Unit 1 (Purposive Communication)
Unit 1 (Purposive Communication)
Introduction
In this unit, you will learn about communication processes, principles, and
ethics.
In your personal life, in school, in the community and in your workplace
later, take note that effective communication is vital for success. Faced with people
of different beliefs, values, attitudes and backgrounds, communication processes,
principles, and ethics become necessary. In real world scenarios, you need to engage
in group discussions, make presentations and interact with different people. If you
do not have the necessary and purposive communication skills, you will have a hard
time relating with others in different situations. Your goal, therefore, is to become
a fully-developed, thoughtful and persuasive communicator.
Every time you talk, you present:
• Yourself
• Your purpose
• Your ideas; and
• Information to others
If you:
- Are ambitious and want to move up the ladder of success;
- Wish to have a positive impact on others;
- Want to have your skills and talents recognized and rewarded;
Then strive to be a successful communicator NOW. Now is the time to equip
yourself with the mastery of the communication processes, principles and ethics so
that you will be prepared in your future jobs.
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
Learning Objectives
At the end the lesson, you are expected to:
1. discuss the importance of communication in different situations
2. share how communication helped in resolving issues you have experienced in
different situations
a. Academics
• Communication skills are tied to academic success.
• Students who are good at writing and speaking perform better not only in
the English classroom but also in the content areas and all other areas of
learning.
b. Professional
• Desired communication skills vary from one career to another. Being able
to communicate leads to a harmonious relationship within the
organization.
c. Personal
• The skills to talk with fluency and write with efficiency lead to a person’s
achievement of his aspirations
d. Civic
• One cannot live alone, so being able to blend with the community is a
satisfying endeavor. This can only be done when a person can
communicate his/her ideas with different people coming from different
backgrounds in the community.
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
Learning Objectives
Presentation of content
Study the pictures below and determine the type of communication being used.
1. Verbal communication
● It is a form of transmitting messages using word symbols in representing
ideas and objects which comes in two forms – oral and written.
● It includes a face to face interaction with another person, speaking to
someone on the phone, participating in meetings, delivering speeches in programs
and giving lectures or presentations in conferences.
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
Consider this:
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
Learning Objectives
Presentation of Content:
The diagram below illustrates the components and the flow of communication.
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
Elements of Communication
1. Sender
- a person, group, or organization who initiates communication.
- She/He may be called the source, encoder, speaker or communicator.
2. Message
- an element transmitted in communication.
- It may consist of the idea, opinion, information, feeling or attitude of the
sender.
3. Channel
- a pathway or medium through which the message travels to reach its
destination.
- It may be oral, written, or visual.
4. Receiver
- a person who receives, analyses, understands, and interprets the message.
- S/he can also be called decoder, reader, or listener.
5. Feedback
- the receiver’s response that provides information to the sender.
- the return process in which the receiver provides both verbal and non-verbal
signals to show whether the message is understood or not.
6. Noise
- a form of distortion, barrier or obstacle that occurs in an of the oral
communication process.
7. Adjustment
- done if the message is distorted or is not clearly understood by the receiver.
8. Context
- It is the situation from which the communication is done. It includes
settings or environment (family, school, workplace, religious
communities); social relations (friends, husband and wife, parent and
child, colleagues/boss- subordinate in the office); scenes which include
place, time and occasion (business meeting, job interview, social
gathering – parties, weddings, etc.); and culture (history, tradition, beliefs,
norms, values)
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
2. Transmission
• The transmission may be as simple as meeting with the intended recipient of the
message, and orally sharing the message, or calling the individual to communicate
orally over the phone.
• If the message is a print one, it may include distributing a paper memo or sending
an email.
3. Reception
• After transmitting the message, the communication duties change hands and fall
upon the receiver of the message.
• The message is obtained either from the written format the sender selected or b
listening carefully as the message is delivered orally.
4. Translation
• Once receiving the message, the recipient must translate the message into terms
that s/he can easily understand.
• To do this, s/he must listen to or read the message in question and paraphrase it
within her/his head, turning the potentially complex context contents of the
message into more manageable and meaningful components.
5. Response
• This may be verbal and immediate, which is commonly the case if
communication is face-to-face.
• It may also be easily a written response that either expands upon the message or
simply indicates receipt of the message in question.
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
Learning Objectives
At the end of the lesson, you are expected to:
1. explain the seven principles of communication, and
2. point out how these principles of communication can be achieved.
Presentation of Content
Source: https://expertprogrammanagement.com/2018/04/7-cs-communication/
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
Feedback
Read the Editorial below and explain how the seven Cs of communication are achieved:
Editorial:
Giving in to China
from: www.philstar.com
There is certainly no doubt now that China’s invasion of the West Philippine Sea is
unstoppable. The defeatist stance of the Duterte administration fuels and further emboldens
China to occupy the atolls and reefs with the installation of military facilities that can only
be dismantled with might which the Philippines does not have.
The conflict in South China Sea, in which the Philippines named West Philippine
Sea as within its Exclusive Economic Zone, involves China, the Philippines, Brunei,
Malaysia and Indonesia. The impasse had become longstanding and, worse, is turning into
a powder keg, so to speak. The controversial waterway’s strategic importance cannot be
ignored as an international waterway where some $5.3 trillion worth of goods move
through the sea every year, according to the United States Department of Defense.
Aside from being a strategic maritime territory, the South China Sea is estimated to
hold 10 percent of the total global fisheries, 11 billion barrels of oil reserve, and 190 trillion
cubic feet of natural gas deposits.
With its booming economy and skyrocketing demand for raw materials for its
industry, China cannot give in to other claimants of the South China Sea other than
declaring war where the victor gets the spoils.
Looking forward to its economic expansion, China declared in 1947 the
demarcation 9-dash line territory of the South China Sea which almost claimed for itself
the 3.5 million square-kilometer total area.
In 2012, the standoff between China and the Philippines happened in the
Scarborough Shoal which displayed China’s might and effectively took away the
Philippines’ control over it. With no other way to contest its claim, the Philippine filed case
before the United Nations Permanent Court of Arbitration. Philippine won the case in 2016
with the ruling that essentially dismissed as illegal China’s self-imposed 9-dash
demarcation line as illegal.
Two years after the Philippine victory over the declared 9-dash line of China and
then presidential candidate Rodrigo Duterte’s theatrics to jet ski to Scarborough Shoal to
plant the Philippine flag there, China has almost completed the militarization of the area in
the West Philippine Sea with its facilities installed.
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
To date, China has already occupied the atolls and reefs the Philippines once
claimed before the aggressive invasion of China of the South China Sea using the 9-dash
line demarcation.
Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque tried to put the blame on the previous
administration of President Benigno Aquino III by saying that “the Aquino administration
did nothing” about the creeping invasion of China in the West Philippine Sea. Roque
obviously ignored that the previous Aquino administration was persistent in pursuing its
claims over the West Philippine Sea which resulted in the Permanent Court of Arbitration’s
ruling in our favor.
We cannot go to war with a superpower like China. But being in the international
community of nations, there are other ways to resist invasion and bullying by more
powerful nation. But with the attitude and stance of President Duterte kowtowing to
Chinese officials, like they are his bosses, no diplomatic protest had been lodged against
China.
Contrary to Roque’s putting the blame on the previous Aquino administration, the
Duterte administration is the one giving in to China, backtracking the gains achieved by
the Philippines’ claim over the West Philippine Sea handed by the Permanent Court of
Arbitration in 2016. What we can see in the way President Duterte handles the issue in the
West Philippine Sea is his allegedly treasonous gesture of surrendering a part of our
national patrimony without a whimper of protest while it is being shamelessly being
usurped right before our very eyes.
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
Learning Outcomes
Presentation of Content
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
Summary
In this chapter you have learned the Communication Process, Principles and Ethics.
You have discovered the importance of communication in the different aspects of your life
like in your family, in your community, in your school and in even in your work place later
on. It is also emphasized in this chapter that verbal and non- verbal communication are
both needed in achieving effective communication. It is very important to note that
participants of the communication process must consider the Seven C’s which are Clarity
of thoughts, Conciseness, Coherence, Completeness, Concreteness, Correctness and
Courtesy. Lastly, this chapter introduced to you the Ethics of communication which
reminds you of the standards that you have to practice when participating in a
communication process.
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Unit 1: Communication Processes, Principles and Ethics
References
Montano-Harmon M.R. (2014) Developing English for Academic Purposes,
California State University, Fullerton
Manzano, B.A., Arador, MVP and Ladia MAp (2018). Purposive Communication
for College Freshmen. St. Andrews Publishing House, Plaridel, Bulacan
https://www.lanecc.edu/llc/speech/ethical-communication
https://ethiccomm.weebly.com/ethical-communication.html
https://expertprogrammanagement.com/2018/04/7-cs-communication
https://expertprogrammanagement.com/2018/04/7-cs-communication/
www.ThoughtCom.com
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