Oral Comm (1st Half)
Oral Comm (1st Half)
people.”
What comes to your mind when you think of
communication? Nature, Process, & Elements of Communication
➢ Point 1: Human Society cannot function without
communication. Communication
➢ Point 2: Communication is what connects us human ➢ Latin Noun: Communicatio –“sharing” or
beings. “imparting”
➢ Latin Term: Communicare – “to share” or “to be
Oral Communication vs. Written Communication in relation with”
1. Meaning
o Oral: Exchange of ideas, information and Understanding the Nature of Communication
message through spoken words. 1. Communication, broadly, may be seen as synonymous
o Written: Interchange of message, opinions and to behaviour.
information in written or printed form. • Some experts consider all behaviour (speech,
bodily, gestures, and all other observable acts) as
2. What is it? communication.
o Oral: Communication with the help of words of 2. Communication may be seen as a flow of information.
mouth. • The sender of communication expressed his/her
o Written: Communication with the help of text. thoughts and feelings which the receiver interprets
and comprehends.
3. Literacy 3. Communication may be seen as synonymous to
o Oral: Less importance interaction.
o Written: Necessary for communication • This perspective emphasizes social contact among
humans.
4. Transmission 4. Communication involves a transaction.
o Oral: Speedy
o Written: Slow The Process of Communication
5. Proof
o Oral: No record of communication is there.
o Written: Proper records of communication
6. Feedback
o Oral: Immediate
o Written: Takes time Elements of Communication
1. Speaker
7. Revision before delivering the message • Chooses his/her purpose, crafts the message
o Oral: Not possible accordingly and decides how to deliver it.
o Written: Possible 2. Message
• Is what needs to be delivered or imparted to
8. Receipt of Non-verbal cues somebody else.
o Oral: Yes • The point of communication is to say "something”.
o Written: No 3. Listener/Receiver/Audience
• Receives the "message".
Communication
• It is the listener who makes sense of what is said
➢ Is a process of sharing and conveying messages or
and reacts to it.
information from one person to another within and
4. Channel
across channels, contexts, media and cultures
• Are the means by which the message is sent.
(McCornack, 2014).
• The basic channels are written (hard copy print
➢ There is a wide variety of contexts and situations in
or digital formats), oral or spoken, and electronic
which communication can be manifested; it can be a:
and multimedia.
a. face-to-face interaction
5. Feedback
b. a phone conversation
c. a group discussion • The response to the message.
d. a meeting or interview • It confirms that the message has been correctly
e. a letter correspondence interpreted.
f. a class recitation and many others.
6. Encoding D. Information Dissemination
• The process of converting the message into ➢ Purpose: When the speaker wants to make
words, actions, or other forms that the speaker others aware of certain data, concepts and
understands. processes – knowledge that may be useful to
7. Decoding them.
• The process of interpreting the encoded message ➢ For example: A newscaster reports about the
of the speaker by the receiver. latest weather disturbance.
8. Context
• The environment where communication takes E. Emotion Expression
place. ➢ Purpose: Move the other person to action.
• It has two components: physical location and the ➢ The speaker appeals to the Listener’s feelings
psychological setting. and emotions to encourage him/her to act in a
9. Barrier particular direction.
• The factors that affect the flow of ➢ Example: Sending messages that include
communication. pictures of the devastation brought about by the
• It could be physical, physiological or typhoon Yolanda to move the receiver to donate.
psychological noise.
Models of Communication
Why are you talking?
5 Categories of the Models of Communication
People communicate for several reasons. 1. Linear Model
1. Regulation & Control • Laswell’s Model
2. Social Interaction • Shannon–Weaver Model
3. Motivation • Aristotle’s Model
4. Information Dissemination • Berlo’s S-M-C-R Model
5. Emotional Expression 2. Interactive Model
• Schramm’s Model of Communication
A. Regulation/Control 3. Transactional Model
➢ Purpose: managing the behaviour of the • Helical Model
audience; directs; insists • Becker's Mosaic
➢ Examples: 4. Gatekeeper Model
a. Making an announcement that the 5. Ecological Model
community will start segregating their
garbage. Linear Model
b. A parent tells a child not to misbehave. 1. Aristotle’s Model
• Speaker > Speech (Message) > Receiver
B. Social Interaction (Listener)
➢ The most familiar and the primary reason why • First and earliest model
people communicate is because people love to • The most important part in his model is the
talk with each other. Setting.
➢ Conversation with one another gives the people • Three Settings:
involved pleasure while passing the time in an a. Legal Setting
entertaining way. o Courts where ordinary people
➢ Social Interaction allows people to be defended themselves.
connected with one another. b. Deliberative Setting
➢ Example: Casual talk with friends. o Political assemblies
c. Ceremonial
C. Motivation o Celebrations held when they
➢ Speaker’s purpose: to persuade another person to won a war, lost a leader, or had
change his/her opinion, attitude, or behaviour. a new one, or welcome a
➢ People communicate because there is a goal to visiting leader
be achieved and motive that must be
accomplished.
➢ Examples: The students are talking to the
teacher and are asking him to give them more
time to finish their class project.
2. Laswell’s Model • Wilbur Schramm – Father of Mass
Communication
• The communicator and the recipient take
turns to speak and listen to each other.
• Key element: Feedback
• Information flows sequentially during the • Through feedback, the communicator and the
communication process. recipient can clarify and develop the ideas in
• Proposed by Harold Laswell. (1948) their conversation.
• Communication is a one-way process in which
only the communicator is the active participant. Transactional Model
• The receipt processes the information but does 1. Helical Model
not reciprocate the message. • Frank Dance (1967)
• Helical - “Helix” which means an object
3. Shannon-Weaver Model having a three-dimensional shape like that of
a wire wound uniformly around a cylinder or
cone.
• He shows communication as a dynamic and
non-linear process.
• The communicators shared information only
with a small portion of themselves to their
relationships.
• Its gradually develops into next level but
• Claude Shannon and Warren Weaver, both which will take some time to reach and
employees of the Telephone Laboratory, expanding its boundaries to the next level.
came up with the model that resembled the
transmission of telephone message.
• Information Source and Destination –
humans
• Transmitter & Receiver – devices or
instruments
• Signals – ranging from electronic signals to
radio waves to gestures
• Noise – secondary signals that hinder the
transmission of the message 2. Becker’s Mosaic Model
• Sam Becker (1968)
4. Berlo’s Model • According to Becker, the classical models
of communication are not very useful in
contemporary communication.
• It explains the complexity of human
communication.
• It describes the randomness of the origin of
messages and communication as a dynamic
process.
• Components:
a. Empty Cells
o Unavailable messages or
sources
Interactive Model
b. Vertical Layers
1. Schramm’s Model
o Set of similar messages
c. Cells
o Messages and sources
d. Receiver
o Go through the cells in loops
every time
• Concepts of Becker’s Mosaic Ecological Model
a. Message depends on information source, culture, • “Ecology”- refers to the environment where people
social situations and environment. interact among each other, using a particular
b. The mosaic is formed from the network of bits of language that they commonly understand.
information. • Proposed by Foulger (2004)
c. Every individual will take the information that • Expounds on the role of mass media, as well as the
he/she needs and ignores all others. individuals and groups that control these outlets of
d. The channels the bits are sent can also vary. information (Creators).
e. The bits are pieced together by a person as per • The model considers messages to be embedded in
the needs to form a message. language (another factor that can aid or hinder the
exchange of ideas), which is subsumed within the
• Two Processes in Mosaic Model context of media.
a. Bits of information are always increasing, has a
wide range of varieties and sources.
b. Mostly, there is repetitiveness in similar
transaction of messages or the message can
sometimes be in isolation.