Spc1017 Chapter 1
• Noise - Anything that interferes with receiving a message - Types of noise: • Physical • Physiological • Psychological • Semantic
Effects - Communication always has some effect on those involved in the communication act
Communication Is Ambiguous
- Ambiguity: the condition in which something can be interpreted in more than one way • Language ambiguity • Relationship ambiguity
• Ethnic Identity and Ethnocentrism
- Each culture develops an ethnic identity that is unique: the attitudes and beliefs of the group
Sources-Receivers
- Each person is both a source (speaker) and a receiver (listener)
The Competent Communicator Is Ethical - Ethics: the study of good and bad, of right and wrong, of moral and immoral - Ethics is concerned with actions, with behaviors • Objective view: Some argue the rightness or wrongness of an act is absolute. • Subjective view: Ethics of a message depends on the culture's values and beliefs as well as the circumstance
- Ethics: the study of good and bad, of right and wrong, of moral and immoral - Ethics is concerned with actions, with behaviors • Objective view: Some argue the rightness or wrongness of an act is absolute. • Subjective view: Ethics of a message depends on the culture's values and beliefs as well as the circumstance
Communication Is Inevitable, Irreversible, and Unrepeatable
- Inevitability • Interactional situations are always taking place - Irreversibility • You cannot "uncommunicate" a message - Unrepeatability • A communication act can never be duplicated
Forms of Human Communication
- Intrapersonal communication - Interpersonal communication - Interviewing - Small-group communication - Public communication - Computer-mediated communication - Mass communication
• The Aim of a Cultural Perspective
- Messages that are effective in one culture may prove totally ineffective in another culture
The Competent Communicator Thinks Critically and Mindfully
- Need critical thinking • Mindfulness • Mindlessness - To increase mindfulness, try the following suggestions: » Create and re-create categories » Be open to new information and points of view » Beware of relying too heavily on first impressions » Think before you act
Newer view of communication
- Sees communication as a transactional process - Each person is both speaker and listener
• Dimensions of Culture
- Seven major dimensions of culture: • Uncertainty avoidance • Masculinity-femininity • Power distance • Individualism-collectivism • High and low context • Indulgence and restraint • Long- and short-term orientation
Messages
- Take many forms - Transmitted or received through one or more sensory organs - Three specific types: • Feedforward » Phatic communication: small talk • Feedback • Metamessages
Human communication
- The sending and receiving of verbal and nonverbal messages - Occurs between two or more people • The study of human communication begins with the following: - forms - benefits - myths
• The Competent Communicator Makes Reasoned Choices
Competence in communication choice making is a series of four interrelated characteristics - The competent communication choice maker: • realizes that each communication situation can be approached in different ways • has a large arsenal of available choices • can make reasonable predictions as to what choices will work and what choices won't • has the interpersonal, small-group, and public speaking skills for executing these choices effectively
In early models, communication process was thought to be
Linear
Myths about Human Communication
Popular but erroneous beliefs: • The more you communicate, the better your communication will be • Needs and wants do not need to be communicated explicitly in a close relationship • Conflict is a sign the relationship or group is in trouble • Leaders are born, not made • Fear of speaking in public is detrimental
Benefits of Studying Human Communication
Skills you will learn include: • Critical and creative thinking skills • Interaction skills • Relationship skills • Leadership skills • Presentation skills
• Communication Context - Context determines the meaning of any message - Contexts have at least four aspects: • Physical context • Cultural context • Social-psychological context • Temporal context
• Channel - Vehicle(s) through which messages pass
Communication Involves Content and Relationship Dimensions - Communication exists on at least two levels
• Communication Is Punctuated - Segmenting of the continuous stream of communication - Some are causes and others effects
Communication Is Purposeful - Accomplishes a goal - Different cultures emphasize different purposes - Five general purposes seem relatively common: • to learn • to relate • to help • to influence • to play
• Communication Takes Place in Varied Forms - In this text, face-to-face communication and online/social media communication are integrated because: • It's the way we communicate
• The Importance of Culture
• Demographic changes • Sensitivity to cultural differences • Economic interdependence • Communication technology • Culture-specific nature of communication
• Contemporary communication can only be understood as a combination of online and offline interaction
• It's part of the skill set that employers expect potential employees to have • Both forms are vital to developing, maintaining, and even dissolving relationships • Both forms are important to your achieving your goals
• The Competent Communicator Is an Effective Code Switcher - Code switching: using more than one language in a conversation, and using different language styles depending on the situation
• The Competent Communicator Is Culturally Aware and Sensitive
communication competence
• Your ability to communicate effectively
• Culture
• consists of the beliefs, ways of behaving, and artifacts of a group • By definition, culture is transmitted through communication and learning rather than through genes