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Critical literacy, communication and interaction 1 (GE3A) University of Aruba FAS: SW&D / OG&M September 1, 2009 UNIT 1 1
Today’s program:  Introduce ourselves Course organization & logistics Introduce the course, 6 units and framework Focus on Unit 1 of the course:   	Communication and Interaction, humans as social beings. Sharing and negotiation of meaning, interpretation and identity 2
Introducing ourselves… Welcome to our learning community!  What do I mean with the concept of a learning community? We form a group (students together with instructor) who, for a while and motivated by common vision and will, are engaged in the pursuit of acquiring knowledge, abilities and attitudes. We inspire and support each other during this learning journey. We are building together our own learning environment 3
Core principles of LC: 4
LC Members: Let’s here each others voices, tell something about yourself and what you expect to learn from this course 5
Course organization & logistics… 6 units A unit weekly Assignments (individual and team projects) Written Exam Wikispace:  Assignments Reading instructions; core concepts etc Room for discussion, further questions (students can try to answer, I’ll give guidance) More information on the subjects (non-mandatory) 6
Link: www.criticalliteracycommunication.wikispaces.com www.criticalliteracycommunication.wikispaces.com More guidance: Module description Reading list  7
Framework: 6 Unit Themes  Communication and Interaction, humans as social beings. Sharing and Negotiating meaning, interpretation and identity Making sense of the world and its codes. The meaning of Literacy The verbal code, Human Language Discourse as means for social action, constructing realities and persuasion Stepping into the cultural dimension. Intercultural communication and its contexts New literacies for the 21st century and our globalizing world. New ways of reading and what it means to be media literate 8
Communication and Interaction, UNIT 1 Communication and Interaction Humans as social beings, Sharing and negotiation meaning, interpretation and identity through codes 9
Objectives: To present a starting point for the understanding of human communication processes To explain the properties and dynamics of the communication process To approach the communication process in a contextual manner To try to make the ‘intangible’ communication process more ‘tangible’ by focusing on the different components of the process To translate the communication process in terms of transactions of ‘codes’ To relate communication with the concept of identity (To explain the meaning of effective communication and communicative competence beginning of UNIT 2) 10
Communicationto be human Human communication -the ability to symbolize and use language- separates humans from animals! Communication with others is the essence of what means to be human! We conduct a life through  	communication We define ourselves Is a vehicle; to initiate, to maintain and to terminate relationships 11
Etymology   = the study of the history of words and how their form and meaning have changed over time: Communication: from the Latin "communicare“ literally means "to put in common", “to share". The term originally meant sharing of tangible things; food, land, goods, andproperty. ‘ to put in common’ ‘communicare’ ‘to share’ 12
Humans are social beings Our essence being social The world is web of relationships: So, communication has a social function! 13
Why do we communicate? Biological motives (nurturing a child, helpless, need of attention, need for security) Interpersonal motives (one’s identity shapes and re-shapes itself through interaction with other and the world) Social/sociotal motives (societies are based on cooperation networks in the broadest sense of the word) 14
So many definitions… Different, numerous, depending on what perspective you choose! holistic approach properties of communication, rather than 1 definition.  And when we refer to ‘communication’ in a certain context, we will use the lasso technique and define the perspective and properties we choose to focus on!  15
8 properties/definitions: Process Dynamic Interactive - Transactive Symbolic Intentional – unintentional? Contextual Ubiquitous (omnipresent) Cultural  16
Dynamic process Ongoing, ever-changing, and continuous Doesn’t have a specific beginning or endpoint Not static, always moving, change  analogy: human body is a process: it is always aging communication is always developing. For verbally their may be a beginning/end. Non-verbally is more intangible.  it does not stop, is irreversible: it affects future communication Can’t be captured easily: flexible, fluid, adaptive Models, pictures, graphs give just a little help; ‘the dynamics of communication’ are impossible to replicate identically 17
Transactive-interactive It happens between people Active participation of people, sending and receiving, consciously directing: two-way flow Transactional implies simultaneously sending and receiving; negotiations Example: tell me what you did last weekend? See how I communicate with you, with my eyes and my face expressions, while listening to your story… 18
Ubiquitous Simply means that communication is everywhere, done by everyone, all the time. Whenever one goes there is communication happening “ one cannot not communicate” (Watzlawick et.al) 	Ok, let’s get philosophical, what does this mean? “ one cannot not communicate”  ??? 19
Logic of this argument: Reasoning: Behavior has no opposite, one cannot not behave  in an interactional setting.  All behavior has informational (message) value, since behavior is informative, it is communicative And one cannot not behave, then one cannot not communicate 20
Communication is symbolic The fundamental difference between information and communication Example: information communication 21
Information vs. communication Everything that reaches our human senses is information. What ‘you’ use as information, depends on your needs, knowledge and experience Communication implies signals (example sounds and images) that are symbolic in their nature. Symbolic = an arbitrarily selected and learned stimulus that represents something else. They don’t have any natural relationship with what they represent. Symbols are the vehicle by which the thoughts and ideas of one person can be communicated to another person. Both verbal as non-verbal symbols are arbitrary! 22
(un)Intentional? Communication is intentional  people consciously engage in interaction with a purpose! 	Eduard: “ do you want to go tonight to the movies?” 	Sarah: “Yeah, that sounds like a good idea”  Communication is unintentional  think about the statement:  “One cannot not communicate?” purpose=function 23
Purpose fulfilled? Effective communication implies that the purpose of a communication utterance was fulfilled!  	“Did he get my message?” “ I didn’t mean that at all, you misunderstood me completely”  	“ That Is precisely what I meant”  24
Communication is Contextual Communication is dependent on the context in which it occurs What is context?  25
Context (1) Refers to the setting, situation, circumstances, background and overall framework within which communication occurs. example, study the following picture, and imagine the context where the communication process takes place:  multilayers 26
“Girl talk” 27
Different contexts Psychical context: girlfriends talking to each other after class, in the university’s beautiful garden Social context: friend to friend (relationship) Psychological context: each girlfriend’s thoughts and emotions 28
Context (2) A world filled with people producing communication utterances: people who have social, cultural and personal identities, knowledge, beliefs, goals and wants, and who interact with one another in various socially and culturally defined situations (Schriffrin, 1994) We can perceive this world as a frame (frames in frames) that surrounds the communication process Our meanings and understandings of a utterance are dynamic, and constantly re-adjusted in the progression of communication 29
Context (3) Dimensions of context are not fixed and immutable Instead they are dynamically and socially constituted by the communication processes themselves. Communication is constrained by context, but it also reveals, sustains, and provides context 30
Communication is cultural Culture shapes communication, and communication is culture-bound A specific context that influence communication: the cultural context  This topic will be extensively elaborated in UNIT 5 of this course. 31
Can you grasp it? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Omc-LerO92c 32
Capturing the process Communication is a dynamic process! Now let’s try to ‘take a picture’ of this process; let’s try to capture it for the purpose of awareness, analysis and reflection. What components are involved in this process? Let’s visualize and appoint the components 33
Components involved in the process Sender & Receiver (continuous role switching)  and their psychological personal world consisting of: accumulated knowledge, experience, attitudes, believes… Channel Medium Message Coding of message Decoding of message Multiple layers of context Negotiation of meaning  interpretation  Feedback Noise 34
We use a model to help capture the process 35
But  models, just like maps, or frames only capture a specific aspect of reality: always keep this in mind! 36
Communication models When trying to capture the communication process in order to analyze it, models can be helpful!  What is a model? =a systematic representation of an object  or event in idealized and abstract form. The act of abstracting eliminates certain details to focus on essential factors = it is a metaphor. it allow us to see one thing in terms of another = is merely a picture; that is even distorting, because it stops or freezes an essentially dynamic interactive or transactive process into a static picture 37
Fiske, 1990 Chapter 1 and 2 introduces the concept of communication models.  Objective: to understand the functions of models and illustrate the range of this approach of communication theory Models: Shannon and Weaver’s model (1949) Gerbner’s model (1956) Laswell’s model (1948): Who says what in which channel to whom with what effect? Newcomb’s model (1953)/Westley and MacLean’s model (1957) masscommunication Jakobson’s model (1960) 38
Examples of models (1): 39
Examples of models (2): Gerbner’s model: perception and meaning 40
Can these models capture new forms of communications? 41
Level of comm.process (comm.forms): Intrapersonal (e.g. processing information, reflecting) Interpersonal (e.g. a couple, friendly/formal conversation) Intragroup (e.g. family) Intergroup or association (e.g. local community)  Institutional/organizational Society-wide (e.g. mass communication; magazine, TV, internet, radio) 42
The case of social media On what level is the communication process happening? 43
Negotiation of identities The ‘self’ (self-identity) is based on innumerable messages about the ‘self’  that the individual gets from the world. Relationships and the input (messages) they give us about ourselves, helps form (shape and re-shape) our identities.  This is a continuous process Interpersonal communication plays an important role in the negotiation of identities But also the groups we want to belong to , we belong to or don’t belong to shapes our identities (social identity) 44
The ‘self’ In negotiation with others 45
Our identity… Identity is changeable, constant in a process of shaping and re-shaping Identities are observable; we communicate it in differ forms (our cloths, language we use,  our behavior, communication is behavior Identities are a product of their time (Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice characters vs. Facebook generation) We look for acknowledgements (bevestiging) in our communication with others. Our ‘self’ is reflected through the mirror that others put in front of us 46
Reflection so far… 47 Please reflect  on the interplay between the shaping of identities and communication. How does your own identity relate to communication? Can you describe how ‘you are’ in communication? How do you relate to others when communicating and what this says about your identity?
So far: Communication is a dynamic process We make sense of ourselves and the world we live in by negotiating meaning, interpretation and identities through messages Sender and receiver interactions are based on coding and decoding of messages. Messages are composed of codes Stepping into ‘the code’ zone… CODES 48
Properties of CODEs! codes are systemized (language, sentences, words, alphabet, agreement upon meaning of arbitrary signs: A B etc.) (verbal/non-verbal codes) All codes convey meaning: they are vehicles for messages, ideas, rules  Codes depend upon agreement amongst their user and upon a shared sociocultural background All codes perform an identifiable social or communicative function All codes are transmittable by their appropriate media or channels of communication 49
Bridging Unit 1 to unit 2:  From unit 1- human beings are social, they communicate and make sense of their selves and their world through codes (messages, ideas, conventions, rules etc.) Being Literate means here, being aware of and being able to deal with these codes (coding and decoding process) Next week’s theme deals with: 50
Theme next week: Making sense of the world and its codes The meaning of being ‘Literate’ 51

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UNIT 1 Critical Literacy, communication and Interaction 1

  • 1. Critical literacy, communication and interaction 1 (GE3A) University of Aruba FAS: SW&D / OG&M September 1, 2009 UNIT 1 1
  • 2. Today’s program: Introduce ourselves Course organization & logistics Introduce the course, 6 units and framework Focus on Unit 1 of the course: Communication and Interaction, humans as social beings. Sharing and negotiation of meaning, interpretation and identity 2
  • 3. Introducing ourselves… Welcome to our learning community! What do I mean with the concept of a learning community? We form a group (students together with instructor) who, for a while and motivated by common vision and will, are engaged in the pursuit of acquiring knowledge, abilities and attitudes. We inspire and support each other during this learning journey. We are building together our own learning environment 3
  • 5. LC Members: Let’s here each others voices, tell something about yourself and what you expect to learn from this course 5
  • 6. Course organization & logistics… 6 units A unit weekly Assignments (individual and team projects) Written Exam Wikispace: Assignments Reading instructions; core concepts etc Room for discussion, further questions (students can try to answer, I’ll give guidance) More information on the subjects (non-mandatory) 6
  • 8. Framework: 6 Unit Themes Communication and Interaction, humans as social beings. Sharing and Negotiating meaning, interpretation and identity Making sense of the world and its codes. The meaning of Literacy The verbal code, Human Language Discourse as means for social action, constructing realities and persuasion Stepping into the cultural dimension. Intercultural communication and its contexts New literacies for the 21st century and our globalizing world. New ways of reading and what it means to be media literate 8
  • 9. Communication and Interaction, UNIT 1 Communication and Interaction Humans as social beings, Sharing and negotiation meaning, interpretation and identity through codes 9
  • 10. Objectives: To present a starting point for the understanding of human communication processes To explain the properties and dynamics of the communication process To approach the communication process in a contextual manner To try to make the ‘intangible’ communication process more ‘tangible’ by focusing on the different components of the process To translate the communication process in terms of transactions of ‘codes’ To relate communication with the concept of identity (To explain the meaning of effective communication and communicative competence beginning of UNIT 2) 10
  • 11. Communicationto be human Human communication -the ability to symbolize and use language- separates humans from animals! Communication with others is the essence of what means to be human! We conduct a life through communication We define ourselves Is a vehicle; to initiate, to maintain and to terminate relationships 11
  • 12. Etymology  = the study of the history of words and how their form and meaning have changed over time: Communication: from the Latin "communicare“ literally means "to put in common", “to share". The term originally meant sharing of tangible things; food, land, goods, andproperty. ‘ to put in common’ ‘communicare’ ‘to share’ 12
  • 13. Humans are social beings Our essence being social The world is web of relationships: So, communication has a social function! 13
  • 14. Why do we communicate? Biological motives (nurturing a child, helpless, need of attention, need for security) Interpersonal motives (one’s identity shapes and re-shapes itself through interaction with other and the world) Social/sociotal motives (societies are based on cooperation networks in the broadest sense of the word) 14
  • 15. So many definitions… Different, numerous, depending on what perspective you choose! holistic approach properties of communication, rather than 1 definition. And when we refer to ‘communication’ in a certain context, we will use the lasso technique and define the perspective and properties we choose to focus on! 15
  • 16. 8 properties/definitions: Process Dynamic Interactive - Transactive Symbolic Intentional – unintentional? Contextual Ubiquitous (omnipresent) Cultural 16
  • 17. Dynamic process Ongoing, ever-changing, and continuous Doesn’t have a specific beginning or endpoint Not static, always moving, change analogy: human body is a process: it is always aging communication is always developing. For verbally their may be a beginning/end. Non-verbally is more intangible. it does not stop, is irreversible: it affects future communication Can’t be captured easily: flexible, fluid, adaptive Models, pictures, graphs give just a little help; ‘the dynamics of communication’ are impossible to replicate identically 17
  • 18. Transactive-interactive It happens between people Active participation of people, sending and receiving, consciously directing: two-way flow Transactional implies simultaneously sending and receiving; negotiations Example: tell me what you did last weekend? See how I communicate with you, with my eyes and my face expressions, while listening to your story… 18
  • 19. Ubiquitous Simply means that communication is everywhere, done by everyone, all the time. Whenever one goes there is communication happening “ one cannot not communicate” (Watzlawick et.al) Ok, let’s get philosophical, what does this mean? “ one cannot not communicate” ??? 19
  • 20. Logic of this argument: Reasoning: Behavior has no opposite, one cannot not behave in an interactional setting. All behavior has informational (message) value, since behavior is informative, it is communicative And one cannot not behave, then one cannot not communicate 20
  • 21. Communication is symbolic The fundamental difference between information and communication Example: information communication 21
  • 22. Information vs. communication Everything that reaches our human senses is information. What ‘you’ use as information, depends on your needs, knowledge and experience Communication implies signals (example sounds and images) that are symbolic in their nature. Symbolic = an arbitrarily selected and learned stimulus that represents something else. They don’t have any natural relationship with what they represent. Symbols are the vehicle by which the thoughts and ideas of one person can be communicated to another person. Both verbal as non-verbal symbols are arbitrary! 22
  • 23. (un)Intentional? Communication is intentional  people consciously engage in interaction with a purpose! Eduard: “ do you want to go tonight to the movies?” Sarah: “Yeah, that sounds like a good idea” Communication is unintentional  think about the statement: “One cannot not communicate?” purpose=function 23
  • 24. Purpose fulfilled? Effective communication implies that the purpose of a communication utterance was fulfilled! “Did he get my message?” “ I didn’t mean that at all, you misunderstood me completely” “ That Is precisely what I meant” 24
  • 25. Communication is Contextual Communication is dependent on the context in which it occurs What is context? 25
  • 26. Context (1) Refers to the setting, situation, circumstances, background and overall framework within which communication occurs. example, study the following picture, and imagine the context where the communication process takes place: multilayers 26
  • 28. Different contexts Psychical context: girlfriends talking to each other after class, in the university’s beautiful garden Social context: friend to friend (relationship) Psychological context: each girlfriend’s thoughts and emotions 28
  • 29. Context (2) A world filled with people producing communication utterances: people who have social, cultural and personal identities, knowledge, beliefs, goals and wants, and who interact with one another in various socially and culturally defined situations (Schriffrin, 1994) We can perceive this world as a frame (frames in frames) that surrounds the communication process Our meanings and understandings of a utterance are dynamic, and constantly re-adjusted in the progression of communication 29
  • 30. Context (3) Dimensions of context are not fixed and immutable Instead they are dynamically and socially constituted by the communication processes themselves. Communication is constrained by context, but it also reveals, sustains, and provides context 30
  • 31. Communication is cultural Culture shapes communication, and communication is culture-bound A specific context that influence communication: the cultural context This topic will be extensively elaborated in UNIT 5 of this course. 31
  • 32. Can you grasp it? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Omc-LerO92c 32
  • 33. Capturing the process Communication is a dynamic process! Now let’s try to ‘take a picture’ of this process; let’s try to capture it for the purpose of awareness, analysis and reflection. What components are involved in this process? Let’s visualize and appoint the components 33
  • 34. Components involved in the process Sender & Receiver (continuous role switching) and their psychological personal world consisting of: accumulated knowledge, experience, attitudes, believes… Channel Medium Message Coding of message Decoding of message Multiple layers of context Negotiation of meaning  interpretation Feedback Noise 34
  • 35. We use a model to help capture the process 35
  • 36. But models, just like maps, or frames only capture a specific aspect of reality: always keep this in mind! 36
  • 37. Communication models When trying to capture the communication process in order to analyze it, models can be helpful! What is a model? =a systematic representation of an object or event in idealized and abstract form. The act of abstracting eliminates certain details to focus on essential factors = it is a metaphor. it allow us to see one thing in terms of another = is merely a picture; that is even distorting, because it stops or freezes an essentially dynamic interactive or transactive process into a static picture 37
  • 38. Fiske, 1990 Chapter 1 and 2 introduces the concept of communication models. Objective: to understand the functions of models and illustrate the range of this approach of communication theory Models: Shannon and Weaver’s model (1949) Gerbner’s model (1956) Laswell’s model (1948): Who says what in which channel to whom with what effect? Newcomb’s model (1953)/Westley and MacLean’s model (1957) masscommunication Jakobson’s model (1960) 38
  • 40. Examples of models (2): Gerbner’s model: perception and meaning 40
  • 41. Can these models capture new forms of communications? 41
  • 42. Level of comm.process (comm.forms): Intrapersonal (e.g. processing information, reflecting) Interpersonal (e.g. a couple, friendly/formal conversation) Intragroup (e.g. family) Intergroup or association (e.g. local community) Institutional/organizational Society-wide (e.g. mass communication; magazine, TV, internet, radio) 42
  • 43. The case of social media On what level is the communication process happening? 43
  • 44. Negotiation of identities The ‘self’ (self-identity) is based on innumerable messages about the ‘self’ that the individual gets from the world. Relationships and the input (messages) they give us about ourselves, helps form (shape and re-shape) our identities. This is a continuous process Interpersonal communication plays an important role in the negotiation of identities But also the groups we want to belong to , we belong to or don’t belong to shapes our identities (social identity) 44
  • 45. The ‘self’ In negotiation with others 45
  • 46. Our identity… Identity is changeable, constant in a process of shaping and re-shaping Identities are observable; we communicate it in differ forms (our cloths, language we use, our behavior, communication is behavior Identities are a product of their time (Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice characters vs. Facebook generation) We look for acknowledgements (bevestiging) in our communication with others. Our ‘self’ is reflected through the mirror that others put in front of us 46
  • 47. Reflection so far… 47 Please reflect on the interplay between the shaping of identities and communication. How does your own identity relate to communication? Can you describe how ‘you are’ in communication? How do you relate to others when communicating and what this says about your identity?
  • 48. So far: Communication is a dynamic process We make sense of ourselves and the world we live in by negotiating meaning, interpretation and identities through messages Sender and receiver interactions are based on coding and decoding of messages. Messages are composed of codes Stepping into ‘the code’ zone… CODES 48
  • 49. Properties of CODEs! codes are systemized (language, sentences, words, alphabet, agreement upon meaning of arbitrary signs: A B etc.) (verbal/non-verbal codes) All codes convey meaning: they are vehicles for messages, ideas, rules Codes depend upon agreement amongst their user and upon a shared sociocultural background All codes perform an identifiable social or communicative function All codes are transmittable by their appropriate media or channels of communication 49
  • 50. Bridging Unit 1 to unit 2: From unit 1- human beings are social, they communicate and make sense of their selves and their world through codes (messages, ideas, conventions, rules etc.) Being Literate means here, being aware of and being able to deal with these codes (coding and decoding process) Next week’s theme deals with: 50
  • 51. Theme next week: Making sense of the world and its codes The meaning of being ‘Literate’ 51