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Understand

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Possible Answers:

SEE.

Last seen on: –Daily Boston Globe Crossword Thursday, 21 December 2023
Daily Boston Globe Crossword Sunday, 16 July 2023
NY Times Crossword 18 Mar 23, Saturday
The Atlantic Wednesday, March 15, 2023 Crossword Answers
USA Today Crossword – Oct 20 2022

Random information on the term “Understand”:

Active listening is the practice of preparing to listen, observing what verbal and non-verbal messages are being sent, and then providing appropriate feedback for the sake of showing attentiveness to the message being presented. This form of listening conveys a mutual understanding between speaker and listener. Speakers receive confirmation their point is coming across and listeners absorb more content and understanding by being engaged. Active listening was introduced by Carl Rogers and Richard Farson.

Carl Rogers and Richard Farson coined the term “active listening” in 1957 in a paper of the same title (reprinted in 1987 in the volume Communicating in Business Today). Practicing active listening also emphasized Rogers’ (1980) concept of three facilitative conditions for effective counseling; empathy, genuineness, and unconditional positive regard. Rogers and Farson write: “Active listening is an important way to bring about changes in people. Despite the popular notion that listening is a passive approach, clinical and research evidence clearly shows that sensitive listening is a most effective agent for individual personality change and group development. Listening brings about changes in peoples’ attitudes toward themselves and others; it also brings about changes in their basic values and personal philosophy. People who have been listened to in this new and special way become more emotionally mature, more open to their experiences, less defensive, more democratic, and less authoritarian.”

Understand on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “SEE”:

See is the sixth studio album by rock band The Rascals, released on December 15, 1969. It peaked at number 45 on the Billboard 200. Three singles were released from the album although the third one was “I Believe” (which was from Search and Nearness) b/w “Hold On”.

The album continued a trend towards album-oriented material authored and sung by Felix Cavaliere, begun with the band’s Freedom Suite album earlier in the year. As the 1960s ended, the Rascals were slipping down the charts and Eddie Brigati was soon to leave the group during the recording of their next release Search and Nearness, their final album for Atlantic Records.

Writing for Allmusic, critic Thom Jurek praised some of the individual tracks, but wrote of the album as a whole “… while See sounded more like an updated version of the Rascals of old, the consistency of attack wasn’t there and there are several simply dodgy cuts, making the album—as an album—a disappointment.” Village Voice critic Robert Christgau rated the album an A- and wrote “Admittedly, the Rascals have severe limitations, but so does rock itself, and this album apprehends and utilizes those limitations, with all of the annoying pretensions absent and the pleasant ones retained.” Rolling Stone critic Lenny Kaye wrote in his review “Sometimes one wonders if the Rascals wouldn’t be better off just making hit singles,” he mused in his review of See. “Given the space of an entire album, the group seems to founder about, coming up with material that is in some cases good, but more often simply innocuous. Their latest, See, falls within this tradition.”

SEE on Wikipedia

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