Introduction to Communication
Communication
A systematic process in which people send and receive messages through symbols to discover and interpret meanings
Fifth stage
Message feedback is transmitted through a channel
You're speaking with your friend, telling him about your plans for the weekend. You notice that his eyes narrow when you tell him about the birthday party. You suddenly realize that he hasn't been invited.
Symbolic nature of communication
You've been invited to give a two-minute speech to the school board explaining why your school needs additional funding for the yearbook. As you plan, you ask yourself: How should I begin? With a joke? What about an interesting statistic tied to last year's yearbook? How do I get their attention and keep it?
Systematic nature of communication
Third stage
A message is received, perceived, and decoded
Second stage
A message is transmitted through a channel
Message
An organized element of communication that includes meaning and symbols, encoding and decoding
Fourth stage
Feedback is encoded into a message
First stage
Meaning is encoded into a message
Sixth stage
Message feedback is received, perceived, and decoded
Which of the following are not parts of a message? Select all that apply
Noise and feedback
Systemic
Pertaining to a system or systems; pertaining to or affecting the entire body
You're talking to your grandmother over the cell phone. Your batteries are low, and at some point, the signal begins to cut out. Your grandmother keeps interrupting you with "What?" "I can't hear you." "Can you repeat that?"
Process-oriented nature of communication
Decoding
The process of transforming and interpreting another's message back into the receiver's own meaning
Encoding
The thinking process in which ideas and emotions are transformed into symbols and organized into a message
Interact
To act upon each other
Feedback
Verbal or nonverbal responses to a message