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91 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Three keys to Nuclear surety.
What is Safety, Security, Reliability?
The FAIR way.
What is Giving Feedback, Offering Assistance, Assuring Inclusion, Giving Respect?
Five characteristics a Diversity-Supportive Organization have.
Hint: (METAL)
What is Main stream diversity, Encourage ownership, Think inclusively, Act proactively, Leadership-driven
Three Os
What is Owing, Order, Ought?
Three Ps
What is Principle, Purpose, People?
Three Rs
What is Rules, Reality, Results?
Three Ds
What is Discern, Declare, Do?
List some Ethical Traps.
What is assumption, stereotypes, social bias, perceptions, perspectives, collusion, prejudices, discrimination?
Accurate, Brief, Specific
What are bullets?
2 types of feedback a supervisor will give to subordinates.
What is Preventative and Rehabilitative?
4 Dimensions of wellness.
What is Physical, Emotional, Spiritual, Social?
ACE
What is Ask, Care, Escort?
Three steps for dealing with substance abuse as a supervisor.
What is Observe, Document, Report?
The ability to bounce back.
What is Resiliency?
The two types of stress.
What is Eustress and Distress?
The most powerful or the most widely practiced cultures in a particular society.
What is Macro-cultures?
A cognitive “shortcut” that helps us organize and interpret the vast amount of information; a complex mental diagram.
What is Schema?
Parts of our schemas for particular concepts.
What are Symbols?
The ability to quickly and accurately comprehend, and then effectively act in a culturally complex environment to achieve the desired effect without necessarily having prior exposure to a particular group, region, or language.
What is Culture General?
Ability to interact more competently with individuals of other cultural backgrounds.
What is Culture Specific?
Begins with an understanding of basic concepts of a culture.
What is Cultural-General Knowledge?
The ability to express one‘s own strengths, feelings, and beliefs in a manner that is considerate to the abilities, thoughts, and feelings of others.
What is Maturity?
An aspect of our personality that is not known to self, but is apparent to others.
What is a Blind Spot?
Shared set of traditions, belief systems, and behaviors and is shaped by many factors, including history, religion, politics, and resources.
What is Culture?
The human tendency to negatively judge others (cultures, behaviors, values) against our own values and beliefs.
What is Ethnocentrism?
The conviction that the beliefs and practices of others are best understood in light of the particular cultures where they are found
What is Relativism (as an attitude)?
Temporarily suspending one’s own culturally informed opinion and thinking about how others might interpret or value a situation.
What is Relativism (as a behavior)?
A cognitive process by which an individual is able to identify the thoughts and/or feelings of another culture.
What is Cultural Perspective Taking?
A fixed or distorted generalization about all members of a particular group that share a particular diversity.
What are Stereotypes?
The creation of an adverse or unreasonable opinion about a person or group without gathering all the facts and is usually based on deeply held beliefs?
What is Prejudice?
By observing other cultures, then orienting yourself to these cultures, deciding on appropriate courses of action, and then acting accordingly is a process performed to gain cultural understanding.
What is the OODA Loop process?
Knowledge, motivation, and skills to interact effectively and appropriately with members of different cultures.
What is cross-cultural communication?
A speaker’s implicit, internalized knowledge of the rules of their native language.
What is linguistic competence?
Understanding how to properly communicate in another language or culture.
What is communication competence?
The image we want others to have of us.
What is projection?
Involves the sub-skills of emotion regulation, self-monitoring, and perceptual acuity.
What is attribution?
Involves both Attribution and Projection.
What is impression management?
Three basic elements of the New Triad.
What is Command and Control, Intelligence, Planning?
The spread of nuclear weapons, fissile material, and weapons-related to nuclear technology and information, to nations which are not recognized as Nuclear Weapon States.
What is Nuclear Proliferation?
Measures to limit and/or stop the spread of nuclear weapons, fissile material, and weapons-related nuclear technology and information.
What is Nuclear Non-proliferation?
This treaties main goal is to limit the spread of nuclear weapons.
What is the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)?
Used to deter an attack against the US and its interests and, should fail, to terminate the conflict as quickly as possible on terms favorable to the US.
What is the Role of Nuclear Weapons?
China, Russia, France, UK, and the US
What are nuclear states?
Originator of the communication process.
What is the sender?
The idea, feeling, or information that the sender transfers to his or her audience.
What is the message?
The way we say things, and is just as important as the actual words we speak
What is paralanguage?
Number of words spoken within a specified time.
What is the Rate?
Combination of articulation, pronunciation, and chooice of words.
What is Diction?
Can be considered in two dimensions: manner of expression and relative pitch.
What is tone?
Recurring patterns of variation in speech like rising and lowering waves of volume, pitch, or rate.
What is rhythm?
Using pauses effectively to provide desired flow and effect.
What is fluency?
Loudness
What is volume?
Commitment or Quality of sound
What is the quality?
Other countries and different cultures occasionally use different terms to describe the same thing.
What are phrases?
Using proper grammar to correctly arrange and express your thoughts in the form of sentences.
What is sentence structure?
How easy a sentence is to understand.
What is sentence clarity?
Target for sender's message
What is the receiver?
Originates from many things and the flood of constant sounds can render communication ineffective.
What is environmental noise?
Relate specifically to work situations or to the working environment.
What are organizational barriers?
Flows neither downward nor upward.
What is lateral communication?
Communication that filters downward?
What is downward communication?
Communication that makes its way up the chain of command.
What is upward communication?
Reaction to the received message.
What is feedback?
Barriers that exist in both written and spoken communication.
What are language barriers?
Tells WHY the audience needs to listen, HOW they can use the information, and makes the audience WANT to listen.
What is the motivation/hook?
The part of written or spoken communication you deliver your message and achieve your objective.
What is the body?
All sentences or points discussed support the topic, which, in turn, supports the main point.
What is unity?
Our obligation to provide truthful, timely, and accurate information about military activities and personnel is accomplished in this activity.
What is engagement?
Principal military advisor to the President, the NSC, and the SecDef.
What is the Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS)?
Two Distinct Branches of the Chains of Command
What is the Operational and Administrative?
Used to employ forces and begins with the President, through the SecDef, and onto the combatant commanders.
What is the Operational Branch?
Used to recruit, organize, train, and equip forces.
What is the Administrative Branch?
A command with a broad continuing mission under a single commander and composed of significant assigned components of two or more military departments.
What is a Combatant Command (COCOM)?
A general term for a commander authorized to exercise combatant command (command authority) or operational control over a joint force.
What is a Joint Force Commander?
Two categories of the nine combatant commands.
What are Geographically Organized Commands and Functionally Organized Commands?
Command that encompasses about half of the earth‘s surface, stretching from the waters off the west coast of the US to the western border of India and from Antarctica to the North Pole.
What is the US Pacific Command (USPACOM)?
This Command is the Unified Combatant Command charged with overseeing the various Special Operations Commands of the Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps of the United States Armed Forces.
What is the US Special Operations Command (USSOCOM)?
These are the Ten Major Commands (MAJCOM).
What is the ACC, USAFE, PACAF, AMC, AFSPC, AETC, AFGSC, AFMC, AFRC, AFSOC?
This command is responsible for organizing, training, and equipping missionready space and cyberspace forces and capabilities for North American Aerospace Defense Command, US Strategic Command, and other combatant commands world-wide.
What is the Air Force Space Command (AFSPC)?
This command provides airlift and aerial refueling for all of America‘s armed forces.
What is the Air Mobility Command (AMC)?
This command develops and provides combat-ready forces for nuclear deterrence and global strike operations—safe, secure, effective—to support the President of the United States and combatant commanders.
What is the Air Force Global Strike Command (AFGSC)?
This command organizes, trains, equips and deploys combat ready forces to support combatant commanders around the globe.
What is the Air Combat Command (ACC)?
This command delivers war-winning technology, acquisition support, sustainment, and expeditionary capabilities to the warfighter.
What is the Air Force Material Command (AFMC)?
This command has forward-based air power to provide forces for global operations, ensure strategic access, assure allies, deter aggression and build partnerships.
What is US Air Forces in Europe (USAFE)?
This command is responsible to US Special Operations Command for the readiness of Air Force special operations forces to conduct the war on terrorism and to disrupt, defeat, and destroy terrorist networks that threaten the United States.
What is the Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC)?
This command offers integrated expeditionary Air Force capabilities to defend the homeland, promote stability, dissuade/deter aggression, and swiftly defeat enemies.
What is the Pacific Air Force (PACAF)?
This command promotes cooperation among nations, responds to crises, deters or defeats state and nonstate aggression, and supports development and, when necessary, reconstruction in order to establish the conditions for regional security, stability, and prosperity.
What is US Central Command (USCENTCOM)?
This theory is a model that uses Reinforcement and Punishment do achieve a desired outcome.
What is B.F. Skinner's operant conditioning theory?
This critical thinking hindrance involves bias, selective thinking, false memories, drugs or an altered state, and personal prejudices.
What are Human Limitations?
This critical thinking hindrance involves ambiguity, assuring expressions, meaningless comparisons, false implications, doublespeak jargon.
What is the Use of Language?
This critical thinking hindrance involves bandwagon fallacy, emotional appeal, evading the issue, limiting alternatives, and poisoning the well.
What are Psychological Sociological Pitfalls?