Experience Communication meets students where they are by foregrounding the core principles of effective communication and encouraging practical applications across scenarios relevant to their everyday lives. Today's students are navigating a world in which most of their personal and professional in…
Kory Floyd presents a balance of theory and application in Public Speaking Matters, providing opportunities for students to put into practice what they just read. Public Speaking Matters teaches students that adapting to the context of the speech - including the cultural backgrounds of their listene…
Schultz/Harms: Connect Master: Business Communication is built on a foundation that delivers frameworks and patterns to empower students to think strategically about how to communicate effectively in the workplace. This digital course experience gives students actionable opportunities to move from r…
Now in its sixteenth edition, Effective Group Discussion combines the most recent research findings and practical tools students need to become productive group members. A variety of secondary groups are covered in the text: work groups, committees, task forces, self-directed work teams, and other s…
This book offers an essential evaluation model so that leadership coaches and stakeholders can demonstrate the impact of their coaching programmes, challenging current thinking that the return on investment from leadership coaching is too complex to measure. The book is both practical and strategica…
In Business Communication: Developing Leaders for a Networked World, Peter Cardon takes a practitioner and case-based approach to help students develop an understanding of how course content applies to the business world. The author stresses why credibility is essential to effective communication to…
How to Think about Weird Things is a concise and engaging text that offers students a step-by-step process by which to determine when a claim is likely to be true. Schick and Vaughn provide a course on critical thinking, with a focus on neither debunking nor advocating specific claims. Rather, t…