The Communication Process
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Transcript The Communication Process
The Communication Process
Chapters 1 and 2
Elements of Communication
What must happen for human
communication to take
place?
You might answer:
People must speak, and
others must listen.
However, this answer is
incomplete. The words
“speaker” and “listener”
are only partly right.
Sender
A more correct term than
“speaker” when discussing
communication.
“Sending” involves both verbal
and nonverbal communication.
Receiver
A more correct term than “listener”
when discussing communication.
“Receiving” involves both verbal
and nonverbal communication.
Verbal and Nonverbal Messages
Verbal communication is
communication with
words.
Nonverbal communication
is communication without
words.
We can communicate
nonverbally by:
Appearance
We can communicate
nonverbally by:
Appearance
Gestures
We can communicate
nonverbally by:
Appearance
Gestures
Body movement
We can communicate
nonverbally by:
Appearance
Gestures
Body movement
Eye contact
We can communicate
nonverbally by:
Appearance
Gestures
Body movement
Eye contact
Facial expressions
We can communicate
nonverbally by:
Appearance
Gestures
Body movement
Eye contact
Facial expressions
Spatial relations
Elements in the
communication process
beyond sender and
receiver:
Feedback - the way the
receiver responds to the
message being sent
Channel - the means
through which the
message is transmitted
Encoding - selecting the
best verbal and nonverbal
messages to make your
point
Decoding - the receiver’s
careful filtering process
of what he or she
understands as
communication
Interference - breakdown
in communication
Types of Interference
External
Types of Interference
External
Loud noises
Distracting activity
Types of Interference
Internal
Types of Interference
Internal
Headache
Daydreaming
Diagram of the Communication
Process
Encoding
Sender
Feedback
Message
Receiver
Decoding
Effective communication:
the receiver interpreting the
sender’s message the same
way the sender intended it
Four specific purposes of
communication:
To exchange information
Four specific purposes of
communication:
To exchange information
To exert control
Four specific purposes of
communication:
To exchange information
To exert control
To follow social rules
Four specific purposes of
communication:
To exchange information
To exert control
To follow social rules
To share feelings