GPCom Lesson 1 Communication
GPCom Lesson 1 Communication
define communication;
discuss the importance, elements and dimensions of communication;
differentiate the language functions;
discuss the role of language in communication and in the subject, Purposive
Communication.
LESSON 1. COMMUNICATION
Let us try to formulate a description of what communication is through all these
words, shall we?
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Communication came from the Latin word “communis,” meaning “common” and/or
“communicare,” meaning “to make common.”
Communication may be in the form of verbal: oral (face-to-face, near-far, digital, etc.) or
written (graphic, printed, pencrafted), or even gestural (hands, head, or eyes in
meaningful motion).
ELEMENTS OF COMMUNICATION
3. Recipient – also known as the receiver, it is the element that receives the message
from the communicator, as well as the one who may decode afterwards.
5. Language Channel – the mechanism and platform used for the message to be
delivered.
5 DIMENSIONS OF COMMUNICATION
5. Communication can take place between two people as well as within groups
www.businesscommunicationarticles.com/different-kinds-types-of-communication/
Oral communication has some real benefits in the business world. Feedback is easier
for communicators to receive and it is easier to modify your message. If your message is
not clear, you can revise or add more information and restate the message. However,
oral messages are not recorded for future reference. Careful wording of a sensitive
message is more difficult with oral communication than it is with written communication.
Verbal communication, from the Latin “verbum,” meaning “word,” informs us that we can
communicate through reading and writing, as it is received in listening, speaking. It may
also deal with viewing and presenting, syntax, vocabulary, language use, and dialect.
LANGUAGE IN COMMUNICATION
Bonet and Bastardas-Boada (2013) say that language greatly affects the way we speak,
write, describe and understand things. They further said that language is the tool we need
to convey both thought and the method we adapt to address the complex world. Thi s is
made possible because of our cognitive instrument (the brain in interaction with the body),
cognition (understood as perception, emotion and action, the entire process of living),
and, especially, metacognition (the knowing of knowledge). All of which come in in
communication.
FUNCTIONS OF COMMUNICATION
The ability to communicate well is often cited by companies as one of the skills they
desired most in employees. Poor communicators are not able to relate well to others and
find their career paths blocked.
THE LESSON IN A NUTSHELL