Human Communication: What and Wny
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Transcript Human Communication: What and Wny
Communicate!
Chapter 1
Why Study Communication?
Practical Needs / Work Place
Employers seek communication skills, team work
skills, and interpersonal abilities. It’s the number
one skills sought. (Hansen & Hansen, 2007;Young,
2003; Koncz, 2008)
In Engineering, speaking skills were important to
72% of employers surveyed (Darling & Dannels,
2003)
Identity Needs
Communication is the way we learn who we are (
see Chapter 2)
Why Study Communication? cont.
Physical needs
Fredrick II, emperor of Germany from 1196 to 1250 illustrated
the importance of communication (Ross and McLaughlin)
Five people are isolated and remain alone in a locked room
(Schachter, 1959)
John McCain talked about 6 years of solitary confinement
(McCain)
Russian Experiment to Mars? Locked away for 520 days?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7966731.stm
http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2010/06/02/russia-mars-experiment-travel.html?ref=rss
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8150385.stm
Why Study Communication? cont.
Physical needs
People who lack strong relationships have 2-3
times the risk of early death. (Duck, 1992)
Divorced, separated, widowed people are 5-10
times more likely to be hospitalized for mental
illness (Duck, 1992)
Social isolation similar to cigarette smoking,
obesity, lack of exercise, and diet??????
People who are socially isolated are 4 times more
likely to get the common cold (Cohen, Doyle,
Skoner, Rabin, Gwaltney, 1997)
(as well as The Journal of the American Medical Association)
Definition of Communication:
What examples come to mind when you think of the term
“communication”?
Adler and Rodman’s definition of communication: “The process
of creating meaning through symbolic interaction.”
Verderber, Verderber, and Sellnow’s definition of communication:
“The process of creating or sharing meaning in informal
conversations, group interaction, or public speaking.”
My definition of communication:
“The process of creating and/or sharing intentional
and/or unintentional meaning through nonverbal
and verbal messages in informal conversation,
group interaction, or public speaking.”
The Elements of the Communication
process:
Participants
Encoder
Decoder
Message
messages are created (encoded and decoded) by symbols to which
meaning is assigned.
Context
Physical context, social context, historical context, psychological context,
cultural context
Channel
Interference (Noise)
Physical noise, Psychological noise, Semantic noise
Feedback
The Communication Process
(the transactional model of communication)
Communication Settings/
Communication Contexts:
Qualitative vs. Quantitative
Intrapersonal communication
Interpersonal communication (dyadic?)
Small group communication
Public communication
Mass communication
Communication Principles:
Communication has purpose
Communication is continuous
Communication messages vary in conscious thought
Communication is relational
Once cannot be attractive without others who are attracted?
One cannot be a leader unless others are willing to follow?
Quality of interaction between parent and child is a two-way
street (Dainton, Stafford, 1993).
Communication is guided by culture
Communication has ethical implications
Communication is learned
After 30 minutes of instruction, participants became significantly
more effective in detecting lies (DeTurch, Miller, 1990)
Communication Competence
Effective (when it achieves it’s goals)
Appropriate (when it conforms to the situation)
Characteristics of Competent
Communicators
A wide range of behaviors
Ability to choose the most appropriate behavior
Skill at performing behaviors
Perspective taking
Cognitive Complexity
Self-Monitoring
Commitment to the Relationship