Kehoe leaves you with a quiet, powerful line: “The single biggest predictor of happiness and success is not IQ or talent. It’s the ability to manage the quality of your conversations.” The course doesn’t give you magic words. It gives you a mirror—and a map to step through it into more honest, effective, and human communication.

Most of us think communication is about transmitting information : I say X, you hear X. But Kehoe reveals the real problem: Meaning isn’t in words; it’s in people. Our brains are prediction machines. We filter everything through past experiences, emotions, and unspoken assumptions. That’s why the same sentence (“We need to talk”) can feel like an attack or an invitation depending on tone, context, and your history with the speaker. TTC Video - Effective Communication Skills

Here’s a structured, engaging “proper story” summary of by Professor Dalton Kehoe. The Story: From Talking Past Each Other to Truly Connecting The Hook You’ve felt it before: a conversation that starts fine, then suddenly derails. Someone gets defensive. You clam up. What you meant got lost. What they heard hurt. You walk away frustrated, wondering, “Why is this so hard?” Kehoe leaves you with a quiet, powerful line:

Professor Dalton Kehoe—a communication scholar and former radio host—steps in not with jargon, but with a reassuring truth: We’re not born knowing how to communicate effectively. It’s a skill, not a talent. Over 24 lectures, he becomes your mentor, breaking down the invisible architecture of everyday conversation. Most of us think communication is about transmitting

Ttc Video - Effective Communication Skills Apr 2026

Kehoe leaves you with a quiet, powerful line: “The single biggest predictor of happiness and success is not IQ or talent. It’s the ability to manage the quality of your conversations.” The course doesn’t give you magic words. It gives you a mirror—and a map to step through it into more honest, effective, and human communication.

Most of us think communication is about transmitting information : I say X, you hear X. But Kehoe reveals the real problem: Meaning isn’t in words; it’s in people. Our brains are prediction machines. We filter everything through past experiences, emotions, and unspoken assumptions. That’s why the same sentence (“We need to talk”) can feel like an attack or an invitation depending on tone, context, and your history with the speaker.

Here’s a structured, engaging “proper story” summary of by Professor Dalton Kehoe. The Story: From Talking Past Each Other to Truly Connecting The Hook You’ve felt it before: a conversation that starts fine, then suddenly derails. Someone gets defensive. You clam up. What you meant got lost. What they heard hurt. You walk away frustrated, wondering, “Why is this so hard?”

Professor Dalton Kehoe—a communication scholar and former radio host—steps in not with jargon, but with a reassuring truth: We’re not born knowing how to communicate effectively. It’s a skill, not a talent. Over 24 lectures, he becomes your mentor, breaking down the invisible architecture of everyday conversation.