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How to make yourself understood while wearing a face covering


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Speech and language expert Dr Abi Roper explains the best ways to communicate through a face covering.

 

Wearing a face mask has become part of our day-to-day lives.

 

But while they help stop the spread of coronavirus, they can make communication difficult.

 

Not being able to see someone's facial expression or fall back on lip reading can make everyday interactions harder than they normally are.

 

Sky News spoke to speech and language therapist Dr Abi Roper who offers eight tips on how to make yourself understood while wearing a face mask.

Face the person you are speaking to

 

Being able to see someone straight on will help with communication.

 

Be patient

 

Face masks put a strain on communication, so people may need more time to understand what you're saying.

Speak clearly and naturally

 

Avoid the temptation to raise your voice, shout or over-annunciate. This actually distorts speech in a way we're not use to hearing it.

 

Use body language

 

From your shoulders to your eyebrows - smile with your eyes - use emotion and feeling to help get your message across.

Point

 

Particularly useful in shops.

 

Enact

 

If you're referring to an object, the most useful type of gesture to describe it is to pretend you're using it. So if it's a banana, peel it, if it's a phone, pick it up.

Draw or write

 

This can be useful if speech with a mask proves too difficult.

 

Voice recognition

 

Most phones have free apps that will transcribe speech in case the other person can't understand you.

 

Dr Roper, who is a member of the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists, said: "We will always find a way of getting our message across, but face coverings slow things down in a way we're not used to.

 

"Wearing a mask will pose the biggest challenge for people who don't have any communication difficulties normally, because the world is pretty well set up for people to be able to communicate through speech alone."

 

Speaking with people you aren't familiar with and unpredictable situations will be the hardest interactions with a face mask, she added.

 

"My message is to learn from people with speech and language needs, because they are used to adapting and using other tools available to make themselves understood," she said.

source

 

have you seen the film Idiocracy (2006)

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