Chapter 11: Communicating with a purpose
message
a specific idea or general information that a sender wants to convey to receivers
noise
potential barriers that may impede communication at all four steps of the communication process
decoding
process by which the receiver attributes meaning to a message
constructive criticism
providing a serious examination or judgment of something in a way that is intended to help the listener improve
encoding
putting a message in understandable terms yb using symbols and media
media richness
refers to a communication medium's ability to resolve ambiguity
deliberative dialogue
refers to structured multidirectional communication that enables multiple stakeholders to learn from one another what is best for the overall community
semantic problems
arise when words have different meanings for people who are from different demographic groups or who have had different experiences
feedback
lets the sender know whether the message has been received as intended
collective decoding
occurs when a message is interpreted by a group of two or more people with the result that each member learns more than anyone could alone (and typically more than the sender could have put into the original message)
filtering
occurs when information is withheld or not communicated to others
feedforward communication
the combination of relationships and prior communication that influences future messages
grapevine
the informal information network in an organization
channel
the pathway along which a message travels through a medium
communication
the process of transferring information by using meaningful symbols so that a message is understood by others
medium
the vehicle that is used to carry a message from the sender to the receiver