EDUC 202 Social Dimensions of Education: Intercultural Communication
EDUC 202 Social Dimensions of Education: Intercultural Communication
EDUC 202 Social Dimensions of Education: Intercultural Communication
Social Dimensions
of
Education
CHAPTER III
INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION
Objectives
4. Telecommunicating - is an
arrangement in which employees use
computers to perform their regular
work responsibilities at home or
somewhere.
Paralanguage
- is the language of gestures, expressions and
postures.
Body Language or Kinesics
- the most obvious form of paralanguage
A man’s language
- is a reflection of the kind of person he is, the
family where he comes from, the level of
education he has attained.
The Study of Language is divided
into Four Areas:
Phonology, Semantics,
Grammar, and Pragmatics
(Sharey)
1. Phonology
- the system of sounds that a particular language uses,
includes not only the language’s basic unit of sounds, or
phonemes, but rules about how we put phonemes together to
form words and rules about the proper intonation patterns for
phrases and sentences.
2. Semantics
- is the study of word meanings and combinations.
Comprehension of written as well as spoken language
requires not only a knowledge of specific words and their
definitions but an understanding of how we use words and
how we combine them in phrases, clauses, and sentences.
3. Grammar
- describes the structure of a language which consists of two
major parts: morphology and syntax. Morphology is the study of
the language’s smallest units of meaning called morphemes –
prefixes, suffixes, and root words.
4. Pragmatics
- consists of rules for the use of appropriate language in
particular contexts. Thus pragmatics is concerned not only with
speaking and writing but with social interaction, and it directly
addresses the issue of effective communication.
RELATIONSHIP
BETWEEN LANGUAGE
AND CULTURE
(Aiza)
Perhaps the most significant of the
inventions made possible by culture is
language. The learning of culture
takes place through language. From
our enormous capacity to learn and
use language is derived our collective
memory, as well as writing, art, and
all other media that shape human
consciousness and store and transmit
knowledge.
According to Panopio et al, 1992:
Language is an integral part of culture
and human culture cannot exist without it.
All human societies have languages. In
some simple societies where people cannot
read or write, they have a spoken
language. Through the use of language,
wide vistas of reality have been opened.
One way a society’s language may
reflect its corresponding culture is in
lexical content, or vocabulary. When
experiences, events, or objects are singled
out and given words it may be the result of
cultural characteristics.
LANGUAGE IDEAS
SYMBOLS KNOWLEDGE
BELIEFS
VALUES
ACCOUNTS
BEHAVIORAL
NORMS MATERIAL
MORES TOOLS, MEDICINES
LAWS BOOKS
FOLKWAYS TRANSPORTATION
RITUALS TECHNOLOGIES
A. COMMUNICATION COMPONENT
1. LANGUAGE. Perhaps more than anything else,
language defines what it means to be human. It
forms the core of all culture. When people share
a language, they share a condensed, very flexible
set of symbols and meanings.