Lab assists students in developing an effective outline. Sample outline available.
Vocabulary Builder Exercises to assist students who wish to build vocabulary or discover the impact of language in public address. University of Toronto.
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