Y12W21WR How men and women talk past each other
Examine Tannen’s communication patterns against your own cross-gender conversations, and reflect on where the patterns hold, where they don’t, and what the difference reveals.
1Retrieval check
Q1.What does Deborah Tannen’s research describe as different average purposes of conversation?
- AWork vs. leisure
- BStatus / independence vs. connection / inclusion
- CFact vs. feeling
- DFormal vs. informal
Q2.What is the article’s key caveat about these patterns?
- AThey don’t exist in modern relationships
- BThey are statistical averages — individual variation within gender usually exceeds average difference between genders
- CThey are universal and apply to every individual
- DThey only apply in professional settings
Show answer key
Q1 → B. Status / independence vs. connection / inclusion.Men’s and women’s conversation styles, on average, serve these different primary purposes.
Q2 → B. They are statistical averages — individual variation within gender usually exceeds average difference between genders.Recognising patterns helps interpret intent without assuming they define any individual.
2Prompt deconstruction
- Stimulus
- Tannen’s rapport vs. report distinction; the statistical-not-universal caveat.
- Scope
- Reference Tannen and the caveat; draw from your own conversations.
- Method
- Examine where patterns fit, where they don’t, and what the mix tells you.
- Thinking
- Honest calibration — avoid confirming stereotypes, stay analytical.
- Output
- Your specific social world mapped against Tannen’s patterns.
3Pick nudge
Which conversations will test where Tannen’s patterns hold or break?
4Planner — for each of your picks
5Sentence stems
- I noticed that ___ when ___.
- The specific moment it stood out was ___.
- Before paying attention, I had been assuming ___.
- [Researcher’s] finding that ___ captures what I saw, because ___.
- The pattern across my cases is ___.
- What this tells me about [wider topic] is ___.
6Exemplar paragraph (not about this article)
(1) I noticed that in a study-group conversation with three friends (two men, one woman), the women’s exchanges about a hard question ran longer and returned more often to ‘have I got this right?’, while the men’s exchanges resolved faster into ‘here is the answer’. The specific moment it stood out was that the woman solved the problem first but kept checking, while one of the men asserted a wrong answer with confidence and moved on. (2) Before paying attention, I had been assuming confidence and competence travelled together. (3) Tannen’s rapport-vs-report distinction captures part of what I saw, because the checking behaviour was a rapport move (co-constructing understanding) and the asserting was a report move (signalling status). (4) The pattern doesn’t fit universally, though: in a separate conversation with two different friends, the man was the one who checked his working repeatedly. (5) What the mix tells me about my social world is that Tannen’s patterns describe the average trajectory of many conversations I have been in but not any specific person’s fixed style. (6) What this tells me about reading competence is practical: confidence-of-assertion is a worse signal of being right than repeated-checking-then-commitment, and the cue I have been weighting is the weaker one.
What this paragraph does, move by move
- Names a specific conversation with enough detail to examine.
- Catches the false link between confidence and competence.
- Uses Tannen’s rapport-vs-report distinction precisely.
- Documents a clean counter-example.
- Distinguishes average trajectories from individual style.
- Ends with a competence-reading adjustment, not a gender claim.
Note on sensitivity: gender differences here are statistical averages, not universal rules, and individual variation within genders usually exceeds average between-gender differences. Keep observations analytical — describe patterns, don’t reinforce stereotypes about any person.
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