Top Banner
Introduction to Communication
45
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 2. introduction to communication

Introduction to Communication

Page 2: 2. introduction to communication

OBJECTIVES

By the end of this unit you should be able to:

Define the term communication Explain the key stages in the

communication cycleDistinguish between the

different levels ofcommunication

Page 3: 2. introduction to communication

Swacx notes

Describe the different methods of communication

Identify and explain the various models of communication

Give examples of barriers to communication

Page 4: 2. introduction to communication

STAGES IN THE COMMUNICATION CYCLE

(The Communication Process)

Page 5: 2. introduction to communication

Introduction

The communication process involves a sender, a receiver and the mes­sage to be sent.

Effective communication occurs when the receiver understands/interprets the message in the way the sender intended.

Page 6: 2. introduction to communication

However, External things might occur during this transfer, which could distort the message and prevent the receiver from receiving the original message that was meant by the sender.

In addi­tion to these externalities, both the sender and the receiver do some­thing interesting.

Page 7: 2. introduction to communication

The senders do not just give a universal message that is under­standable by everybody. They encode it. They add certain things and state things in a certain way.

Page 8: 2. introduction to communication

On the other side, the receiver of the message has to decode, to a certain extent, what the sender meant to say.

As well as the words, this includes the tones and certain gestures and indications that are not ex­pressed verbally. This often results in distortion of the message.

Page 9: 2. introduction to communication

Our ex­pe­rience is part of this encoding­decoding process. It can affect the intention of the message sent, based on past experiences involving similar cases.

The meaning the sender intends does not necessarily match the impact on the receiver.

Page 10: 2. introduction to communication

Stages

Communication specialists have developed a model to explain how the communication process works, known as the communication cycle.

Insert diagram

Page 11: 2. introduction to communication
Page 12: 2. introduction to communication

Stage 1Information

The actual content to be put across to the reader or the listener.

At this stage, the sender defines the information to be sent, by thinking of the aim of the communication and the content to be conveyed.

It does not have to be factual information, it could be an idea or opinion.

Page 13: 2. introduction to communication

Stage 2The encoding process

This process is done by the sender. It is a process of putting information into the form which is most suitable both to the receiver and to the aim.

In most cases, the encoding involves putting an idea into words, but sometimes the communication could be non-verbal.

Page 14: 2. introduction to communication

Stage 3Transfer of information

This stage involves the actual transfer of information by means of the message, medium, or channel.

Page 15: 2. introduction to communication

Stage 4 Taking in of message

At this point the receiver takes in the message by, for example, reading a letter, listening to a speech or looking at an educational television programme.

Page 16: 2. introduction to communication

Stage 5 Decoding

This is the process by which the recipient/receiver interprets the message he/she has been given in order to obtain his/her own idea of the information it conveys.

This may not be the same as the information which the sender intended to convey.

Page 17: 2. introduction to communication

This may be a result of distortion, if the sender encodes the idea wrongly, ambiguously, or in terms which the receiver understands according to his/her own experience rather than that of the sender’s.

Page 18: 2. introduction to communication

Stage 6 Feedback

Feedback is the name given to the information the sender derives from the receiver’s first reaction to the message.

The sender should watch for feedback to see whether or not the message has been understood.

Page 19: 2. introduction to communication

Feedback could take the form of either verbal or non-verbal responses, e.g. nodding or smiling to show agreement, or adopting a posture which reflects active listening.

It refers to the indirect reactions of the recipient, rather than to any message sent in return.

Page 20: 2. introduction to communication

Motivation

Although it is not shown in the diagram, motivation is a crucial element in communication. It is the urge or desire to achieve a purpose, alter a given situation, or satisfy need.

If Motivation is not present, the communication cycle is adversely affected.

Page 21: 2. introduction to communication

Conclusion

These are the principle elements in the cycle of communication. They are completed when the process is reversed and the receiver/recipient communicates in response to the sender’s original message.

Page 22: 2. introduction to communication

Although the cycle can be effectively accomplished by effective communicators, any system which involves the exchange of information has to overcome many barriers.

Page 23: 2. introduction to communication

Methods of Communication

Verbal communication – When a message is put across through speech. The message can be sent to an individual, a team or a group.

Non-verbal communication - is divided into six types: Body language, physical characteristics and appearance, voice, space, environment, time

Silence can be a type of non-verbal communication.

Page 24: 2. introduction to communication

Written communication provides a record for the future. Written communication can be studied, reflected on, and absorbed at the receiver’s own pace.

Visual communication is the visual display of information, like, topography, photography, signs, symbols and designs. Television and video clips are the electronic form of visual communication.

Page 25: 2. introduction to communication

Levels of Communication

The levels of communication are the following:

1. Intrapersonal Communication2. Interpersonal Communication3. Group Communication4. Public Communication

Page 26: 2. introduction to communication

1) INTRAPERSONAL COMMUNICATION

Intrapersonal communication is language use or thought internal to the communicator.

It is the active internal involvement of the individual in symbolic processing of messages. The individual becomes his or her own sender and receiver, providing feedback to him or herself in an ongoing internal process.

Page 27: 2. introduction to communication

Although successful communication is generally defined as being between two or more individuals, issues concerning the useful nature of communicating with oneself have made some argue that this definition is too narrow.

Page 28: 2. introduction to communication

Intrapersonal communication can encompass:

Day-dreamingNocturnal dreamingSpeaking aloud (talking to oneself),

reading aloud, repeating what one hears. This is considered normal, and the extent to which it occurs varies from person to person. The time when there should be concern is when talking to oneself occurs outside of socially acceptable situations.

Writing one's thoughts or observations

Page 29: 2. introduction to communication

Making gestures while thinkingSense-making e.g. interpreting

maps, texts, signs, and symbolsInterpreting non-verbal

communication e.g. gestures, eye contact

Communication between body parts; e.g. "My stomach is telling me it's time for lunch."

Page 30: 2. introduction to communication

2.) INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION

Interpersonal communication is defined by communication scholars in numerous ways, though most definitions involve participants who are interdependent on one another, or who have a shared history.

Page 31: 2. introduction to communication

Swacx notes

Communication channels are the medium chosen to convey the message from sender to receiver. Communication channels can be categorized into two main categories: Direct and Indirect channels of communication.

Page 32: 2. introduction to communication

Direct channels are those that are obvious and can be easily recognized by the receiver. They are also under direct control of the sender. In this category are the verbal and non-verbal channels of communication.

Page 33: 2. introduction to communication

Indirect channels are those channels that are usually recognized subconsciously by the receiver, and not under direct control of the sender. This includes kinesics or body language, that reflects the inner emotions and motivations rather than the actual delivered message.

Page 34: 2. introduction to communication

GROUP COMMUNICATION

Group communication refers to the nature of communication that occurs in groups that are between 3 and 12 individuals.

Small group communication generally takes place in a context that mixes interpersonal communication interactions with social clustering.

Page 35: 2. introduction to communication

4.) PUBLIC COMMUNICATION

Public communication is at the heart of our economy, society, and politics.

Studios use it to promote their films. Politicians use it to get elected. Businesses use it to burnish their image. Advocates use it to promote social causes.

It is a field built on ideas and images, persuasion and information, strategy and tactics.

No policy or product can succeed without a smart message targeted to the right audience in creative and innovative ways.

Page 36: 2. introduction to communication

Four Principles of Interpersonal Communication

These principles underlie the workings in real life of interpersonal communication. They are basic to communication. We cannot ignore them

Page 37: 2. introduction to communication

Interpersonal communication is inescapable

We cannot not communicate. The very attempt not to communicate communicates something.

Through not only words, but through tone of voice and through gesture, posture, facial expression, etc., we constantly communicate to those around us. Through these channels, we constantly receive communication from others.

Page 38: 2. introduction to communication

Swacx notes

Remember a basic principle of communication in general: people are not mind readers. Another way to put this is: people judge you by your behavior, not your intent.

Page 39: 2. introduction to communication

Interpersonal communication is irreversible

You cannot really take back something once it has been said. The effect must inevitably remain.

. A Russian proverb says, "Once a word goes out of your mouth, you can never swallow it again."

Page 40: 2. introduction to communication

Interpersonal communication is complicated

No form of communication is simple.

Because of the number of variables involved, even simple requests are extremely complex.

Page 41: 2. introduction to communication

Interpersonal communication is contextual

In other words, communication does not happen in isolation. There is:

Psychological context, which is who you are and what you bring to the interaction. Your needs, desires, values, personality, etc., all form the psychological context. ("You" here refers to both participants in the interaction.)

Page 42: 2. introduction to communication

Swacx notes

Relational context, which concerns your reactions to the other person - the "mix."

Situational context deals with the psycho-social "where" you are communicating. An interaction that takes place in a classroom will be very different from one that takes place in a bar.

Page 43: 2. introduction to communication

Swacx notes

Environmental context deals with the physical "where" you are communicating. Furniture, location, noise level, temperature, season, time of day, all are examples of factors in the environmental context.

Page 44: 2. introduction to communication

Swacx notes

Cultural context includes all the learned behaviors and rules that affect the interaction.

e.g. If you come from a culture (foreign or within your own country) where it is considered rude to make long, direct eye contact, you will out of politeness avoid eye contact. If the other person comes from a culture where long, direct eye contact signals trustworthiness, then we have in the cultural context a basis for misunderstanding.

Page 45: 2. introduction to communication

ASSIGNMENT DATE DUE: 17 SEPTEMBER 2012(Monday)

1) Without feedback, communication cannot be said to have taken place. Discuss.

OR

2) The grapevine is no longer viewed as a potential hindrance to effective organizational performance. Discuss.