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Communication and Language

Communication and Language. Introduction to language and communication. What is communication? transmission of information evoking understanding, meaning maintaining social contact What is language? a system of human communication using words. A conversation. A: ‘What’s your name boy?’

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Communication and Language

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  1. Communication and Language

  2. Introduction to language and communication • What is communication? • transmission of information • evoking understanding, meaning • maintaining social contact • What is language? • a system of human communication using words

  3. A conversation • A: ‘What’s your name boy?’ • B: ‘Dr. Poussaint. I’m a physician’ • A: ‘What’s your first name, boy’ • B: ‘Alvin’

  4. Context Message Addresser Addressee Contact Code Functions of communicationJacobson (1960)

  5. Context - Referential Message - Poetic Addresser Emotive Addressee Conative Contact - Phatic Code - Metalingual Functions of communication (2)

  6. Interviewing

  7. Advice bureaux At the bank Tourism and travel services Opinion polls Telephone interviews Selling Surveys Parent - teacher Mass media interviews Job interviews Counselling Police Welfare services Clinical interviews Research interviews Types of interview

  8. Class exercise - a short informal interview about “Being a good communicator” • Divide into pairs • Allocate role - interviewer / interviewee • Plan the questions you will ask • Conduct the interview and take note of answers • Review conclusions • Reverse roles and repeat

  9. The interview as conversation • Opening - Establishing rapport • Cognitive, social and emotional factors • Topic • Development - maintaining attention • Closing • Attitudes - empathy, sympathy & judgement • Ethics • Interviewer credentials • Anonymity and confidentiality • Records • Truth - content and purpose

  10. ‘True Conversation’ • A conversation is a process of two people understanding each other. ….each opens himself to the other person, truly accepts his point of view as worthy of consideration and gets inside the other to such an extent that he understands not a particular individual but what he says. • (Gadamer, 1975)

  11. Interview structure • Define topic • Question formats • Open-ended, multiple choice, ranking, probing • Bias, ambiguity, style of language • Leading questions • Source of bias, or test the limits • Question response sequence • Dealing with emotion • Prejudice

  12. Topic: Everyday lived life world Interpret meaning of central themes Qualitative Open nuanced description Specific situations and action sequences (not general opinions) Deliberate naivité Focused - neither structured nor non-directive Ambiguity Change and insight Interviewer sensitivity Interpersonal interaction Positive experience Qualitative research interviews

  13. Extent of spontaneous, rich specific and relevant answers The shorter the interviewer’s questions and longer the respondents answers the better Degree to which interviewer follows up, clarifies meanings of answers The ideal interview is to a large extent interpreted throughout the interview The interviewer attempts to verify his interpretations of S’s answers in the interview Interview is ‘self-communicating’ - story contained in itself not needing extra description and elaboration Quality criteria for an interview

  14. Hamlet’s interview with PoloniusAct III Scene 2 H: Do you see yonder cloud that’s almost in shape of a camel? P: By th’ mass, and ‘tis like a camel indeed H: Methinks it is like a weasel P: It is back’d like a weasel H: Or like a whale? P: Very like a whale H: (aside) They fool me to the top of my bent

  15. Interpretation • Unreliable technique? - leading questions, different answers about clouds • Trustworthiness of Polonius - reliable, thrice checked answers. Indirect interview. Speaks for itself before aside • Power relations at a royal court. Courtier can be made to say anything, or ‘play up to’ the prince? • Part of a theme of the play - questioning reality, motives of others, frail nature of reality, pervasive doubt about the appearance of the world • Ethics - deception, no informed consent, but survival, life or death

  16. Knowledgeable Structuring Clear Gentle / permissive Sensitive Open Steering Critical Remembering Interpreting Qualification criteria for the interviewer

  17. Class exercise • How far did your interview match up to these criteria? • What were the problems? • How could you overcome these problems? • What were your findings? • What credibility do they have? • What can you say about this communication sequence?

  18. Contrasting Theories of Communication and Language

  19. 5 approaches to language and communication • Language as a formal system of grammar • Language as the processing of information • Communication as understanding • Language as use • Communication as a social skill

  20. Language as a formal system • Structural complexity of language • Rules of grammar, esp. syntax • Universal competence underlies performance • Acquisition through biological maturation not learning • Key texts: • Pinker

  21. Language as the processing of information • Empirical experimental approach • Information processing system • Generic cognitive processes • Sophisticated computational models • Increasing attention to neurophysiology • Key texts • Harley, Forrester

  22. Communication as understanding • Founded on semiotics - theory of signs • Role of reader/listener paramount in analysing signs • Meaning is a cultural production • Discourse and narrative • Key texts: • Forrester, Fiske, Bignell, Barthes

  23. Language as use • Shared understanding - common ground • Co-operation and joint action • Intentionality of participants is central • Roles, relationships and social action • Key text: • Clark

  24. Communication as a social skill • Behavioural / ethnological approach • Includes non-verbal communication • Patterns of interaction (eg turntaking) • Ecological structure of discourse • Interviews, lectures, chatrooms • Key text: • Hargie, Saunders & Dickson

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