Title: Foundations of Communication
1Chapter 1
- Foundations of Communication
2Linear ModelCommunication as Action
Transmitter
Receiver
Info Source
Channel
Destination
Who says what in what channel to whom with what
effect?
3Interaction ModelCommunication as Message
Exchange
Context
Context
Source
Channel
Receiver
Message
Message
Context
Context
Feedback
Adds two key elements (feedback and
context)still fails to recognize simultaneous
process of sending/receiving that occurs.
4Transaction ModelCommunication as Message
Creation
Context
Context
Source/Receiver
Source/Receiver
Message/Feedback
Context
Context
We constantly react to what others saynot just
exchanging meaning, also creating meaning
58 Propositions about Interpersonal Communication
- Communication has both verbal nonverbal
components - You cannot not communicate
- Communication expresses both content
relationship - Meanings are in people
68 Propositions about Interpersonal Communication
(continued)
- Communication is irreversible
- Communication is a neutral tool
- Communication is a learned skill
- Communication takes place in physical
psychological contexts
7Source
Intentional
Unintentional
1
Intentional
2
Receiver
4
3
Unintentional
8Chapter 2
- So Whats Stopping You?
- Communication Anxiety
9Why are some people apprehensive about
communicating?
- Inadequate positive reinforcement
- Poor skill development
- Inadequate or poor models
10Understanding Stage Fright
- Fear of evaluation
- Lack of preparation
- Feel conspicuous
- Rigid rules
- Negative self-talk
11Managing your Fear of Communicating
- Think!
- Severe Communication Apprehension
- Systematic desensitization
- Cognitive therapy
12Chapter 4
13What is Listening?
- Receiving
- Understanding
- Interpreting
- Discriminating
- Remembering
- Evaluating
- Responding
14Who is the Listener?
- Listeners purposes
- Listeners knowledge interest levels
- Listeners listening skills
- Listeners attitudes
15Contextual Barriers to Good Listening
16Becoming a Better Listener
- Adapt to speakers delivery
- Listen with your eyes as well as your ears
- Monitor your emotional reactions
- Avoid jumping to conclusions
- Listen for major ideas
- Identify your listening goals
- Take notes
- Become an active listener
- Be a selfish listener
- Whats in it for me?
- How can I use this information?
17Chapter 3
- Ethics Professional Communication
18Professional Communication Ethics
- Take responsibility
- Respect tolerate others
- Speak with commitment will
19Scholastic Dishonesty
20Chapter 5
- Interviewing for Information Gathering
21What is an Informational Interview?
- Exchange between two parties
- Strategic purpose or goal
- Asking answering of questions
22Preparing for an Interview
- Decide on a purpose
- Choose a structure
- Generate topics
- Construct a schedule of questions
- Primary secondary questions
- Probes
- Examine your questions for language problems
- Ambiguous complex phrasing
- Irrelevant offensive content
- Leading questions
- Speedy guessing questions
- Prepare your opening and closing
23Chapter 6
- Working with Groups Teams
24Teams
- When should you use a group or team?
- Successful teams
- Themes identity
- Enthusiasm and energy
- Event-driven history
- Personal commitment
- Optimism
- Performance results
- Goals roles (p. 180)
25Unsuccessful Teams
- Unclear goals
- Changing objectives that are poorly communicated
- Poor leadership
- Lack of mutual accountability
- Having the wrong people on the team
- Not prioritizing the team
- Misunderstanding of roles
- Too much unhealthy conflict
- Bad process management (how team is organized
run) - No rewards for teamwork
26Leading Teams
- Assigned vs. emergent leadership
- Task vs. social leadership
- Participative leadership
- Democratic leadership
- Laissez-faire leaders
- Authoritative leaders
27Building Consensus
- Share similar goals
- Have a common enemy
- Spend time together on both task and non-task
activities - Work at respecting and trusting one another
- Have a series of successful experiences together
28Downside of Consensus
- Social loafing
- Groupthink
29Effective Meetings
- Keep the meeting structured
- Build consensus
- Understand the stages of meetings
- Orientation
- Conflict
- Resolution
- Reinforcement
- Follow-through on commitments
- Be a good team member
30Chapter 7
- Leadership Decision Making in Groups
31What is Leadership?
- Leadership is a dynamic, interactive process
whereby one person (or group) influences another
person (or persons) to move toward a particular
goal or objective.
32What is Leadership?
- Process
- Dynamic
- Interactive
- Influence
- Purpose
- Are leaders born or made?
- Is leadership science or art?
33Perspectives on Leadership
- Blake Moutons leadership grid
- Concern for people vs. concern for production
- Transactional vs. transformational leadership
- Situational leadership
- Directing
- Coaching
- Supporting
- Delegating
- Contingency theory
- Least-preferred coworker scale
34Blake Moutons Leadership Grid
1,9 Country Club
9,9 Team
5,5 Organizational
9,1 Authority- Obedience
1,1 Impoverished
35Situational Leadership Theory (Hersey
Blanchard)
- Follower Development Levels
- F1 Enthusiastic Beginner
- Low competence, high commitment
- F2 Disillusioned Learner
- Some competence, low commitment
- F3 Reluctant Contributor
- High competence, variable commitment
- F4 Peak Performer
- High competence, high commitment
Leadership Styles L1 Telling/directing Low
supportive, high directive L2
Selling/coaching High supportive, high
directive L3 Participating/supporting High
supportive, low directive L4 Delegating Low
supportive, low directive
36F1
F4
Telling
F3
Leadership Direction
F2
Leadership Support
37Contingency Leadership Theory (Fiedler)
- Effective leadership is a balance of
relationships, power, task structure - Based on the Least-Preferred Co-worker Scale
- Leader-Member Relations extent of loyalty,
support, and quality of relationships - Leaders Position Power extent to which leader
has authority controls rewards punishments - Task Structure extent to which tasks are
standardized controlled
38Contingency Leadership Theory
Leader-Member Relations Task structure Leader's Position- power Most Effective leader
Good Structured Strong Low LPC
Good Structured Weak Low LPC
Good Unstructured Strong Low LPC
Good Unstructured Weak High LPC
Poor Structured Strong High LPC
Poor Structured Weak High LPC
Poor Unstructured Strong High LPC
Poor Unstructured Weak Low LPC
39Chapter 9
40(No Transcript)
41Know your Audience
- A Analysis
- U Understanding
- D Demographics
- I Interest
- E Environment
- N Needs
- C Customized
- E Expectations
42Audience Needs
- Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
Self Actualization Needs
Self-Esteem Needs
Social Needs
Safety Needs
Physiological Needs
43Personality Types
- Intuitors
- - Conceptual
- Thinkers
- - Analytical
- Feelers
- - Relational
- Sensors
- - Practical
44Chapter 15
45Purpose of Informative Speaking
- Convey understanding
- Educate
- Transmit information through personal channels
46Types of Informative Speeches
- Objects
- Processes
- Events
- Concepts
47Choosing a Topic
- Not over listeners heads
- Not too personal
- Intriguing
- Manageable
- Has substance
48Types of Evidence
- Narrative or objective
- Factual
- Specific
- Statistics
- Testimony
49Chapter 10
- Organizing a Successful Presentation
50Defining the Purpose of your Presentation
Topic
General Purpose
Specific Purpose
Thesis
51Organizing your Ideas
- Chronological
- Spatial
- Topical
- Problem-solution
- Cause-effect
52Connecting your Ideas
- Previews
- Summaries
- Transitions
- Signposts
53Introduction
- Attention grabber
- Credibility
- Thesis statement
- Preview main ideas
54Conclusion
- Intent to conclude
- Summary of main ideas
- No new information
55Chapter 14
- Delivering Public Presentations
56Verbal Delivery
- Volume
- Rate
- Articulation
- Inflection/tone
- Rhythm
- Flow
57Nonverbal Delivery
- Eye contact
- Hand gestures
- Facial expressions
- Posture
- Clothing
- Presence
58Delivery Styles
- Memorized
- Manuscript
- Extemporaneous
- Impromptu
59Chapter 8
- The Importance of Language
60What is Language?
- Socially shared system
- Arbitrary
- Symbolic
- Governed by rules
- Combined
61Speech Act Theory
- Language is a functional toolwords mean
because they do things
62Language Reality
- Language reflects reality
- vs.
- Language creates reality
63Using Language Effectively
- Appropriateness
- Rhetorical sensitivity
- Precision
- Concise
- Clear
- Specific
- Creativity
- - Metaphor - Simile - Repetition -
Hyperbole
64Chapter 12
65Purpose of Visual Aids
- Visual representation of your ideas
66Types of Visual Aids
- Objects
- Models
- People
- Drawings
- Photographs
- Maps
- Graphs
- Charts
- Video Tapes
- CD ROMs/DVDs
- Audio Tapes/CDs
67Guidelines for Visual Aids
- Visual aids enhance your presentation, not a
substitute for your presentation - Easy to see / read / understand
- Simple
- Adapt to audience
- Look professional
68More Guidelines
- Rehearse
- Maintain eye contact
- Explain the visual aid
- Use handouts effectively
- Prepare backups for technology failure
- Timingshould coincide with ideas
69Chapter 13
- Making your Point with PowerPoint
70PowerPoint
- Present information incrementallyallow audience
to process - Simplicity (animation, slide design, etc.)
- Consistency
- Narrating PowerPoint slides is not a speech!
71Chapter 16
72Levels of Influence
- Attitudes
- Beliefs
- Values
- Behaviors
The goal is change
73 Important Distinctions
- Attitude learned predisposition to respond
favorably or unfavorably toward something a
like/dislike easiest to change - Al Gore would have been a pretty good
president - Belief the degree of confidence with which
something is perceived true or false - The best way to stimulate the economy is to cut
taxes - Value an enduring conception of right/wrong,
good/bad most difficult to change Abortion and
the death penalty are both morally wrong
74Determining your Persuasive Purpose
- Persuasion happens when something is in
question - Questions of fact
- Questions of value
- Questions of policy
75How do we Motivate Listeners?
- Classical Appeals
- Logos Appeals to audience reason
- Pathos Appeals to audience emotion
- Ethos Appeals to speaker character
76How do we Motivate Listeners?
- Positive motivation statement made by a speaker
suggesting that good things will happen if the
speakers advice is heeded
77How do we Motivate Listeners?
- Negative Motivation (fear appeals)
- Research shows that
- Fear appeals involving loved ones are more
effective than appeals involving the audience
members themselves - The greater your credibility, the more likely
your fear appeal will be successful - You must convince your audience that the threat
is real and could actually happen
78Persuasive Strategies
- Cognitive Dissonance (mental inconsistency)
- Discredit the source
- Reject or deny the inconsistency
- Seek new information
- Stop listening
- Alter values, beliefs, attitudes, or behavior
causing the dissonance
Potential responses
79Persuasive Strategies
- Monroes Motivated Sequence
- Attention
- Need
- Satisfaction
- Visualization
- Action
80Persuasive Strategies
- Implicit Intent
- Dont be explicit with your intent to persuade
(i.e., Today Im going to persuade you to) - - Introduction
- - Audience type
81Chapter 11
- Supporting your Claims (Evidence)
82Types of Evidence
- Explanations
- Comparisons
- Divisions
- Interpretations
- Descriptions
- Testimony
83Types of Evidence - Definitions
- Etymological
- Categorical
- Oppositional
- Denotative
- Connotative
84Types of Evidence - Statistics
85Types of Evidence - Examples
- Hypothetical
- Case study
- Narrative
- Personal experience
86Types of Evidence Analogies
87Types of Reasoning
- Inductive reaching a general conclusion based
on specific examples, facts, statistics and
opinions - Reasoning by Analogy A comparison to explain
how someone/something will respond - Deductive Reasoning reaching a specific fact or
opinion based on general information - Causal Reasoning Relate two events saying that
one caused the other
88Fallacies in Reasoning
- Hasty generalization
- Genetic fallacy
- Appeal to ignorance
- Bandwagon (popular appeal)
- Appeal to false authority
- Sequential fallacy
- Begging the question
- Ad hominen (personal attack)
- Circular reasoning
- Misuse of statistics
- Either/or fallacy
89Chapter 17
- Professional Argumentation
90Argumentation Defined
- Argumentation the mechanics of influence and
the structure of reason
914 Theories of Argument
- (1) Aristotles enthymeme - Partial
syllogism - - Omits the secondary premise
924 Theories of Argument
- (2) Toulmins Components of Argument
Warrant
Evidence
Claim
Reservation
934 Theories of Argument
- (3) Perelmans Technique of Argument
- - Practical vs. formal reasoning
- - How to reason about values
- - Association
- - Dislocation
944 Theories of Argument
- (4) Fishers Narrative Paradigm
- Narrative Rationality
- - Coherence
- - Fidelity
95Chapter 18
- The Art of Impromptu Speaking
96Impromptu Speaking
- Strong oral tradition
- Importance in contemporary society
- Neglected as a formal skill
- Need training and practice
97Impromptu Topics
- Subjects
- Objects
- Quotations
98Division of Structure
- Classification
- Unification
- Cause-effect-solution
99Preparing for Impromptu Speaking
- Must be an on-going process
- Read deliberately
- Practice making associations
- Breath support
- Muscle relaxation
- Fluency pace
100Tips to Consider
- Consider your audience
- Be brief
- Organize your ideas
- Speak honestly, but with reserve
- Speak from personal knowledge experience
- Be cautious