Comm 3
Comm 3
CHAPTER
1: Exploring the Nature of Communication: An Overview
2: The Listening Process
3: The Self and Intrapersonal Communication
4: The Speakers Ethos
5: Language
6: Using the Voice to Communicate
7: Nonverbal Communication: The Potent Hidden Language
8: Communicating with Another Person
9: Group Dynamics
10: Communicating in Public
APPENDICES
A: Self-Evaluation of Listening Habits
B: Oral Reading Evaluation Sheet
C: Interview Plan Format
D: Sample Interview Plan
E: Evaluation Sheet for Interview
F: Basic Agenda for a Problem Solving Discussion
G: Sample Exploratory Guide (problem of policy)
H: Leadership Evaluation Form
I: Scrambled Outline 1
J: Scrambled Outline 2
K: Scrambled Outline 3
L: Sample Speech Plan (to inform)
M: Sample Speech Plan (to persuade)
N: Sample Speech Plan (to impress)
O: Sample Speech Plan (to entertain)
P: Speech Evaluation Form
Q: Sample Special Occasion Speech
PREFACE
We were in the thick of a discussion in search of an appropriate title for an introductory course in
Theatre. I felt my eyeballs turning for I was challenged. What could that title be? I am way past
retirement. Over forty years this is something I had been involved in: the formulating of course titles,
course descriptions, attending meetings to present them, defend them, and the like. All of a sudden, the
moderators eyes met mine and he called on me. The only thing I had in mind was Shakespeare, so
without hesitation, I blurted out: The worlds a stage. I liked it myself. As a title, it is brief. Being
Shakespearean, it sounded learned. I thought the response to it was favorable. But the best thing was it set
peoples minds thinking and there were more suggestions that followed. Finally, The Worlds a Stage
was one of three titles to be polished by a committee.
But I didnt stop there. The Worlds a Stage still kept bothering me on my way home. Then, out of the
blue, came an inspiration. To add the word for so that the title would be For the Worlds a Stage. I
thought the idea and an idea came. That could be an expression of a justification of the course for new
general education purposes. For the Worlds a Stage would be a springboard to an exploration into an
understanding of the dramaturgy of theatre as communication. It would provide a motivation for the act of
studying theatre. It would be personal and global.
I did the next best thing when I arrived home. I called up the Department to have my idea on record and
for consideration by the editorial committee.
Even to myself, at this advanced age, the thought was a significant, momentous rhetorical experience.
With one word, I changed the idea. It was made more consecrated, more instrumental: the power of
language.
Which brings me back to my present task of writing a preface. I think the narration of my experience
with one word what it can do to open the ears, to place stars in ones eyes is appropriate for this task.
For that is what the present book hopes to do: Open the eyes, the ears, to enable the individual to relate
himself to his environment.
The book has been well thought out and written. We congratulate everyone, faculty and students, who
participated one way or the other, in making the writing of this book possible. The choice of the last item
they included, the sample of an occasional speech is excellent. In one stroke, the book became Filipino,
proudly Filipino.
I thank the authors for this role they gave me, to write the preface. I feel honored and privileged to be
part of the book even in this sense.
I wish every teacher and student user of the book a fruitful journey towards acquisition of optimum
speaking effectiveness.
Alejandro J. Casambre, Ph., D.
Professor Emeritus
28 May 2002
1
EXPLORING THE NATURE OF COMMUNICATION
An Overview
Objectives
After reading this chapter you should be able to:
1. discuss the nature of human communication;
2. construct a basic framework for defining communication;
3. analyze the different models of communication and generate new ideas therefrom;
4. dispel misconceptions about communication and reinforce basic concepts;
5. describe the functions and values of human communication;
6. differentiate the modes of communication;
7. identify the levels of communication; and
8. synthesize the common elements of the speech communication process.
INTRODUCTION
Why speech communication?
What other power [than eloquence] could have been strong enough either to gather scattered
humanity into one place, or to lead it out of its brutish existence in the wilderness up to our
present condition of civilization as [people] and as citizens, or, after the establishment of
social communities, to give shape to laws, tribunals, and civic rights?
Cicero
De Oratore 1.33
Marcus Tullius Cicero (10643 B.C.), one of the greatest Roman orators and statesmen of his time,
underscored the power of speech in the paragraph above. In our global age today the call stands strong.
People need to talk. Families become united and stable by communicating. Communities and social
groups bond together for the attainment of shared goals and commitments. Fiat in democracy as a form of
government in many countries is sustained through freedom of speech or communication. Nations coalesce
for the protection of their common interests and purposes through oral communication. Communicating
leads to sharing; sharing leads to bonding; bonding leads to uniting.
The Latin word communis is divided into two parts, com-munis (common, public). The initial
syllable in communia is com together and the rest is munia duties. From this etymology one draws
the sense of working together. A sense of sharing, a duty to work publicly with is the gist of the word
communicate. Without speech or oral communication, societies could not attain levels of civilization,
communities could not organize into living and working groups, mark and ritualize practices and
traditions, debate and decide difficult issues, and transform society for its good. People need to talk.
When the boy you admire doesnt know you exist, you run to your best friend to ask for advice. You
share on a one-on-one basis. When your family needs to sit in council to plan how to cope with a financial
crisis, you share person-to-person and with every person in the circle. When husband and wife talk about
rules of child-rearing, one person shares intimately or dialogues with the other. When you are granted that
first interview for a job youve always dreamed of, you talk with someone superior to you.
When teachers communicate to their students, they need to share not only content but values as well.
When a shop foreman communicates instructions to his men, he needs to motivate them towards a
productive work ethic. We could go on ad infinitum.
Oral or speech communication is the preferred form of communication because it flows spontaneously
and directly between individuals. Although public speaking no longer defines the scope of human
communication, its functions for a society are equally important to individuals and groups (Gronbeck et al
1994):
1. Speeches are used for self-definition.
Just as church groups recite their creeds aloud and often, societies and communities engage in
speech communication activities in order to define themselves or reaffirm their common identity,
indicate what they stand for, or what it means to have affinity to a group or organization.
2. Speeches are used to disseminate ideas and information.
Even into days proliferating media, much information needs to be disseminated in a personalized
way. Leaders of nations talk to their people in matters of grave interest: emergent societies or
republics are galvanized by influential speakers who rally people to a cause. Civic and social
action to change society starts in small groups that discuss, share, and think about vital issues of
common concern.
3. Speeches are used to debate questions of fact, value, and policy in communities.
One could say that civilizations advanced when men learned the art of public debate or verbal
controversy instead of resorting to weaponry.
Facts are necessary to shed light on any situation. Values have to be clarified by members of
societies or groups in order to ensure the common good. Policy has to be arrived at through a
democratic consensus before any rational action.
4. Speeches are used to transform individuals and groups.
Speech communication in any form has to be persuasive to bring about change in the individual or
in a group. Communities and groups have to adapt to changes in their environments and ways of
life if change must occur. Speeches advocating change in order to spur growth of the individual
and groups in society can unlock doors to progress in any civilization. Changed attitudes that lead
to positive action in the individual become a force when done collectively.
If we relate the above functions to our everyday life, we can say that communication in several
instances holds the following values for us:
1. Communication helps us to define and understand ourselves and our environment
2. Communication breaks barriers between two or more persons, thus, leading to relationships.
3. Communication creates bonding in groups and affirms the human need to belong.
4. Communication facilitates cooperative action toward goal attainment.
5. Communication informs and enlightens people for knowledges sake and informed judgment.
6. Communication leads to enduring friendships and intimacy between individuals and among groups.
7. Communication enhances our understanding of and respect for different cultures.
8. Communication opens avenues for growth of the individual and society.
Now that youve seen how important speech communication is, youd like to discover what
communication is and how it works in reality.
THE NATURE OF COMMUNICATION
In your mathematics class you ask your professor to explain how she arrived at the solution just written
on the board; as she finishes you nod your agreement. Then you hurry after class to the dormitory and
relish a lunch with your roommate who tells you she understands your moods. At days end you attend a
business meeting with a peer group that gives you a feeling of belonging.
But when you return for the weekend, your father complains that your steady date lacks manners. You
certainly disagree but remain silent and walk slowly away. Then a teenaged sibling with nose up in the air
complains about her older sister being more privileged on the use of the house phone. Rather than get into
an argument with your father or sister, you withdraw to your room. It seems its going to be a long, long
weekend.
In both sets of examples there is communication taking place. But is one more effective than the other?
Words, gesture, body movements, and even silence communicated feelings and ideas. If you think that the
first examples characterize more effective communication than the second, what distinguishes the former
from the latter? But before we can come up with a basic definition of communication, we need to
understand certain core premises on the nature of communication.
In any system the parts constitute a whole and so each component relies and depends on one
another. This interdependence makes for efficient functioning of the whole. If every part contributes
chances are the system will work as a unit. As an example, lets take your speech communication
class as a system. The parts are your professor, classmates, syllabus, textbook, references and your
particular room (physical environment). Add to these the bigger system that encompasses your class
system the university and its policies and SOPs (standard operating procedures), Philippine
society and its culture. How will changing your present stuffy room into a whitewashed airconditioned one affect the communication? How will a change in faculty to handle the course affect
the system? How will the universitys shift in emphasis from arts and letters to mathematics and the
sciences affect your communication? In any event change in any of the parts will most likely
engender change in the entire system.
c) The whole is more than the sum of its parts.
Communicators, messages exchanged, seating arrangement, lighting, sound system, ventilation and
the like may comprise any one particular communication situation. But treating these parts like an
arithmetic sum adding up to a whole misses the point. Herbert Hicks (1972) cites the sum of inputs is
a bigger number, and not a case of 2+2 = 4. The interaction of all the parts results in a synergy,
where the output differs in quality and quantity from the sum of the inputs.
d) Constraints within systems influence or affect meanings.
There is no ideal communication system, human or machine-fed. System constraints are features
that influence our efforts at communicating. Meanings intended may be altered, modified, watered
down or even distorted by these constraints. Systems contain physical constraints such as stiff chairs,
a smoky room, stuffy air, poor lighting or even distances between communicators. Communicators
may experience constraints when they perceive status differences among them (sociophysiological).
Then there are also barriers of language, norms and customs (cultural constraints).
Thus, a systemic view of communication implies the following: one, communication can be
understood only within its contexts; two, all parts of a system are interrelated; three, the whole is more
than the sum of its parts; and four, communication systems contain constraints that affect meanings.
3. Communication involves communicators.
Speakers speak and listeners listen, that is obvious. But communicators simultaneously and
continuously speak and listen, thus rendering the labels speakers and listener not too accurate.
Another problem with a speaker-listener view of communication lies in the fact that it may ignore the
simultaneous exchange of messages between participants. Even while a listener may be verbally
passive, he nevertheless sends messages with perhaps a nod, a smile or frown or whatever. The simple
act of facing a person speaking sends a message of wanting to listen at that particular moment. Thus, the
speaker is doing things simultaneously sending and receiving messages. This is also true with the
listener.
4. Communication is irreversible.
The adage a man cant step in the same river twice does point to the concept of irreversibility.
Human experience flows as a steam in a single direction leaving behind it a permanent record of
mans comunicative experience, (Barnlund 1970). Communicators have no way but to go forward
from one moment to the next, from a present state to a future one. Like time running on and moving
forward, communication progresses in similar fashion; but this can build upon the significance or
meaning of the present instant and succeeding events that unfold.
5. Communication is proactive.
Technical devices of advertising and propaganda those media with their paradoxical messages
gradually break down our barriers of criticism; glued to the TV screen, people become passive and
apathetic...we are all a little bit slave to the great television hypnosis (Meerloo 1968). Persons
engaged in communicative behavior bring themselves totally to the situation their mental,
psychological and emotional makeup, their world view, their self-image, etc. Far from being inert or
passive bystanders, they are proactive communicators capable of seeing, perceiving, analyzing and
shaping situations. Even while asleep, our brain does its work. It goes on processing like a giant
factory of ideas. Author Langer (1942 : 33) said: ...the brain follows its own law, actively translating
experience into symbols...
6. Communication is symbolic interaction.
Human communication is symbolic in nature, which means it is created and employed by humans
(Wood 1964). Human beings can think and act symbolically. When we say that human communication
is symbolic interaction, the communicators interact with and through language. We use language to
define ourselves, our surroundings, people and events. In this manner we ascribe or give meaning and
importance to our experiences. Unlike animal behavior that responds to stimuli automatically, the
human communicator is proactive in that he assigns and acts upon meanings, not on stimuli per se. We
act upon our environment a man-made world that we have seen, studied and shaped ourselves
(Platt 1968) and this ability elevates us above all other life forms ... because we are symbol users
(Burke 1968; Cassirer 1944).
7. Meaning in communication is individually construed.
No two people will attribute the same meaning to one distinct or particular situation. Each individual
interprets or assigns value and meaning differently on the basis of his past experiences, beliefs,
attitudes and values, and cultural makeup. It is well nigh impossible to elicit the same comments
because of every persons uniqueness.
Meanings are always personal because we can never respond directly to another person. We come
to understand other peoples communication through ourselves. The person listens to your message and
first interprets it on the basis of his own needs, beliefs, desires, feelings, self-concept and goals. The
response is not to your statement but to his interpretation of the same (Wood 1964). It is like saying
every person has a unique processing system with which to communicate. For an example, the word
love elicits quite different images and notions from all ages. To many teeners, a love-team on the
silver screen probably means romance in a moonlight-dance-wine and roses-setting. To an estranged
spouse, the word love conjures scenes of a bitter quarrel and love lost. But to a happily married
woman, love means having made the decision to commit herself totally to her man through thick and
thin, and having felt true joy in her relationship. But in each type of situation, meanings of the word
love will indefinitely vary. Even an individuals meanings are in a state of flux. We have moods,
feelings, predispositions and changing perceptions.
COMMUNICATION DEFINED
Thus we can now define communication as a dynamic, systemic or contextual, irreversible and
proactive process in which communicators construct personal meanings through their symbolic
interactions (Wood 1964).
Having a basis for further discussion, let us look at certain models of the communication process.
MODELS OF COMMUNICATION
What is a model? If we were to play a game of association, what words would cue you in to the
concept model? The words scale, ramp, mannequin, role, fashion would perhaps elicit the
key word. But scale and role would most closely be associated with our meaning. A model describes
an object, event, process or relationship. It attempts to represent the essential or major features of what it
models. Thus we could say a communication model attempts to describe the communication process
how it works.
Why do we study models? For one, models provide a schema for understanding various phenomena. A
good model presents the essential nature of what it describes by highlighting key features thought
important by the model builder. Since human communication is such a complex process, no single model
can do justice to it. Thus, any model of communication will select certain features and freeze them for
closer scrutiny. A model visualizes for us how certain features are related to another and provides a more
orderly understanding than we might have without the model. Thus, models have organizing value.
Another function or value is heuristic in nature. Models that provoke thought with its insights can lead
scholars to generate concepts and theoretical frameworks. Some scholars of communication theory point
to the heuristic power of models as their most valuable function.
The Aristotelian Model
The Aristotelian model which was first developed among the Greeks in ancient times is simple and
basic. It has three (3) main features, namely: speaker, message, audience.
Greek citizens went about their daily life defending or prosecuting in the courts of law, deliberating
and debating among themselves in the legislature or simply arguing a case in plain peoples assemblies.
Thus, a premium was placed on ones persuasiveness to his audience. The speakers (persuaders)
quality of persuasiveness was called ethos. Such characteristic hinged upon the character of the
speaker. However, there are other factors mentioned in Aristotles Ars Rhetorica which determine the
persuasiveness of a speakers message:
1. content
2. arrangement
3. manner of delivery
4. ethos
5. arguments
6. logos
7. pathos
The model combines five key elements in a sequential or linear pattern, that of a speaker delivering a
message through a channel of communication to another with such impact. As a social scientist, Lasswell
premised his model upon three key functions of communication in human society, namely:
1. surveillance a function of surveillors such as diplomats and political leaders designed to alert
society to the dangers and opportunities it faces.
2. correlation a function mainly carried out by institutions such as journalists, educators and polltakers designed to gather, coordinate and integrate into meaningful form the responses of society
towards changes in the environment
3. transmission a function mainly carried out by institutions like the family, church, school, and
community in order to hand down values, mores, customs and traditions to the next generation.
To paraphrase Lasswell, communication must perform its key functions to protect, fortify, and enhance
a nations stability. A country is responsible for consolidating its strengths and this can be done by
controlling the forces that interfere with efficient communication, e.g., message controllers (censors,
agents of distortion and filtering, etc.).
The Shannon-Weaver Model
A model originally designed for telephone communication, it identifies five (5) basic components: an
information source, a transmitter, a receiver, a destination and noise. Somebody makes a phone call an
information source; the telephone is the transmitter that converts the message into an electronic signal;
the telephone at the other end is the receiver that reconverts electronic signal into a message; the message
is heard by another person, destination; distorting signals like static comprise noise.
Briefly, let us look at an example applying the model to a non-telephone situation. The information
source became the brain of the speaker; the transmitter became the vocal mechanism. The receiver
became the hearing mechanism of the listener, and the brain of the listener became the destination, and
noise became anything that interfered with the message.
The Shannon-Weaver model depicts communication as a one-way or linear sequence of transmission
and reception. It also depicts noise as an element found only within the message and not throughout the
communication process. And since it originally applied to telephone communication, its concepts of
transmitter, receiver and noise are mechanical.
Schramms Model
Wilbur Schramm moved beyond the verbal model to advance a significant insight in his second model
(his first model is similar to Lasswells). Schramm highlights the importance of an overlap of
communicators fields in order that communication can occur.
Schramms third model describes the dual role of each communicator in that he is both sender and
receiver, and that both encoding and decoding entail personal interpretation. The fourth model presents
another heuristic insight by the fact that it emphasizes the dynamism of human communication. People
interact in constant cyclical fashion whereas earlier models (Aristotle, Lasswell, Shannon-Weaver)
depict communication as a sequence, Schramm finally captures the notions of process and interaction.
Berlos Model
S
SOURCE
M
MESSAGE
C
CHANNEL
R
RECEIVER
Communication Skill
Knowledge
Attitude
Sociocultural System
Element
Structure
Content
Treatment
Code
Seeing
Hearing
Touching
Smelling
Tasting
Communication Skill
Knowledge
Attitude
Smelling
Sociocultural System
According to David Berlos model, source and receiver are influenced by their personal makeup of
three (3) factors: knowledge, attitudes and communication skills. A fourth influence is the sociocultural
system of the communicators. Where the communicators message is concerned, three areas matter:
message content, communicators treatment, and coding of content. Channels of communication or the
means by which communication is shared consist of five senses, seeing, hearing, touching, smelling,
tasting.
Berlo acknowledges the complexity of the communication process as evidenced by the influence of
several factors on communication, to include an all-encompassing system the communicators
sociocultural framework.
Whites Model
Eugene White gave his communication students a sequence of events that takes place in communication.
These eight stages of oral communication are the following.
1. Thinking a desire, feeling, or an emotion provides a speaker a stimulus to communicate a need.
2. Symbolizing before he can utter sounds, a speaker has to know the code of oral language with
which to represent his ideas and in order to make his selection.
3. Expressing the speaker then uses his vocal mechanism to produce the sounds of language
accompanied by his facial expression, gestures, and body stance.
4. Transmitting waves of sound spreading at 1,000 feet per second and waves of light traveling at a
speed of 186,000 miles per second carry the speakers message to his listeners.
5. Receiving sound waves impinge upon the listeners ears after which the resulting nerve impulses
reach the brain via the auditory nerve; light waves strike the listeners eyes after which the resulting
nerve impulses reach the brain via the optic nerve.
6. Decoding the listener interprets the language symbols he receives and thinks further.
7. Feedbacking the listener may manifest overt behavior like a nod, smile, or yawn or he may not
show any behavior at all (covert behavior like fast heartbeat, a poker face, etc.)
8. Monitoring while the speaker watches for signs of reception or understanding of his message
among his listeners, he is also attuned to whats going on inside him; the speaker is receiving and
decoding messages about himself from his audience in order to adjust to the particular situation.
The Eugene White model implies a step-by-step sequence of events that starts with thinking in the mind
of the speaker and ends with monitoring also by the speaker. Communication is a repetitive, cyclical
event but the dynamic quality of interaction is not depicted. The speaker is the originator of the
communication process and the listener is a passive reactor who does not initiate communication.
Dance Model
The model advanced by Frank Dance is represented by a spiraling figure the helix. It depicts the
process of communication as one that progresses or moves forward in cyclical fashion moving
forward but coming back upon itself. Notice the spiral moving in progressively larger spheres as it goes
upwards. This signifies the dynamic quality of human communication in that what has occurred before
influences what we say now. What we say now influences the future. The continuum of human events
serves as a backdrop for all human interaction.
Dances model is unlike earlier models in that one cannot pinpoint any literal features or elements.
However, the helix as a symbol for the dynamics of human communication is visually powerful.
situations, moods and interests. Over time people also learn to use common symbols to designate ideas,
concepts, perceptions, rituals, and expectations. Shared experiences may lead to a greater understanding
between communicators. It is communication that enables people to build shared worlds.
Lets consider an example of the process by which people construct a shared phenomenal world.
Recently a freshman was admitted to a university dormitory facility. She met her roommate with whom
initially she had rather an uncomfortable, stilted encounter. As the two tried to find common areas of
interest in their high school life and as they warmed up to each other in view of their similar goals and
expectations of college life, they began to communicate better. The discovery of a shared world spurred
them both to relate with a sense of togetherness in a new, exciting environment that is college.
Communication can thus enlarge the shared worlds between communicators. Thus, the model emphasizes
the temporal dimension of communicationa given interaction serves as a starting point for the next and
future interactions.
In addition to the models dynamic feature, there is also the systemic quality of communication. Several
levels of systems are represented within the model. Both communicators live within a vast social system
or social world composed of all the social systems that make up a given society. Each communicator
belongs to a few not all of such systems and is represented by dotted lines. This is to indicate the
openness of these systems to forces of outside of them. The dotted lines also mean that there is
interrelatedness between systems.
Furthermore, the model emphasizes the communicators personal construction of meanings through his
individual phenomenal world. This world consists of everything that makes up an individual selfconcept, goals, emotions, thoughts, skills, attitudes, past experiences, beliefs, and values. This world is
the basis for interpreting communication. In the model Communicator B interprets As messages through
his phenomenal world, not through As. To the extent that these two worlds overlap, A and B will have a
clear, shared understanding of symbols. Their personally constructed meanings when found to be common
or similar will lead them to deeper communication.
Finally, the model presents a feature not highlighted by the other models: constraints. The series of
lines indicates the existence of constraints throughout the communication process. Constraints may come
in the form of conditions beyond our control (i.e., unstable economy) and they may also be found in the
communicators (i.e., biases, moods, dislikes).
The Speech Communication Transaction Model (Gronbeck et al)
d) Attitudes. Since attitudes of persons are generally shaped by the values they hold, it would be
unwise for a speaker to antagonize his audience with contrary opinions. Listeners tend to seek out
speakers whose beliefs and views they already agree with, and retain longer those ideas they
strongly approve of. A speaker who wishes to alter listeners views must start from familiar and
common ground, then slowly build up to his alternative or contrasting ideas.
FEEDBACK
Feedback is a two-way flow of ideas, feelings, and information from listener to speaker, speaker back
to listener. Listeners yawn or frown, nod or shake, smile or laugh. The speaker instantly interprets these
as signals of comprehension or confusion and boredom or satisfaction. The speaker adapts, adjusts, alters,
and modifies his speaking behavior in order to respond to such signals. It takes skill and sensitivity to
spot cues in audience behavior.
CHANNELS
Public communication cuts across multiple pathways or channels. The verbal channel carries words;
the visual channel transmits gestures, facial expression, bodily movement, and posture of speakers and
listeners; the aural channel or paralinguistic channel carries the tone of voice, variations in pitch and
volume or loudness, as well as cues on the emotional state of the speaker and tenor of the speech. At
times a pictorial channel aids the communication process by use of visual aids such as diagrams, charts,
graphs, and objects. Simultaneous messages are being communicated through these channels.
SITUATION
Your speech is affected and influenced by the physical setting and social context in which it occurs. A
church congregation awaiting services will behave differently from a crowd at a political rally. A
function room decorated in heavy dark drapes and lighted dimly may dampen audience response; a wide,
brightly lighted space with comfortable chairs may enhance listening behavior or response; a subordinate
taking orders from a superior seated behind a massive desk may connote the authoritative and powerful
stance of the boss; a roommate talking to another who is chummy would be comfortable and at ease
communicating, and so on and so forth.
A social context is a particular combination of people, purposes, places, rules and conventions that
interact communicatively. A mix of the factors of age, gender, profession/occupation, ethnic aggrupation,
power, degree of intimacy and others will determine the context in which one communicates with others.
For example, younger people generally defer to their elders and elders generally speak authoritatively to
the young.
Certain purposes or goals are more or less properly communicated in varying social contexts. For
instance, a miting de avance is a context for attacking or criticizing the program of the incumbent
government but not for eulogizing the deceased. Some places are more conducive to certain exchanges
than others. You would hesitate delivering a sermon on board a public bus but speak with fervor in the
pulpit on a Sunday.
Societies observe certain customs, norms, and traditions that form the framework for social
interactions. These give rise to communication rules or norms that often specify what can or cannot be
said, how to say what to whom in what circumstances. Adherence to these rules facilitates and enhances
communication. Non-deference entails the risk of non-acceptability.
CULTURAL CONTEXT
Finally, elements of communication may have different meanings depending upon the culture, or society
in which the communication takes place. Each culture has its own set of rules for interpreting
communication signals. While it may be perfectly alright to address parents by their first names in the
U.S.A., the Filipino custom is not to call them by their first names but to always use the words po and
opo or the third person kayo, sila while talking to parents and elders. This is a good example of
cross-cultural context wherein communication behavior is predicted on prevailing norms and customs.
The serious or thoughtful communicator needs to examine and analyze the culture he is in at the time.
MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT HUMAN COMMUNICATION
Now that weve explored at some length what human communication is, let us look at some commonly
held misconceptions, or what communication is not.
1. What we need is more communication.
People generally think more communication improves anything and everything. The pervasive
comment, What we need here is more communication usually indicates a desire to exchange more
words, more talk between people. But will mere communication solve poverty, political, and religious
problems? Many problems cannot be solved by words and more words alone because many problems
do not originate from unclear or inadequate words. Many problems, however, can be addressed
through the avenue of communication. Communication can help resolve conflicts and address problems
when there is better not more communication between persons and groups of people. In the end we can
maximize the strengths of communication if we know its limits.
2. Speakers bear the burden of effective communication.
Even if everybody agreed that a speaker should be responsible for effective communication because
he normally initiates, listeners are also to bear in part the burden because they mirror by their response
or behavior the clarity of understanding and comprehension the message elicits. Listeners are the other
half of an effective communication transaction. When listeners do their part by feeding cues to the
speaker, they exercise considerable influence on the effectiveness and impact of the exchange.
3. Communication breakdown stops communication.
Since a breakdown actually occurs within a fixed sequence of events (i.e., machine operations),
there is no breakdown in communication because the process is cyclical, interactive, dynamic. The
notion of breakdown suggests communication can be fixed by detecting the defective part. This is not
consistent with the system view of communication wherein all features or components are interrelated.
Does communication stop? Our process view of communication cannot pinpoint exactly where the
beginnings and endings of communication are located. Words may originate at some specific point in
time during a given transaction and also close at a given time, but when it exactly began or when it will
end is not certain. Words may stop at some point but thinking and reflection go on. How about
situations where listeners do not or cannot respond to our messages in the way we would expect?
Communication has not stopped. It is possible that in those cases communicators may have attached
different meanings to the symbols used or did not agree with the desired response (i.e., walking out,
boycotting). Ideas were exchanged, meanings were personally constructed, but in the end speakers
desired outcomes were not realized.
4. Communication consists of words.
Just say what the other person wants to hear may work once or twice but not all the time. Often our
words are contradictions of what our body stance communicates to the other. Words in order to become
meaningful must be accompanied by the body, especially facial expression and tone of voice. The
communicators body must be attuned to what he is saying. Often what words cannot convey, the body
does eloquently.
5. Meanings are in words.
Human beings construct meanings and therefore meanings vary from person to person. In theory this
is accepted by most but in practice we attribute intrinsic or inherent meaning to words. Some people
react negatively when hearing words such as male chauvinist, feminist, leftist, union-buster,
and the like. Others may react differently to the same words. These words by themselves are neither
good nor bad, but different people assign meanings which are good or bad or somewhere in the middle.
We choose the way we interpret the symbols we use and hear. As we interact with these words or
symbols, we actively assign meaning as well as value to them.
6. Effective communicators are born, not made.
If this were true, then there would be no need for communication courses at all. If this were true, then
this reading material would not have been written for students. The fact is year in and year out,
communication students who at first thought so turned out to become effective communicators after a
semester of hard work and persistence. Any student who is willing to invest much time and effort can
enhance his communication skills dramatically. Knowledge, skills, and attitudes that comprise good
communication can be developed or cultivated over time.
SUMMARY OF COMMUNICATION MODELS
As a summary of the communication models, let us extract their essential features and draw similarities
as well as differences. Try generating new ideas from them.
A SUGGESTED SURVEY OF COMMUNICATION MODELS
MODEL
Aristotle
Lasswell
Model
ShannonWeaver
Schramm
ORGANIZING VALUE
What features and relationships
are emphasized?
Features: speaker, speech and
audience
Relationship: linear, sequential
among the 3 elements
Features: speaker, message,
receiver, channel and effect
Relationship: linear, sequential
among 5 elements
Features: information source.
transmitter, receiver, destination,
noise
Relationship: linear, sequential
relationship among 5 elements
Features: communicators,
messages, fields of experience
Relationship: interactive, circular
HEURISTIC VALUE
Can you generate new insights?
Can you ask stimulating questions?
Berlo
White
Dance
Features: communicators,
phenomenal world, time dimension,
symbolic interaction, constraints
Wood
Relationship: dynamic, systematic,
enlarged shared phenomenal world
between communicators, interactive
Features: speaker, message,
Monroe,
channel, listeners, feedback,
Gronbeck,
situation and cultural context
Ehninger
Relationship: interactive,
&
transactional, contextual, dynamic,
McKerrow
public communication-oriented
LEVELS OF COMMUNICATION
Now that we have enough models of communication, perhaps we should familiarize ourselves with the
different levels or relational forms of communication. According to Monroe and Ehninger (1974), there
are three distinguishable forms: 1) interpersonal; 2) small group; and 3) public communication.
Communicologists Ruesch and Bateson (19__) classify human communication into four (4) levels,
namely: 1) intrapersonal, 2) interpersonal, 3) group; and 4) cultural. The following typology would give
us a broader perspective:
1. Intrapersonal Communication communication occurs in the individual (i.e., a student chooses to
study for an exam instead of attending a party)
2. Interpersonal Communication communication takes place between two or more persons; this has
two forms, namely: dyadic (between 2 persons) and group (among 3 or more persons); (i.e., a
mother-daughter dialogue; and a meeting of a study group of 5 classmates in Math 14)
3. Public Communication communication occurs between a speaker and several listeners (i.e., the
UP president welcomes the freshman population in June)
4. Mass Communication communication occurs between the source (speaker) and a vast
audience/readership/viewership via mass media/channels of radio, television, and print (i.e.,
presidential candidates engage themselves in pre-election debate on a radio-TV network)
5. Organizational Communication communication occurs within the workplace between and among
members in order to carry out an organizations objectives and purposes, defining goal-directed
behavior for efficiency and effectiveness; (i.e., a division manager enunciates the latest policy on
employee productivity and initiates an open forum)
6. Intercultural Communication communication occurs in verbal and nonverbal ways to promote
understanding and goodwill between and among cultural communities/nations; (i.e., soirees,
symposia among Filipinos and international students in the UP campus; cultural/stage performances
highlighting Korean traditions through dance and music)
7. Developmental Communication communication occurs between progressive nations and
developing societies of the world in order to facilitate the total development of individuals and
nations (i.e., UNESCO experts/workers mobilizing communities among developing countries to
launch educational and livelihood projects)
MODES OF SPEECH COMMUNICATION
In each of the relational forms of human communication (interpersonal, group, public), two modes of
oral or speech communication prevail: one, verbal mode; two, nonverbal mode. In the verbal mode, the
speaker or communicator uses his voice or vocal mechanism while in the nonverbal mode, the speaker or
communicator displays bodily behavior/movement in forms such as facial expression, eye contact,
gestures of the hands and shoulders. In the verbal mode listeners hear the human voice while in the
nonverbal mode listeners see the speakers bodily movement and behavior. But as a whole, the speaker
communicates his message through both avenuesverbal and nonverbal. As these will be dealt with more
lengthily in a later chapter, let us end our discussion with a summary of the essential points learned from
this foundational chapter.
1. Study and analyze the communication system in your own family. Draw up a schema or a diagram of its
main components/features. Explain how it works using any or a combination of the communication
models taken in class. Share your insights with a classmate and listen to her response as well.
2. Choose any of the 3 relational forms of human communication: interpersonal, group, public. Explain
and describe how these communicators interact or communicate with one another. You may recall a
recent event which you are familiar with. Or the situation could be an event in the past which is still
vivid in your memory. Focus your discussion on how they speak and how they show bodily behavior.
3. Write a single-paged comment on any of the following statements/maxims:
a. You cannot not communicate.
b. Actions speak louder than words.
c. Say what you mean, mean what you say.
d. Parents should listen more
e. A man cannot step into the same river twice.
f. You take back your word.
g. Communicating is speaking and listening.
Civikly, Jean M. (ed.) Contexts of Communication. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1981.
Feingold, P.C. Toward a Paradigm of Effective Communication: An Empirical Study of Perceived
Communicative Effectiveness. Unpublished Ph.D dissertation, Purdue University, 1976.
Gronbeck, Ehninger et al. Principles and Types of Speech Communication. 12th ed. New York: Harper
Collins Publishers, 1994.
Knapp, Mark L. Becoming An Effective Communicator, from Social Intercourse: from Greeting to
Goodbye (1978), in Jean M. Civikly (ed,) Contexts of Communication. New York: Holt, Rinehart and
Winston, 1981.
Miller, Gerald R. Models and Speech Communication, from An Introduction to Speech Communication
(2nd ed.), in Jean M Civikly (ed.). Contexts of Communication. New York: Holt, Rinehart and
Winston, 1981.
Monroe, Alan H. and Douglas Ehninger. Principles and Types of Speech Communication. 7th ed.
Glenview, Illinois: Scott, Foreman and Company, 1974.
Mortensen, C. David. Communication Postulates, from Communication: The Study of Human Interaction
(1972), in Jean M. Civikly (ed.). Contexts of Communication. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
1981.
Wood, Julia T. A Symbolic Interactionalist Perspective. _______________________________.
2
THE LISTENING PROCESS
Objectives
After reading this chapter you should be able to:
1. state why listening is important;
2. distinguish hearing from listening;
3. define listening;
4. describe the nature and stages of the listening process;
5. explain the purposes of listening;
6. identify barriers to effective listening;
7. suggest ways to improve listening;
8. identify ways to give and receive effective feedback; and
9. recognize various propaganda techniques.
INTRODUCTION
A story is told of a balikbayan who upon boarding a plane from San Francisco noted the usual
passenger apathy as the attendants gave their safety message at the beginning of the flight. That is until a
voice came over the intercom. Ladies and gentlemen, as the song says there may be 50 ways to leave
your friend, but I guarantee you there are only 7 exits from this airplane. So listen up! And after the
laughter subsided, they did.
Indeed, listening is an activity we often take for granted. We do not take our listening seriously until we
face the consequences of not listening. Due to your inattentiveness in the classroom, how often have you
asked your seatmate what the teacher has just said? What about the habit of engaging in passive listening
until the teacher informs the class that a quiz will be given after the lecture? Poor listening takes a toll in
the home as well. Marriage counselors say that many domestic break-ups are related to communication
failure between spouses, among family members and listening is often at the heart of it. Moreover, poor
listening in the workplace often results in lowered productivity and morale.
Having examined the communication process in an earlier chapter, let us now focus on listening, the
reciprocal of speaking. In this chapter the nature and stages of the listening process will be discussed. The
purposes of listening will be explained. The different barriers to effective listening and some suggestions
on how to overcome or counteract these barriers will likewise be tackled. Finally, some guidelines to
further improve your listening will be presented
THE IMPORTANCE OF LISTENING
Listening is the most basic of the four major areas of language development. S. Lundsteen notes that
listening is the first language skill which we develop (Wolvin 1988). As children, we listen before we
speak, we speak before we read and read before we write. The preceding statement clearly indicates that
our ability to speak, read and write and master cognitive skills is dependent directly or indirectly upon
our ability to listen.
Listening is also the most frequently used form of verbal communication. Many studies made to
investigate the frequency of listening conclude that listening consumes more of our daily communication
time compared to any other forms of verbal communication. According to Rankin, on the average, adults
spend 70 percent of their waking hours engaging in communication activities. Specifically, about 10
percent of this communication time is spent in writing, 15 percent in reading, 30 percent in speaking and
45 percent in listening. Given the amount of time we spend listening, our listening behavior should be
made more effective. Unfortunately, listening is a skill that does not automatically improve with practice.
It seems quite evident that despite the great allocation of time for listening, we do not listen as well as
we should. We are relatively poor listeners. Listening consultant Lyman Steil notes that on the average
our level of listening effectiveness is only about 50 percent. We can hear, evaluate and respond to only
about half of what was said. These figures may drop after 48 hours to an effectiveness level of 25 percent.
Operating on this low level of listening results in a 75 percent loss.
Listening is a skill that is of utmost importance at the various levels of communication. We listen to
ourselves at the intrapersonal communication level. We listen at the interpersonal level when we listen in
conversation, to interviews and in small group discussion. We listen at the public communication level
when we listen to various speakers, watch a play or a concert. We listen at the mass communication level
when we listen to the radio, television and film. Listening is not limited to formal speaking situations or
just the classroom. It is a skill that is vital in both formal and informal situations. It plays an integral part
in our everyday lives as our attitudes, skills; and behaviors are affected by the listening that we do.
with the ones that are familiar to the listener. The sounds are recognized according to their likenesses and
differences.
During mental reorganization, the listener uses a system that will help him retain and structure the
incoming sounds. He may recode, regroup or rehearse these sounds in his mind. He may syllabify the
word while pronouncing it; he may group numbers in batches or he may repeat the series several times.
Even as the listener hears the sounds, he is making associations in his mind. He links these sounds with
previous experiences, memories and backgrounds. He creates associations even if the sounds spoken are
in a foreign language, one that is totally strange to him and even if his personal and subjective meanings
differ from the speaker.
The third and last stage of the listening process is auding. The listener assimilates the words and
responds to them with understanding and feeling. Aside from the listeners experiential background,
some skills in thinking can be useful to make the assignment of meaning an easy task. The diagram lists
five thinking skills that the listener can engage in: indexing, making comparisons, noting sequence,
forming sensory impressions and appreciating.
Indexing is arranging the listening material according to importance. As the information comes in, the
listener searches for the main ideas as well as the subordinate ones. He also distinguishes the relevant
material from the irrelevant. He may arrange the parts of the message to form the complete whole.
Making comparisons is another thinking skill.
Noting sequence is arranging the material according to time, space, position or some other
relationship. The framework thus created will facilitate the assignment of meaning as well as the recall of
the information or material.
Forming sensory impressions is translating the material to sensory images. When we listen, we often
react with our different senses. We may form a visual impression thus adding an interesting dimension to
the meaning of the verbal message. Although sight is the most frequently used, we may also create other
impressions so that we may perhaps taste, or smell or feel the message.
Appreciating is a final function that the listener can engage in during the auding stage. Appreciating is
responding to the aesthetic nature of the message. This may take place when the listening material (e.g.
special occasion speeches) demands an emotional response.
ATTENTION and LISTENING
Do you recall why and how your grade school teacher tried to get your attention at the start of the
class? Or how during drill days the platoon commander would shout the initial command Attention!?
Let us briefly learn some facts about the nature of attention and how they apply to listening.
Attention is a key concept in effective listening. Let us examine the two parts of the term. The first part
of the word is at or focuses. The second part comes from tension which pertains to the energy that a
listener needs to be able to focus or in this case, perform his listening task. ONeill and Weaver give us a
more precise definition: attention is a unified, coordinated muscular set, or attitude, which brings organs
to bear with maximum effectiveness upon a source of stimulation and thus contributes to alertness and
readiness of response (Brembeck and Howell 1952).
To be in attention is not an easy thing. Understanding the duration of attention, the number of stimuli one
can attend to and the selectivity of attention should enable us to listen more attentively. Duration of
attention refers to the length of time one is able to attend to a given stimulus or stimuli. How long? It might
surprise you to know that the length of absolute attention has been found to be only a few seconds. In
1908, Pillsburys studies revealed that the duration of a single act of attention was three to twenty-four
seconds, with most acts falling within the 58 second range. In 1914, M. Billings observed that the
average duration of attention was approximately two seconds. Schmidt and Kristofferson in 1963
determined it to be 63.8 to 66.4 of a second. W. Scott attributed this brevity of duration of attention to the
fact that our thinking is done in spurts There are periods of attention followed by periods of inactivity.
A stimulus can be attended to for a long period of time but the attention will not be uniformly strong all
the time. He added further that in public speaking we seldom are able to hold the full and undivided
attention for more than a few seconds or a few minutes at best. The audiences attention is constantly
wandering or decreasing in force.
At any one time, a multitude of stimuli in the immediate environment is vying for your attention. You
must be aware of this fact as you find yourself in the classroom a great deal. There are external stimuli
such as the teachers lecture, her visual aid and a chatty seatmate. Coming from outside the classroom,
you may hear the grass cutter motor running and the students talking. From your seat you can see students
walking up and down the corridor. There are also internal stimuli trying to grab your attention. You may
be suffering from a terrible headache or are worrying about your exam in the next period. How many of
these stimuli can you attend to? How many objects or ideas attended during a particular period are
important? Laboratory experiments have revealed that on the average we can attend to four to five objects
visually and five to eight auditorily. Our attention span is really limited and dependent on the type of
stimuli as well as the person listening or attending. If there are too many objects a person has to attend to
simultaneously, the quality or intensity of attention is reduced.
Furthermore, attention shifts from one stimulus to another. Imagine that you are watching a musical
extravaganza on stage. There are myriad stimuli in that particular listening event. Which one will grab
your eyes or ears? Generally we attend to stimuli that stand out above the others in terms of odor, lights,
shape or sound.
Even as we discuss attention in the context of listening, the attention factor is also essential to the
speaker. The brevity of the duration of attention, for instance, becomes important to a public speaker. He
will need to focus selectivity on those stimuli upon which his speech rests. Further discussion on various
factors of attention as they relate to public speaking will be covered in the last chapter Communicating in
Public.
PURPOSES IN LISTENING
Just as a speakers purpose in speaking varies from situation to situation, so, too, does a listeners
purpose in listening. Each purpose or kind of listening has its own requirements and skills that are needed
to achieve the goals of the communication transaction. Listening experts identify at least four different
types of listening.
1. Appreciative listening is listening for pleasure, entertainment or enjoyment. It calls for a receptive
attitude and an open and relaxed mind. Listening to music, to conversations with friends, to an
entertaining speech or a television sitcom demand only little or no concentration. We listen simply
because we want to unwind or relieve tension.
2. Empathic listening is listening to provide emotional support. It serves a therapeutic function. We
listen because the other person needs us to understand his plight and feelings. Therapeutic listening
is exemplified by parents as they listen empathically to their children, by supervisors as they listen to
employees who have personal problems, or by trained volunteers who help troubled callers on the
telephone hotline. When we provide others a sounding board, it gives them comfort and support.
3. Comprehensive listening is listening to derive information, facts, ideas and principles. Since the
focus of this type of listening is accuracy of perception, a considerable degree of concentration is
needed. When you sit in class and listen to the lecture or listen to directions for finding a friends
house you are listening with the goal of acquiring knowledge.
4. Critical Listening is listening to make an evaluation in order to make an intellectual judgment, to
criticize, to evaluate ideas of others. Here, appreciative listening is controlled and analytical
listening is necessary. When you have all the facts, you can evaluate and then arrive at a decision
based on the evidence. When you listen to a campaign speech of a political candidate or the sales
pitch of a real estate agent, you will first need to understand the message in order to make judgments
about it.
Make it a habit to consciously determine your listening purpose demanded by the listening occasion.
This will help you to structure or organize your listening. It will enable you to anticipate the needs of the
specific level or type of listening and adapt your skills accordingly.
BARRIERS TO EFFECTIVE LISTENING
Have you ever played the telephone (or rumor) game? A story is told to one person and this person is
asked to tell it to another person. This person then tells it another, etc. By the time the story has gone
through five or six persons, it is often almost unrecognizable. Many of the distortions which take place in
message transmission are due to the fact that listeners are influenced by their habits, attitudes and
expectations which they bring to that listening event. All of these come into play with the other elements
of the communication situation. There are many obstacles to effective listening. The listener must
recognize these obstacles and know how to overcome them.
1. Hastily branding the subject as uninteresting or irrelevant.
Sometimes speakers fail to show how the information they are presenting can be relevant to their
audiences needs. More often though, it is the listener who feels that the subject matter is not worth
listening to. This then becomes an excuse by the listener to abandon his task. This habit does not give
a chance for the speaker to prove that the hasty dismissal of the subject is wrong. Someone once said
that all communication is at least potentially interesting and useful, What can I learn or use? is
often a good question to ask. Suggestion: Seek ways to make the subject matter interesting and
useful to you.
2. Focusing attention on appearance or delivery
As students, you will likely agree that it is difficult to resist the temptation to dwell on the
speakers mannerisms, gestures and vocal qualities. Delivery and physical appearance are details
which influence a listeners reaction to a speaker but should not be used as excuses not to listen.
This practice takes a toll on listening because it diverts time and energy. Do not be too critical of the
physical appearance or manner of speaking. Suggestion: Judge content, not delivery.
3. Avoiding difficult and unpleasant material.
What do you consider difficult to listen to? The answer will vary depending on your interests and
capabilities. Generally speaking, if the subject matter demands careful scrutiny and mental exertion,
it is considered difficult material. And since most listeners do not usually want to strain their minds,
these messages are avoided. Filtering unpleasant subject matter may also serve as an obstacle to
effective listening. Messages which contradict personal stands or question long-held beliefs and
ideals are the very things we ought to listen to. When we avoid difficult and unpleasant material we
may miss a lot. Suggestion: Practice listening in a wide variety of situations.
A.
B.
C.
Another note-taking method is called prcis writing or precis method. There are three steps to
follow in accomplishing this system. First, the note-taker listens for several minutes. He then
mentally summarizes what was said. Finally, at periodic intervals, he writes a short paragraph or
a one- or two-sentence abstract summarizing what he has heard. He may even have a series of
brief abstracts covering what the speaker said. This method works well for both organized and
disorganized messages. The writing though can take up too much time which may also result in
losing other relevant information.
The fact versus principle system of note-taking requires that the note taker divide his paper
into two vertical columns. In the right-hand column, he lists the important principles or main ideas
derived from the speech and number them in Roman numerals. In the left-hand column, he lists the
important facts and numbers them in Arabic numeral. The listener organizes the speakers thoughts
by mentally checking the facts against the principles. When done efficiently, this method is
excellent for review.
A fourth method of note-taking is mapping. This system organizes the notes in a visual manner
resembling a map. This method requires that each main idea as it is presented is written on the
center of the paper and then encircled. If more than one main idea is presented, it is listed to the
left or right of the center. The supporting details are then written on lines connected to the main
idea that they support. If there are minor details that need to be included, they are also written on
lines which are connected to the supporting details. This system works well for disorganized
messages and for visually-oriented notetakers. However, the note-taker can get too engrossed in
the drawing and consequently miss out on important concepts and details that are presented.
In the annotation method, the listener records important notes opposite the printed speech or
discussion while the verbal explanation or oral presentation is being made by the speaker. As a
Comm. III student for instance you may jot down the explanations made by your instructor in the
left- or right-hand margins of the speech book or the hand-outs provided in the class.
To use notes effectively, the note-taker should be able to review his notes in order to retain the
information more permanently. A recommended method of reviewing notes is the Cornell System.
It was developed by Dr. Walter Paule of Cornell University. These are the steps involved in the
Cornell System.
1. The listener divides his paper vertically into two columns. The right-hand column is labeled
RECORD while the left-hand column is labeled RECALL.
2. The listener lists the speakers main ideas in the Record column.
3. When the speaker has completed the message, the listener summarizes the recorded information
by jotting down key words and phrases in the RECALL column.
4. Shortly thereafter, the note-taker covers the right-hand column (RECORD) and then using only
the key words and phrases attempts to reconstruct the other column (RECALL) as he recites the
message in his own words.
5. Future review sessions are conducted in the same manner.
Your choice of note-taking method will depend on the organizational pattern of the message.
Keep your notes clear and brief so that they will be easy to review at a future time. Becoming a
better note-taker will surely help you become a better listener.
7. Faking Attention
Many think that looking like an attentive and cooperative listener will satisfy the requirements that
a speaker expects of his listeners. The reality is that these actions (nodding the head periodically to
indicate understanding, smiling occasionally, even obsessive note-taking) which are done to please
the speaker are really superficial. You have nothing to gain in pretending to grasp the message while
making a mental detour. Besides, speakers are smarter than you think. They often know when you
have switched them off. They can recognize these signs that you may be unaware of. Suggestion:
Dont pretend to listen.
8. Creating or yielding easily to distractions
Experience will tell you that there is hardly a perfect listening environment. There will often be
distractions in the physical environment. A good example is your classroom in Communication III. It
can get uncomfortably hot or noisy especially when students wait outside the hall for their next class.
Overcome these distractions by closing the door, adjusting the electric fan or lights or finding a good
seat. Sometimes listeners themselves create distractions in the listening environment. Latecomers can
disrupt proceedings. Students play with a ballpen, doodle or chat with their seatmates. Some even
entertain text messages or phone calls. These are negative behaviors which interfere with effective
listening. Remember, it is your joint responsibility with the speaker to create a favorable listening
environment. Suggestion: Fight or resist distraction.
9. Engaging in private planning
How often have you used the time for listening to an important lecture or class discussion to
daydream or make plans for the weekend? Perhaps relive an argument you had with you boyfriend
over the phone last night? Anyone of these seems the better option to a boring presentation. If you
wish to make the most out of your listening, learn to concentrate and focus. It takes a lot of energy but
it can be done. Suggestion: Set aside unrelated personal problems or concerns.
10. Wasting the advantages of thought speed
We are inefficient listeners because our brains can understand many more words per minute than
speakers can produce clearly (Gronbeck 1994). The average rate of speaking is 125 words to 175
words per minute while the rate at which we think is 400 words per minute. These figures reveal that
listeners can think four to five times faster than a speaker can speak. On the average, we need only
about 20 to 25 seconds of every minute to comprehend what the speaker is saying. This is only a
portion of the total listening time needed to process the information in messages. This time
differential between thought rate and speech rate provides a tempting excuse to tune out the speaker.
You may not realize it but these spare moments can be the used to the listeners advantage.
How can you capitalize on the advantages of thought speed? Here relevant mental activities can
you engage in to use the spare time wisely.
You can anticipate what the speaker will say
You can mentally review the points or concepts discussed so far
You can test the use of evidence and reasoning.
You can formulate questions
You can search for additional meanings by listening between the lines.
You can outline or re-organize the speech.
You can relate the speakers examples to your personal storehouse or field of experience.
Do not allow mind to wander. Use the time wisely. Suggestion: Capitalize on the advantages of
thought speed.
GUIDES TO EFFECTIVE LISTENING
1. Listen actively.
In the initial part of this chapter a distinction between hearing and listening was made. It was
emphasized that we usually can hear without effort but we cannot listen without effort. It takes a lot of
time and energy to listen effectively. For one, a certain degree of physical alertness is needed. Do you
remember how you moved up close to somebody who had something important to say to you? With
straight body, head brought close to the speaker and ears all set to hear, you listened attentively. This
physical readiness is a sign that you are mentally ready as well. Active listening is not just
participating physically but mentally and emotionally or empathically in the listening process.
2. Listen with empathy.
Listening with empathy is to be able to feel what the speaker feels. You will have to learn to see
things from the point of view of the speaker. As students, it is important that you see things from the
point of view of your professors. Teachers must also learn to see matters not just from their own
perspectives but from the point of view of their students as well.
3. Listen for total meaning.
We would normally think that all we have to hear are the words or utterances of a source or speaker.
Listening involves the total communication process. It includes visual perceptions that attend the
listening situation. We have to watch the speaker, observe his use of bodily actions and audio-visual
aids. What does a speaker who paces throughout his delivery communicate? These visible symbols are
significant in that they help you accurately interpret the verbal message and thereby gain more
information. They may sometimes dominate a communication act and become the most important source
of a message.
Together with the overt behavior of the speaker, we have to listen between the lines, so to speak.
We listen for meanings in the context and in the total situation. We need to listen also to what is unsaid
or omitted. It takes a sensitive receiver/listener to infer meanings from messages which are hidden.
4. Listen with an open mind.
A closed-minded listener will refuse to hear and understand conflicting points of view. He will not
strive to hear out the other side of the story. Being dogmatic causes us to be poor listeners. Before
arriving at decisions or accepting proposals, listen with both an open ear and an open mind. It is a
healthy and mature practice to listen to all sides.
5. Give effective feedback.
If speakers to be effective are expected to adapt their messages to their listeners, then listeners must
be trained to send effective feedback. Feedback is defined as the response or reaction (overt and
covert) of the listener as perceived by the source in the communication transaction. Reacting and
responding is a necessary component of the listening act.
DeVito (1982) characterizes effective feedback as immediate, honest, appropriate, clear and
informative. The most effective feedback is that which is sent immediately after the message is
received. The practice of sending feedback quickly will help in the process of understanding anothers
messages. Honest feedback is a sincere response to the communication. Do not hesitate to express your
doubts or disagreements. Do not feel afraid to admit that you do not understand the message. Feedback
should be appropriate to the communication situation. Keep feedback to the message separate from
feedback directed at the source or person you are listening to. Feedback must also be clear and
specific in meaning. Avoid sending distracting and unintentional feedback. Your overt response must
communicate the messages you intend. For instance, facial expressions can be misconstrued. If what
you had for breakfast does not agree with you, make sure that these reactions will not confuse the
source or speaker. Lastly, effective feedback is informative. It provides the speaker with relevant clues
that can improve his subsequent communication efforts.
Consider other general guidelines for sending feedback. Make sure that you understand the message
before sending directive feedback. Be certain that the speaker recognized the feedback. Use
nondirective feedback until the speaker invites feedback to his message. Sending feedback is a
conscious effort. It should come easy and natural once you get accustomed to it.
6. Listen critically.
An effective listener must carefully evaluate and critically analyze the messages that he receives.
This responsibility becomes a real challenge in the classroom where academic interaction with
teachers and classmates takes place. Evaluate the main points or arguments advanced by the speaker.
Test the evidence used to support various claims. Also test the reasoning employed by the speaker.
Brooks suggests that such weighing and evaluating is most effectively done point by point rather than
at the end of a message.
A critical listener must also have the ability to recognize propaganda techniques and fallacies in
reasoning so he can reject false claims advanced by some speakers.
PROPAGANDA TECHNIQUES
1. Name-calling is a device that affixes an unfavorable label or name to a person or thing. Objectional
labels such as crony, trapo (traditional politician), activist, nerd, loser or terror teacher are often
used to discredit or ridicule a person and thus cause the listener to eventually reject what he
represents.
2. Glittering generalities involve attaching a vague but virtuous-sounding label to a person, cause or
object (a strong proponent of justice, defender of freedom). Since they are approved verbal
sanctions they are often used to gain acceptability of programs, plans and ideas.
3. The use of irrelevant personal attacks, also known as argumentum ad personam, is used when there
is a deficiency in logical proof. Instead of attacking the issue at hand, a speaker resorts to attacking
the personal character of an opponent, his age, his relatives or even physical appearance.
4. False appeal to authority is another type of fallacy. Its Latin name is ipse dixit which means
because he says it. Often, testimonials from famous people are used to build confidence in a
product or proposition. When the authority is legitimately connected to the matter at hand the move
may seem reasonable. However, if they are not authorities on them, then the speaker can be guilty of
false appeal. Many television and print ads ask consumers to purchase products because sport
celebrities or popular figures endorse the product(s).
5. Transfer shifts the authority, sanction and prestige of something known, respected and revered over
to something else in order to make the latter acceptable. The flag, the church, educational institutions
are common sources of emotional approval.
6. Half-truth is a common propaganda technique that is neither false nor true.
7. Card-stacking is a scheme used to deceive by means of carefully selecting only favorable evidence
and omitting unfavorable evidence to support the propagandists cause.
8. Plain-folks device stresses humble origins and modest backgrounds. This is a common strategy of
politicians who seek the support by portraying themselves as men of the masses. This appeal may
be used to establish common ground particularly in introductions of public speeches. However, if it
is used as pseudo-proof to justify a proposal, then, its use becomes unethical.
9. Bandwagon is sometimes known as argumentum ad populum. It is an appeal to popular opinion. It
encourages belief or acceptance of an idea or product by creating the impression of universal
support. It capitalizes on the so-called herd instincts.
10. False causality assigns a false or wrong cause to a certain happening or effect. Its Latin equivalent
is post hoc, ergo propter hoc. Sequential fallacy can be spotted in reasoning from causal relations.
11. False analogy results when the instances compared are not closely similar in all essential respects.
Although analogy is an effective means to clarify and make vivid a point, it has limited weight when
used for justifying a claim.
12. Hasty generalization is a claim made on the basis of too little evidence. Enough cases must be
examined in order to make a justifiable claim.
An awareness of these propaganda techniques and logical fallacies and the context in which they are
employed will be helpful in evaluating, weighing evidence and arguments and arriving at sound judgments
about a speakers message.
Listening, the reciprocal of speaking, is an integral part of the total communication process. It is a
complex communication skill which according to Brooks involves three stages: hearing, identifying and
recognizing, and auding. There are at least four purposes or kinds of listening: appreciative listening,
empathic listening, informative listening and critical listening. Attention and effective listener feedback
are crucial to good listening. Listening critically calls for the recognition of various propaganda
techniques. Although there are many barriers to effective listening, these can be overcome through
concentration and constant practice.
1. Evaluate your major strengths and weaknesses as a listener. What steps do you need to become a better
listener?
2. Begin a listening journal. For a period of two to three days log in or record your listening transactions.
Note the following.
who you were listening to
what your purposes in listening were
how effectively you listened.
After the specified period, review your log and examine your listening patterns. What changes in your
listening behavior should you make?
3. Attend a class. Observe the listening behavior of your classmates. Describe both positive and negative
behaviors that you observe.
4. Listen to a class lecture. Make an outline the lecture using any one of the methods suggested earlier.
Keep these notes for review.
5. Make a list of judgments /biases you have made about three friends or classmates that may serve as a
barrier to listen to them effectively and objectively. What can you do to help suspend these judgments
as you prepare to listen to their speeches?
6. Make a conscious effort to send feedback to speakers in various communication settings: interviews,
panel discussions and public speaking. How well does making an attempt to give feedback affect your
listening? Share your observations with the class.
7. Interview a person who you think is particularly effective as a listener. Some suggestions include a
guidance counselor, a parish priest or a friend who is known to be a good listener. Find out what
listening strategies/ techniques have worked for them.
8. Make a written critique of a speech you recently listened to. Evaluate both the speakers content and
delivery.
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Company, 1968.
Bradley, Bert E.. Fundamentals of Speech Communication. Iowa: Wm. C. Brown Publishers, 1991.
Brembeck, Winston L., and William S. Howell. Persuasion A Means of Social Control. New Jersey:
Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1952.
Brooks, William D., and Heath, Robert W. Speech Communication. Seventh edition. Iowa: Wm C.
Brown & Benchmark, 1993.
Buan, Estrella L. A Study of the Effect of a Lecturette on the Listening Comprehension of High School
Students. Unpublished undergraduate thesis. University of the Philippines, 1996.
Buzar, Jaime M. Correlates of International Students Listening Comprehension of Filipino Speakers.
University of the Philippines, 1978.
Casambre Alejandro Jimenez. Listening Performance in English and Pilipino in Three Philippine
Linguistic Settings, Masks and Voices. Volume 4, Number 1, January-July 1996.
Casambre, Alejandro Jimenez and Ruby G. Alcantara. Husay sa Pakikinig sa Tatlong Kontekstong
Filipino. Experimental Edition. Sentro ng Wikang Filipino, Sistema Unibersidad ng Filipinas, 1998.
Detabali, Bernadette B. A Survey of the Status of Instruction in Listening in Selected Elementary
Schools in Quezon City. Unpublished undergraduate thesis. University of the Philippines, Diliman,
1996.
DeVito, Joseph. Communicology: An Introduction to Communication. New York: Harper and Row
Publishers, 1982.
Fong, Stella Eloisa M. The Effectiveness of the E-12 Course in Enhancing the Listening Skills of
Freshmen in Miriam College: An Evaluative Study. Unpublished graduate thesis, University of the
Philippines, 1997.
Gamble, Teri, and Michael Gamble. Public Speaking in the Age of Diversity. Massachusetts: Allyn and
Bacon, 1994.
Gronbeck, Bruce E., Raymie Mckerrow, Douglas Ehninger and Alan H. Monroe. Principles and Types of
Speech Communication. 12th Edition. New York: HarperCollins College Publishers, 1994.
Lobitania, Evelyn. The Effects of Language Variation and other Selected Variables in Listening
Comprehension. Unpublished graduate thesis. University of the Philippines, 1981.
Locsin, Rose June V. Popular Music Involvement of U.P Diliman Undergraduate Dormitory
Residents: A Case Study in Listening Behavior. Unpublished undergraduate thesis. University of the
Philippines, 1996.
Lukban, Marina D. Listening Comprehension and Retention of Third Grade Pupils as Affected by
Music and Sound Effects and other Variables. Unpublished graduate thesis, University of the
Philipppines, 1985.
Monroe, Alan H., and Douglas Ehninger. Principles and Types of Speech Communication (seventh
edition). Glenview, Illinois: Scott, Foresman & Company, 1974.
Nichols, Ralph G.. Listening and Speaking. Iowa: Wm. C. Brown and Co., 1954.
Powers, John H.. Public Speaking: The Lively Art. New York: HarperCollins College Publishers, 1994.
Rivera, Jo Annelyn L. A Correlational Study on Listening Comprehension and Language of
Instruction. Unpublished undergraduate thesis. University of the Philippines, 1999.
Sarile, Angela P. Effects of Selected Factors on Listening Comprehension of Students in UP Manila.
Unpublished graduate thesis, University of the Philippines, 1978.
Tica, Christine Salceda. The Effects of Storytelling on the Listening And Cognitive Abilities of
Preoperational Children: a Case Study of International Baptist Academy Preoperational Children.
Unpublished undergraduate thesis. University of the Philippines, 1998.
Torres, Nadia Theresa C. A Study on the Effects of Two Storytelling Techniques on the Listening
Comprehension of Grade Two Students. Unpublished undergraduate thesis. University of the
Philippines, 1999.
Verdeber, Rudolph F. The Challenge of Effective Speaking. Belmont, California : Wadsworth Publishing
Company, 1994.
Wolvin, Andrew D. and Carolyn G. Coakley. Listening. Dubuque, Iowa: Wm C. Brown Publishers, 1988.
3
THE SELF and INTRAPERSONAL COMMUNICATION
Objectives
After reading this chapter you should be able to:
1. reflect upon the values or significance of self-introspection;
2. establish the connection between self-concept and intrapersonal communication; and
3. arrive at a keener understanding of ones self-communication prior to acquiring interpersonal
communication skills.
INTRODUCTION
Throughout life you are constantly asked the question: Who are you? Often you reply in a stereotyped
manner, saying: Im Anna Santos, 17 years old, a junior student of computer engineering. Its an
inadequate answer, of course, and a cryptic one at that. We try to learn much about ourselves as we live
along and yet often we are not fully aware or conscious of this self. We frequently depend or rely on
others who perceive us, in the process receiving and responding to what or whom they say we are. The
self is thus an elusive thing. Clues and artifacts abound to reveal to us who we are, but arriving at a
self-view or self-concept is much more complicated than we think.
Let us look at an interesting excerpt from Lewis Carrolls Alices Adventures in Wonderland:
Who are you? said the caterpillar.
This was not an encouraging opening for a conversation.
Alice replied rather shyly, I hardly know, sir, just at present at least I knew who I was when I
got up this morning, but I think I must have changed several times since then.
If Alices remarks intrigue you, read on. Our self-view is formed and given shape in complex ways, but
primarily communicated by you, the communicator, whose message is communicated back to you.
Jean M. Civikly (1981) says in her prefatory note to Morris Rosenbergs article on self-concept
formation (1979), the ways in which we think about and describe ourselves (self-concept) and the
degree to which we like those descriptions of ourselves (self-esteem) have an inevitable impact on our
human interactions. In this chapter on intrapersonal communication, therefore, you are strongly
encouraged to introspect, to look into yourselves, and in the process recognize vital clues to your selfidentity, self-concept, or self-image. A few basic questions can guide you, namely:
1. How do I see myself?
2. Do I like or not what I see?
3. How do I wish to see myself? How do I present myself to others?
4. Who do others say I am? What do I imagine others say about me?
5. How does this affect me?
With that as a backdrop to our discussion, we can now start with how self-concepts are formed.
SELF-CONCEPT FORMATION
1. Reflected appraisals
The first principle of direct reflections (Thorstein Veblen : 1934) holds that the self-concept is
largely shaped by the responses of others. This principle means you are deeply influenced by peoples
attitudes towards you. You are a social being who wants and needs to be with people. In the course of
time, you come to view your self as you are viewed by others. According to Veblen, the usual basis
of self-respect is the respect by ones neighbors or fellows. Only individuals with dysfunctional
temperaments can in the long run retain their self-esteem in the face of disesteem of their neighbors or
colleagues.
In general, there must exist a healthy, reasonable correspondence between others views of us and
our own in order to be well-adjusted individuals. Difficulties that arise between discordant definitions
of the self are too often familiar. For instance, an adolescent may see himself as a responsible, mature
young adult while his mother persists with her view of an irresponsible child [drink your milk; brush
your teeth]. If we are to have solid or firm basis for our behavior or actions, it is essential to know
what we are like. Rosenberg (1979) states, Because it is so difficult to arrive at self-knowledge, how
others view us is of tremendous importance. We need a consensus from others in order to validate our
own self-concepts.
A foremost social psychologist, George Herbert Mead (1934), stresses the importance of consensual
validation. He points out that in social communication the individual takes the role of the other and
his self slowly emerges as he interacts with and responds to the views of others, i.e., in his social
group, home, community. By taking the attitudes and perceptions of other individuals towards us, we
are more or less unconsciously seeing ourselves as others see us. Thus, our own self-evaluation is
affected by others evaluations of us.
The second principle of perceived self can be explained in terms of Cooleys (1912) looking-glass
self although he claims it is not an entirely adequate term. We imagine our appearance to the other
person and imagine his judgment of that appearance, as well as some self-feeling, such as pride or
regret. The thing that moves us to pride or shame or regret is not merely a mechanical reflection of
ourselves but an imputed sentimentthe imagined effect of such reflection upon another mind. Thus,
the crucial question is not What is the other persons attitude towards me? but What do I perceive to
be his attitude towards me?
The Reeder, Donohue, & Biblarz study in 1960 found a very strong relationship between selfconcept and the perceived self. In the group of 54 military personnel, 46 fully believed the group rated
them as they rated themselves in leadership characteristics, and slightly lower but still substantial in the
good-worker characteristics (38 out of 54).
In the third principle of the generalized other, Mead stresses that the self arises out of social
experience, particularly social interaction. The process of communication requires the individual to
adopt the attitude of the other toward the self and to see himself from their perspective or standpoint. In
any organized social interaction, if the individual has to play his role effectively he must internalize the
attitudes of all those participating. A clergyman has to incorporate into himself the attitudes and beliefs
of all his confreres if he is to stay a healthy and active member. A third baseman cannot play his role
of a third baseman without internalizing the attitudes of the catcher, pitcher, second baseman, and so
forth.
All the others particular attitudes are crystallized in the me, in the process giving rise to a single
standpoint or attitude called the generalized other. One could say, thus, your individual self-concept
is shaped by applying to your self the attitudes of society as a whole.
2. Social comparisons
The principle of social comparison forms a major component of social evaluation theory. Pettigrew
(1967) points out the basic tenet of social evaluation theory, thus: Human beings learn about
themselves by comparing themselves to others. The second tenet states that the process of social
evaluation leads to self-ratings that may be positive, neutral, or negative in relation to the standards set
by the individuals employed for comparison. If a low-achieving pupil compares himself to the lowestscoring pupil in his class, he may find his self-esteem raised. But if he compares himself with a highscoring or high-achieving classmate, he finds his self-esteem lowered. The key factor here is the
referent individual or in case of groups, the reference group. The referent individual or group
becomes your standard.
Rosenberg (1979) distinguishes two useful comparisons, one social comparison that is criterionbased, i.e., excellence, virtue, or merit; another social comparison that is norm-based, i.e., deviance or
conformity. The first marks or classifies individuals as superior or inferior to one another in terms of a
criterion; the second marks or classifies individuals as same or different. Both types of social
We refer to the process which takes place in intrapersonal communication as internal because all the
eight (8) stages take place within the individual, particularly, in his brain. The first four on the left margin
of the rectangle involve evaluation of both external and internal stimuli while the last four on the opposite
portion are stages that involve reaction to these stimuli.
The internal processes which take place when we self-communicate are triggered or initiated by two
types of stimuli. Some are internal; others are external to the communicator.
Internal Stimuli
Internal stimuli are nerve impulses that are received by the brain. They make the self-communicator
aware of the physiological and psychological conditions of his body. Often such stimuli trigger your
prompt response. Lets say youre coming down with the flu. Your joints ache, your nose is stuffy, your
temperature registers a fever, and on top of it all, you feel depressed. Your general bodily discomfort
sends you rushing to the infirmary for a check-up. The internal stimuli in this example have resulted in
what we call intrapersonal communication.
External Stimuli
External stimuli, on the other hand, come from outside your body, from your immediate or proximate
environment. There are two types of external stimuli. Overt external stimuli are stimuli received at the
conscious level. Our sense organs receive these and send them to the brain. Examples of overt external
stimuli are the pizza commercial on TV and the aroma coming from your kitchen. Your sight sense and
olfactory sense, processing such stimuli, may now prompt you to ask the question: Ma, whats for
supper? Several stimuli usually try to compete for our attention at any one time. The result depends on
such factors as strength of the stimuli, familiarity with the stimuli, and the emotional connotations
which the stimuli produce.
Covert external stimuli are external stimuli that are received at the preconscious or subconscious
level. Imagine that youre getting dressed for school. Getting ready, you listen to a popular song being
played on your favorite station. The reporter blares the morning news and next comes the weather
report. You notice that your socks are mismatched and immediately find another pair. You hear the
pattering of rain on your roof and grab your jacket. Checking your watch, you realize you have barely
enough time to get to school. Although the volume of your radio was turned up, you cannot remember
what was said in the news. This stimulus (announcement on the air) was received and stored in the
brain. You were not consciously aware of what the announcer said. Covert stimuli are known to affect
our communication behavior. Other examples of this type include subliminal communication,
background music played in a movie, unnoticed traffic noises, and frequent spots (visuals only) of
television advertisers.
Reception
When the body first receives stimuli that is when intrapersonal communication actually starts.
Receiving can take place singly or in combination of any of the five senses: sight sound, smell, touch,
and taste. External and internal receptors in the five sensory organs receive stimuli which are
transformed into nerve impulses and subsequently transmitted to the brain. External receptors are found
on or near the surface of the body. These receptors react to physical, chemical, and mechanical stimuli.
Internal receptors such as nerve endings provide information about your internal state such as an empty
stomach or an itchy throat.
Discrimination
There are countless stimuli that reach you simultaneously. You cannot very well attend to all of them.
Imagine that you are in the Social Science class listening to a guest lecturer. In a moment you feel the
draft coming in through the door, you hear the voice of a student over a megaphone urging you to join a
rally, you hear the drone of a ceiling fan just above you, you see the lecturer up front, the visual aids
plastered on the board, and you smell your seatmates cologne. In addition, you are reliving an
argument you had with your boyfriend over the telephone last night. Theres a p.s. to it. You have a
faint headache.
Discrimination determines what stimuli are allowed to stimulate thought. It screens out the less
significant or weaker stimuli. Thus, in the example earlier cited, the strongest stimuli could be the
lecturers words or message, your brewing headache, and the students rallying shouts over the
megaphone. You are not fully aware of this filtering process because discrimination occurs below the
conscious level. In short, this stage allows you to attend to only those stimuli you consider significant.
Regrouping
During this stage the strongest and most important stimuli previously selected are arranged in a
meaningful sequence. Although previously screened the diverse stimuli are not received in a
predetermined ranking. Thus the chosen stimuli surface to the conscious level so that the person can act
upon the strongest and most significant stimulus first, the medium stimulus next, and the weaker or less
important ones last. In the example earlier cited, you are now aware of the lecturers words and the
self is analogous to a window composed of four (4) panes or quadrants, namely: 1) the open quadrant, 2)
the blind area, 3) the hidden quadrant, and 4) the unknown area. In todays setting, one is an open
window; the second is a window tinted dark from within; the third is a window camouflaged not to look
like a window; and fourth, a window the self hardly touches or opens. Each of these quadrants, however,
contains a different self, not separate and distinct but rather, interacting selves.
Known to Self
Known to others
OPEN
BLIND
HIDDEN
UNKNOWN
Let us see what these four quadrants represent. First, the open self represents various types of
information or knowledge known to the self and known to others or that which you are willing to divulge
to or share with others. This would include your name, student number and course, sex, age, perhaps your
height and weight and social affiliations. Luft and Ingham emphasize that since communication is
dependent on the degree to which we open ourselves to others and to ourselves, then we may learn how to
enlarge the open quadrant. If the open area or proportion is small, communication between individuals
could suffer. The size of an open quadrant varies according to a number of factors (De Vito). These may
include the nature of individuals you associate with, the degree of your closeness to them, or role-related
factors.
Second, the blind self is that quadrant that represents information which is known to others but
unknown to self. Others can see your mannerisms like saying bale, bale ba or actually/ basically
prior to every sentence, but you dont see this. Matters such as even body odor or halitosis (bad breath)
may seem unnoticed by you but not by others. Some people have large blind areas, others have small
blind areas. If effective communication depends on individuals who are willing to open up, blind areas
will make communication difficult. Although blind areas cannot be totally eliminated, decreasing the size
of the blind quadrant can enhance interpersonal relationships. To decrease the size of the blind quadrant,
you could seek out information from family, friends, and intimates, especially on gray areas of your
self. Ask questions and learn to positively respond to others perceptions of you.
Third, the hidden self represents things or information known to self but unknown to others. Personal
secrets, skeletons in the family closet, intimate details and the like are included in this quadrant.
Different people vary in the size of their hidden windows. Some individuals reveal everything. Their
lives are an open book for everyone to peruse. They are sometimes referred to as over disclosers.
Family matters, finances, problems and insecurities, personal goals, failures and successes form the
gamut of their disclosures. Under disclosers on the other hand have large hidden quadrants. They keep to
themselves and tell nothing. Fear of rejection, reprisal, discrimination or lack of trust may trigger such
communication behavior. Selective disclosers are those who screen the information they reveal to
certain people, they tell only that which they think other people need to know, keeping the rest to
themselves. They carefully weigh the pros and cons of their disclosure.
Fourth and last, the unknown self represents information unknown both to you and to others. Indeed,
there are uncharted areas of ourselves that we are not aware of. You may not know why one situation
triggers in you such strong emotions, while others similarly situated do not react intensely. You may
sometimes not understand why youre in a bad mood when things started well that day. Time will tell,
reveal, and disclose to the self what some of these areas are. For example, a newspaper man of so many
years never knew he could learn the violin and play it rather well until he tried it! Hidden talents,
untapped abilities and giftedness can come out in the open through time.
In the space that follows, an ideal Johari window is drawn according to standards of effective
communication.
Known to Self
Known to others
OPEN
HIDDEN
Not
Known to
Self
UNKNOWN
There other devices such as personality tests (i.e., Myers-Briggs Test), personality inventory, inkblot
tests, enneagrams, E.Q. Tests (emotional quotient) and the like that can help you increase your selfawareness. So now that we have a deeper understanding of how self-awareness can come about, let us
learn some things about the notion called self-presentation.
Knowing ourselves can be very tricky indeed. Often the good things about us make us beautifully
wrapped packages. But the not-so-nice things make us go out of our way to present ourselves attractively
to others. We seldom wish to be known as nasty, hot-tempered, unkind, or even ugly. Young people
especially are sensitive about the public images they present. Peer acceptance is paramount during the
teenage years and early adulthood. Kenneth J. Gergen (1971) in his book, The Concept of Self, writes that
until we define ourselves and who we are to others, they cannot identify us and therefore cannot know
how to behave toward us. To present oneself as a borrower of money who forgets to pay back will earn
you displeasure or outright avoidance from others. To present oneself as a gracious host will merit praise
and pleasure from others.
Factors that influence our self-presentation are: the other, situation or interaction environment,
and motivation.
Others determine the way we present ourselves. For instance, you would present yourself in differing
ways to your professor, mother, and intimate chum. You would show respect for one, childlikeness for
another, and casualness for your friend. You may be a happy, go-lucky person with your friends but a
conscientious student to your teachers. As William James (1892) once said, a man has as many different
social selves as there are distinct groups of persons about whose opinion he cares.
Those around us are constantly telling us who we are. Others have differing images of us and
depending upon these images they treat us as a particular kind of person. Weinstein (1967) calls this
altercasting, because we are cast into different but specific roles or identities by those around us.
Another determining factor is the situation or interaction environment. In determining the self that we
present, the environment where the encounter or interaction takes place matters. We would not likely
identify ourselves in the same way at a formal dinner as we do at the bowling alley. Different situations
bring about shifts in identity primarily because they offer cues for maximization of reward. For instance,
at a church service we are expected to behave with proper decorum. At informal parties, we crack jokes
and are humorous.
The third factor is motivation. Motives of the self in undertaking a relationship determine selfpresentation. If a person wishes people to defer to him (show respect) his demeanor may be characterized
by superiority and authoritativeness. If he wishes to be trusted, he may behave consistently, not
erratically. People in general want and need to be liked. They manage their self-identities in such ways as
to gain the acceptance and approval of others.
In sum, therefore, self-communication or intrapersonal communication is not an uncomplicated process.
But the self can stand to profit if the individual practices openness to learn more about himself, a
willingness to listen to others perceptions, and communicate these back to himself through reflection and
introspection. Self-concept formation is a dynamic, ongoing thing operating in a process of becoming. It
is a prerequisite to intrapersonal or self-communication.
Intrapersonal communication is the most basic level of communication. It involves communication with
the self, where the sending and receiving of messages happen within one individual. The Wiseman-Barker
Model describes eight internal processes in communication with the self: 1) reception, 2) discrimination,
3) regrouping, 4) symbol decoding, 5) ideation, 6) incubation, 7) symbol encoding and 8) transmission.
All these stages are affected or influenced by an overarching factor called life orientation.
Self-concept formation is governed by three principles, namely: direct reflections, perceived self, and
generalized other. It is worthwhile to understand the process of how the individual arrives at selfperception because this conceptual self shapes his behavior. Devices such as the Johari window,
enneagrams, personality tests contribute to a better understanding of the self.
Self-attribution is a phenomenon deserving of scrutiny because often misconceptions among students
and the general public thrive for lack of understanding of self processes. Self-attribution can spell the
difference between determination and resignation, between success and failure in lifes pursuits.
1. Explain what role life orientation plays in intrapersonal communication and eventually in
interpersonal communication.
2. Cite examples of a possible breakdown occurring in each of the eight internal processes as we
communicate with ourselves. How can these hamper self-communication?
3. Suggest ways by which the open window can be expanded in order to improve interpersonal
communication.
Note: Keep nos. 4-6 in your journal
4. What effect does a positive self-concept have on your communication with others? A negative selfconcept?
5. Think of how many times you have compared yourself with others. Did it help or not help you?
Explain by recalling instances in the recent or not so recent past.
6. List down areas of your life where you think you are doing well, super, poorly. Why? To what do
you attribute such ratings of yourself? Explain.
Example: Well
Super
Poor
Academics relationships figure /dieting
1. Divide a sheet of paper into two (vertically). In the left portion draw your Johari window at the point
or stage of your initial/early interaction with a classmate. How do you suppose your window would
look like at semesters end? Draw this second window on the right portion. How will the proportions
of the square change? Next draw a Johari window for an intimate friend or for a parent.
2. What is this next exercise all about? Pass a sizable piece of paper around and let your classmates write
down what they think of you. You could do this once at the early outset of the semester and once
more before the semester ends.
3. Make a collage of yourself by clipping pictures of symbols, images, etc. Elaborate on the reasons for
your selection. Do you now have a clearer picture of who you are?
4. Work in dyads while playing the Larry Barkers Who are you? game. Student A starts by asking
Student B: Who are you? Student B should respond with brief, spontaneous answers, i.e. I am a UP
student. Then upon hearing the reply, Student A repeats the question and this goes on for about five
minutes. Afterwards the roles are reversed, this time with Student B asking the question. Learn what
your partner and others perceive of you as you learn about yourself. Are these positive or negative?
How do these affect your communication? (Barker 1996).
5. Jot down various kinds of feedback (positive, neutral, negative) that you get from others during a 2-hr.
period. How do these feedbacks from others affect/influence you? How do you normally respond to
negative feedback? Why so?
Barker, Larry and D.A. Barker. Communication. New Jersey: Simon & Schuster Co., 19.
________________________. Communication. Massachusetts: Allyn & Bacon, 1996.
Civikly, Jean M., ed. Contexts of Communication. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1981.
De Vito, Joseph A. The Interpersonal Communication Book. New York: Harper & Row Publishers,
1986.
Hilgard, Ernest R. Introduction to Psychology. Orlando, Florida: Harcourt Brace & Company, 1996.
Luft, Joseph. Of Human Interaction. Palo Alto, Calif.: National Press Books, 1984.
Wiseman, Gordon and Larry L. Barker. Speech/ Interpersonal Communication. New York: Chandler
Publishing Co., 1974.
Woolfolk, Anita E. Educational Psychology (7th ed). Massachusetts: A Viacom Company, 1998.
4
THE SPEAKERS ETHOS
Objectives
After reading this chapter, you should be able to:
1. come up with a basic definition of ethos;
2. identify the characteristics of ethos by integrating its traditional and contemporary concepts;
3. understand the dynamics of ethos or source credibility; and
4. reflect on the importance of source credibility in human communication.
INTRODUCTION
Young people, old people, practically everyone wants to make a good impression, right? An 18-year
old rehearses his table manners before going out on a dinner date. A job seeker bears in mind the
importance of speech, poise and grooming in clinching an interview. A professor primes his mind, heart,
and spirit before taking on the first day of class. All these people want to communicate with one aim: to
become credible, competent, trustworthy, and good before their respective listeners or audiences. In
short, to communicate meaningfully and successfully.
In ancient Greece the concept of ethos was modeled in everyday life and in duties of citizenship.
Discussed extensively by Aristotle in his book, Ars Rhetorica, the character or ethos of the speaker or
communicator was the most potent means of convincing and influencing ones listeners. Ethos surpassed
logos and pathos in the factor of persuasiveness.
Briefly defined, the 3 factors of persuasion are:
1. Ethos the character of the speaker or the speakers credibility
2. Logos the method of reasoning and argumentation employed by speaker
3. Pathos the speakers use of emotional appeals
Aristotle said: There are three things which inspire confidence in the speakers own character,
namely, that which induced us to believe a thing apart from any proof of it: good sense, good moral
character, and goodwill. (Ryan, 1952).
DEFINING ETHOS
Ancient rhetoricians and writer-philosophers like Quintillian, Plato, Cicero, and Isocrates, including
Aristotle himself, taught that the most effective of the three is ethos, or the character of the speaker.
Quintillian, a Roman teacher-orator who wrote the 12-volume book Training of an Orator, defined this
quality in a good man speaking well. He believed in and advocated the training of orators from infancy.
Contemporary authors Gronbeck, McKerrow, Ehninger and Monroe (1994) define ethos as speaker
credibility, or the degree to which an audience judges a communicator trustworthy, competent, sincere,
attractive and dynamic. They concur with research findings a speaker who can raise an audiences
estimation of his own trustworthiness, competency, sincerity, attractiveness, and dynamism will heighten
the impact of the speech. Author James McCroskey (1971) sees a communication source as having three
possible process dimensions: 1) initial credibility, 2) produced credibility, and 3) terminal credibility.
Today these persuasive forces residing in the speaker are generally referred to as source credibility.
Take note of what these same writers have listed as practices affecting speaker credibility:
1. References to yourself and your experience (in moderation) tend to increase your perceived
trustworthiness and competence. References to others (authorities) tend to increase your perceived
trustworthiness and dynamism.
2. Using highly credible authorities (experts) to substantiate your claims increases your perceived
fairness.
3. If you can demonstrate that you and your audience share common beliefs, attitudes, and values, your
overall credibility will increase.
4. Well-organized speeches are more credible than poorly organized speeches.
5. The more sincere you are, the better chance you have of changing your listeners attitudes.
As it was with ancient Greece, so it is with modern times that we know for certain a speakers impact
rests upon his listeners. McCroskey defines ethos as the receivers impression of the message source. It
is a source characteristic that is attributed to and conferred on him by the receiver-listener. The latter
(listener) sits quietly to assess those qualities in the speaker that will culminate in a favorable or
unfavorable judgment. Whereas the speaker brings with him certain qualities that he has acquired and
honed as well as certain inadequacies, the listener looks at these qualities and comes to a conclusion of
the formers worth.
Since ethos resides in the mind of the listener, therefore, it will vary in as many ways as there are
listeners. Also, a listeners experience in a given communication situation is unique and personal to him.
However unique and varied this perception may be, listeners or audiences generally prefer speakers who
are sincere, honest, trustworthy, consistent, competent and knowledgeable.
Adopting McCroskeys idea, thus, ethos or source credibility is the listeners reception of the
message source, which impression he processes at a given time or situation in order to assess the
speakers worth. Such a definition is similar to the one given by Andersen and Clavenger (1963): ethos
is the image held of a communicator at a given time by the receiver. The overall credibility of the
message source hinges on generally accepted personal traits like sincerity, goodwill,
competence/knowledge, pleasantness, and trustworthiness.
Let us explain the concept of ethos with examples. In the late sixties there was a brilliant senator in the
Philippine scene. He would be besieged with speaking invitations by offices, campuses, and neighboring
countries in the region. With his amazing grasp of history and international events plus an astute, analytic
mind, then lawmaker Benigno Aquino was a much-sought-after speaker. We were students then who along
with our neighbors from Ateneo and Maryknoll would jampack the Wilfrido Ma. Guerrero Theatre to
listen to the man for hours. He had such a high ethos, one could say. Then a few years passed until he
became an enemy of the Marcos administration. The martial law era found him guilty in proceedings of a
military tribunal. He decided to go on a 40-day hunger strike and waged his political campaign from a
prison cell. The electorates response was tremendous because the people conferred upon him an even
higher ethos than before his prisoner days. Until his destiny became manifest on that fateful day of August
21, 1983 death in the hands of assassins the martial law regime considered him a threat. Benigno
Aquino is long gone but his ethos remains very high indeed for he is considered a modern Filipino hero
whose words The Filipino is worth dying for! will be remembered for a long time in the collective
psyche of the Filipino nation.
If the above example deals with ethos that increases with time, what about ethos that changes in the
opposite direction? Let us look at another historical figure. In the late fifties till about 1970, high ethos
was conferred upon then Pres. Marcos by the Filipino populace because of his exemplary achievements
as a UP student leader of his time and his track record of scholarship, soldiery, and service as a solon
(oppositionist in Congress). But the same persona suffered from the peoples very low perception of him
during the historic EDSA revolution of 1986 due to his alleged tyrannical leadership, grave violations of
human rights, and trail of graft and corruption in government for more than twenty years. Still today, there
exists among our people a so called loyalist group who despite the leaders questioned past defers to
his memory. In this dynamic of ethos, you can see two kinds of ethos-pictures, namely: a high ethos
conferred by one group, and, a very low ethos conferred by another group. What differentiates these
groups? Are there particular traits or qualities ranked higher or lower in a scale of ethos-related traits of
a speaker-leader? Which group of raters or perceivers would give weight to certain characteristics more
than others?
In the international scene, the US President, Bill Clinton, despite unsavory media mileage about his
personal affairs enjoys high ethos as given him by admirers while he also suffered low ethos as conferred
by other sectors of American society. But there was no general clamor for him to step down. Do
leadership qualities subsume personal or private life characteristics? How are these perceived by
different sectors of American society?
In an unpublished masteral thesis on the dimensions of ethos in the Philippine setting (Madrigal: 1992),
the study looked into the perceptions of Filipino respondents of political figures prior to a presidential
election. The results showed that there are three (3) major dimensions of ethos that are perceived by them,
namely: moral qualifications, intelligence, and expertise. The other two are minor ones, namely:
message-related factor and delivery.
In a related study by Nenita Osio-Santos (1996) on the Patterns of Ethos: A Filipino Profile, ranked
highest among three in ethos was a senator who was perceived to be capable of transforming peoples
lives to realize their dreams/potentials, an agent of change, and a problem-solving figure. If these
characteristics were thought to reside in the speaker even before concrete proof of them came about, on
what factors did the audience attribute high credibility to the source? Since we subscribe to the fact that
ethos resides in the mind of the listener, what characteristics do Filipinos see in political candidates that
make them winnable?
What about universals of ethos? Do people the world over cherish the same things in speakers?
Leaders like Indias Mohandas Gandhi, the Philippines Ninoy Aquino, Israels Golda Meir, Egypts
Anwar Sadat, American spiritual black leader, Martin Luther King; Calcuttas Mother Teresa; and
diplomats like our very own Carlos P. Romulo, the first secretary-general of the United Nations Council,
to this day remain in our memory because of high credibility or ethos accorded them by peoples of the
world.
Now that we have seen some real-life applications of ethos, lets examine it further.
NATURE OF ETHOS
Ethos, thus, may be characterized as:
1. varying from individual to individual, from group to group
2. changing through time (fluctuations and progressions)
3. being personal and situational
4. being composite (determined by factors like context, previous reputation of the speaker, audiences
needs, priorities/expectations, rhetorical aspects of message at a given time)
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ETHICAL SPEAKER
ARISTOTLE
competence/intelligence
trustworthiness (honesty)
good character
GRONBECK, McKERROW
et al
trustworthiness
competence
sincerity
attractiveness
dynamism
LEMERT, BERLO,
MERTZ(1969)
trustworthiness
competence on the subject
pleasantness & liveliness
McCROSKEY(1966)
attractiveness (interesting
personality)
honesty
knowledge of the subject
listeners receptiveness to speaker
When McCroskey (1974) examined earlier researches on ethos, he came up with a group of communal
characteristics, namely: a) competence on the subject; b) honesty; and c) trust-worthiness as a result of
honesty. Looking at the table above, can you think of your own list of what makes a speaker ethical?
Would you weigh all characteristics equally?
At this point, what can you say about the different elements (speakers reputation, time, context,
listeners needs and goals, etc.) interacting in the ethos process? Lets examine further the dynamics of
ethos.
THE DYNAMICS OF ETHOS
In view of a continually changing speaker-listener situation, ethos may be classified into three levels:
1. Extrinsic or initial ethos, wherein the audience or listeners have previous knowledge of the
speakers good character, competence, intelligence, and trustworthiness.
Example A: droves of college students in the late 60s would troop to listen to then Sen. Benigno
Aquino speak on international and regional events, i.e. the Vietnam war, Kampuchea situation,
because the senators articulateness on world affairs preceded him
Example B: a speech of introduction delivered by a respectable person prepares the mind of
listeners to accept the speaker who speaks to them the first time with a positive picture of his initial
credibility
2. Intrinsic or transactional ethos, wherein the speakers words and actions are continually being
assessed by his listeners; this credibility level may heighten or diminish the speakers initial ethos
Example B: a rehabilitated DARE inmate gives his testimony on the evils of drug abuse; this affects
Ethos traditionally refers to those persuasive factors residing in the reputation and personality of the
speaker. Today ethos is generally known as source credibility or the degree to which a speaker is
adjudged competent/knowledgeable, pleasing, and trustworthy by his listeners. Because ethos partakes of
a volatile and dynamic nature, a communication source can undergo three process dimensions, namely:
initial or intrinsic ethos, starting credibility; transactional or extrinsic ethos (produced credibility), ethos
derived as the communication event progresses; and terminal or ending ethos, credibility upon the
completion of the communication event. Several researches have found that the most common
characteristics of speakers with ethos are the following: competence, honesty, and trustworthiness as a
result of honesty.
Since ethos or source credibility is a function of listener behavior and reception, it is important that
successful communicators cultivate the generally appealing traits of sincerity, competence, honesty,
dynamism, and pleasantness. Furthermore, since ethos is a changing dimension, speakers with originally
low ethos can still improve in subsequent communication events while those with high ethos can work at
sustaining their credibility. Finally, listener-responsibility comes into the picture too. A
speaker/communicator can only achieve so much. Listeners seek certain rewards in communication
situations, i.e., to satisfy their intellectual curiosity, to have fun/entertainment, to be convinced, and
others. While it is understandable for them to have goals or purposes, they need to place themselves in a
posture of readiness to listen this is listener-accountability. Then the entire communication process or
event can be said to be working properly because speaker-listener responsibilities are shared.
1. Pick two personages in government, business, science, art, or show business and attribute to them
characteristics of ethos that you perceive. Prepare a 3-minute talk for a live classroom audience. You
may give examples of high and low ethos.
2. In your own voting locality, observe and gather what characteristics of ethos are given voters
consideration. Be sure to classify (just roughly) the types of voters. Analyze these characteristics in
light of why you think they are important to the different types of voters. You may write a one-page
paper or stage a short skit about it.
3. Conduct a 5-7 minute-interview on what personal characteristics of college boys appeal to college
girls; after the males question the females, the latter take their turn. The class can tabulate the most
popular characteristics and brainstorm on them.
4. Listen to two speeches, one that is taped, and the other on video. Analyze the characteristics of both
speakers and compare their source credibility. Again compile the most likable traits found in both
speakers.
5. What characteristics in a professor make him/her credible to students? Write off a list of ethical
characteristics you expect from your teacher (s). Share what you wrote in class. You may also analyze
what ethos traits of teachers helped you as students in the past. How?
Aristotle. Rhetoric. Translated by Lane Cooper. New York: Appleton-Century Crofts, 1960.
Berlo, David K., J.D. Lemert, and R.J. Mertz, Dimensions for Evaluating the Acceptability of Message
Sources. Research Monograph, Dept. of Communication. Michigan State University, 1966.
Eisenson, Jon, J. Jeffrey Auer, and John V. Irwin. The Psychology of Communication. New York:
Appleton-Century Crofts, 1963.
Gronbeck, Bruce E., R.E. McKerrow, D. Ehninger, and A.H. Monroe. Principles and Types of
Communication. 12th ed. New York: Harper Collins College Publishers, 1994.
Hovland, Carl, I. L. Janis, and H. M. Kelley. Communication and Persuasion. New Haven, Connecticut:
Yale University Press, 1953.
Madrigal, Albert D. Dimensions of Ethos: A Study in the Philippine Setting. An unpublished graduate
thesis, University of the Philippines, Diliman, Q.C., 1992.
Osio-Santos, Nenita. Patterns of Ethos: A Filipino Profile. An unpublished graduate thesis, University of
the Philippines, Diliman, Q. C., 1996.
McCroskey, J.C. Scales for the Measurement of Ethos, Speech Monographs, XXX (1966), pp. 65-72.
5
LANGUAGE
Objectives
After reading this chapter, you should be able to:
1. describe the nature of language
2. differentiate the types of meanings
3. explain the attributes of effective oral language
4. suggest ways to achieve oral style
5. employ language in conversation and public speech that meets the criteria of clarity, directness,
appropriateness and vividness
INTRODUCTION
English being one of our nations official languages has come a long way. The language introduced by
colonizers has apparently charted a distinct path of its own. Today this foreign tongue is used, misused,
and abused depending on who is the perceiver. How do we Filipinos understand its nature and use?
In 1977, former American President Jimmy Carter, on a trip to Poland, had to rely on Polish
government interpreters because the American government could not find one who could speak modern
Polish. It seemed natural that native translators interpreted his speeches and pronouncements in a way
that fit Polish political sensibilities. So when he offered his condolences to dissident journalists who
wanted to attend but were not permitted to come, the interpreters translated it as who wanted to come
but couldnt. And thus the audience missed the point. Of course, this was long before perestroika.
In an article in the Gentlemans Quarterly in 1987, Kenneth Turan described some of the
misunderstandings that occurred during the dubbing or subtitling of American movies in Europe. In one
movie where a policeman tells a motorist to pull over, the Italian translator has him asking for a sweater
(which is sometimes called a pullover). In another where a character asks if he can bring a date to the
funeral, the Spanish subtitle has him asking if he can bring a fig to the funeral.
Filipinos who certainly are reputed to speak good English have their slip-ups too. When a popular
leader was asked where his lady was, he unashamedly responded: You didnt see her? Oh, she just
passed away. All the occasion needed was to delete that adverb!
These stories illustrate some of the many communication problems which may arise in the use of
language. What is language? What is the nature of language? What are the attributes of effective oral
language? The answers to these questions will be discussed in this chapter.
How are we using the term language? Language sometimes refers to different tongues such as Chinese,
Nippongo and Spanish. In the early history of rhetoric, classical rhetoricians regarded language as one of
the major canons: inventio (analysis), dispositio (organization), elocutio (language or style), memoria,
and pronunciatio (delivery). Hughes defines it as a system of arbitrary symbols by which thought is
conveyed from one human being to another. According to DeVito, language is the code, the system of
symbols, utilized in the construction of verbal messages. These last two definitions emphasize that
language has to do with verbal symbols. It has to do with a system which involves pattern and order. It
has to do with the human social context.
We must distinguish between language and speech. Language is not synonymous with speech because
the latter covers the entire scope of human communication. More precisely, Knower defines speech as
the ongoing multisymbolic behavior in social situations carried on to achieve communication. It is
multisymbolic because it employs language, tones, pitch range, and non-verbal behavior simultaneously to
represent what we mean. Language is a symbol system for both written and oral communication. We will
be primarily concerned with oral or spoken language. This is the language of conversation and
speechmaking.
THE NATURE OF LANGUAGE
We need to understand the nature of language so that we can use words more effectively in the
communication of our thoughts and feelings. Oftentimes problems arise that turn language into a
communication obstacle rather than a communication facilitator. To understand the characteristics of
words is to understand the possibilities as well as limitations of these verbal tools.
WORDS ARE ONLY SYMBOLS
Words are symbols which represent and substitute for objects, concepts, feelings, emotions,
experiences and events around us. These referents may be concrete or they may be abstract. We use
words to represent our meanings and to stimulate the listener to create his own image/representation of
what we are talking about. The word is merely a symbol, it is not the actual thing itself. Alfred Korzybski,
the father of general semantics, emphasized this fact when he said that the map is not the territory it
stands for, the word book is not the collection of pages. What this means is that if you are looking at the
map of the U.P. Diliman campus, you are not looking at Diliman, but a functional symbol that stands for
that physical territory. The map is not the physical territory, the map simply represents the area referred
to, in this case the Diliman campus. If you hear or see the word book, you are not seeing or hearing the
book but a symbol that stands for it. These examples clearly remind us that as the map represents the
Diliman campus, the word book only represents the actual object, it is not the thing itself.
Very often, though, people react to words as if they were the things symbolized. Have you ever
discussed an operation or a disease with friends? Did you notice how they got squeamish at the mere
utterance of such terms as blood, pus, transfusion, incision, or perhaps infection? It is
probably because they were reacting to words as if they were the real things.
To further understand the symbolic nature of words, let us refer to the triangle of meaning formulated by
Ogden and Richards in The Meaning of Meaning. The diagram illustrates the relationships of the word
or symbol, the thought or reference and the referent or the thing itself.
Note that only broken lines connect the word or symbol and the referent or thing itself. This indicates that
there is no direct relationship between word and the referent. The link between word and the referent is
the thought or mental process. The relationship or connection is created in the mind of the user of the
language.
Although it is often emphasized that there is no necessary connection between the symbol and that
which is symbolized (the referent), a habitual confusion of symbols (words) with things symbolized
persists. People treat words as if they were the actual objects or events to which they refer. For instance,
there is a grain of fear about death and dying in almost all of us. In an effort to ward off this threat,
we refrain from even pronouncing the words. If the topic cannot be avoided, the idea is circumvented
with an array of metaphors: passing away, demise, departure, loss, has left us for the great beyond, wrote
thirty and met his Maker. We use circumlocutions or euphemisms. A euphemism according to Websters
Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary (1991), is the substitution of an agreeable or inoffensive expression
for one that may offend or one that may suggest something unpleasant, harsh or indelicate. Old people are
referred to by gentle euphemisms such as senior citizens, the elderly, advanced in years or the golden-age
group. In the book The Official Politically Correct Dictionary and Handbook, its co-authors
humorously offer some linguistic improvement. They suggest that instead of saying bald say
follicularly challenged, instead of fat say horizontally challenged. They prefer temporarily able
to healthy. A better word for body odor is nondiscretionary fragrance and for lazy is
motivationally deficient. Other interesting entries include ethically disoriented for dishonest and
negative saver for spendthrift. The familiar line sticks and stones may break my bones but words will
never hurt me should be true but it is not.
have many terms for it : finances, funds, capital, assets, cash, pocket money, pin money, change, bread,
loot etc. We Filipinos have many words for rice. It is our staple crop and we find it on the dining table
more than three times a day. Have you tasted galapong, pirurutong pinipig, suman, bahaw,
and tutong?
Communicators would do well to be sensitive to how these differences in time and place or region
affect the meaning of words. The tendency to ignore change and assume that words are static and
unchanging can be a barrier to effective verbal interaction.
WORDS HAVE MANY TYPES OF MEANINGS
There are at least five general types of meanings : denotation, connotation, structural meaning,
contextual meaning and sound meaning. The first type of meaning is denotation. It is the objective, precise,
literal or dictionary meaning of a word. Suppose we take the word university. The dictionary defines it
as an institution of higher learning providing facilities for teaching and research. Denotation is like
pointing to a referent or the object itself. We would more likely agree with the denotative meanings of
words and have the same definitions.
Such is not the case, however, with connotative meanings. Connotations are more subjective,
figurative and variable. The connotative meaning of university includes all the feelings, associations
and emotions that the word touches off in different individuals. These experiences and memories may be
pleasant or unpleasant, negative or positive, good or bad. For one person, the school might connote DQs,
boring lectures, enlistment lines and term papers. Since connotations are extremely personal, fewer
people would agree on the connotative meanings of a term. These meanings reside in the relationship
between the object and the speaker of listener.
According to the late American Senator S.I. Hayakawa, author of Language in Thought and Action
there are snarl-words and there are purr-words. The terms politician and statesman refer to the
same denotation. But the term politician continues to have a sinister meaning hence, a snarl-word.
Statesman, on the other hand, suggests a more desirable image of one who exercises political
leadership wisely and without partisanship, therefore, a purr-word. Another pair of examples is
mellow and senile. The word mellow is a complimentary synonym for the neutral term old.
Mellow usually causes listeners to react favorably toward the object described. The word senile is
often regarded as an uncomplimentary synonym. It causes people to react unfavorably toward the same
person or idea. It may be difficult to attain complete impartiality as far as word choices are concerned but
by being aware of the favorable and unfavorable feelings that certain words can arouse, you can attain
enough impartiality in writing and in speech.
Many words carry with them a strong effect on the reactions of the audience. They are more
specifically referred to as loaded words. Words such as instigate, failure, sequester, dictator, and seize
are considered loaded words by many. They possess rich emotional coloration. Exercise care when using
loaded words.
Meanwhile, structural meaning tells us that the meaning of a sentence is determined not by the word
alone but also by the total arrangement and sequence of words. The pattern or order in which the words
are used or encountered communicate certain meanings. Misplacing a modifier can change the meaning of
an idea. White, in his language chapter cites that seven different meanings can be conveyed successively
inserting the word only before each of the 7 words in the sentence : She told me that she loved me.
Examine the two statements below. Although they have exactly the same set of words arranged in the
same sequence, two different meanings can be inferred depending on where the commas are placed.
Woman, without her, man is a savage.
a. The first attribute of clarity is correctness. Your language must be grammatically correct.
Aside from causing misunderstanding, errors in grammar can contribute to a lowered ethos or
perception of the source. For instance, the verb of a sentence must agree with subject of the
sentence. Clear language must also avoid mangled syntax.
b. A second attribute of clarity is accuracy. Precise word choice involves choosing words
that accurately depict your meaning. A speaker must first make certain what meanings he
wants his receivers or audience to get. He then checks whether the words he has chosen are
the most precise ones for expressing that meaning. Suppose you want to say that you are
terribly perplexed by the events. Is perplexed a better choice over puzzled, bewildered,
confused, nonplussed or even dumbfounded? The words guess, prediction, estimate, foretell,
forecast mean roughly the same thing. One of them can represent reality more precisely and
can convey a shade of meaning that distinguishes it from the other words. The same is true of
the following set of synonyms: gift, subsidy, award, contribution, inheritance, present,
endowment and benefits. Each term in the preceding group is slightly different from the other.
Choose you words carefully. Use a dictionary or thesaurus when in doubt.
Imprecision may result from the use of all-purpose words. All-purpose words emphasize
similarities but not differences. Remember the last time your mother asked you how you are
doing in school? You probably said, Okay or Fine. Try to give more precise and
specific answers next time. My professor gave me a 1.5 for a critique of a play which I
watched recently or I flunked my third exam in Math 17. To say the car has been driven
30,000 kilometers and has never required repairs is clearer than saying Its a great car!
Imprecision may also result from the use of abstract words. Abstract words refer to
general concepts, qualities or attributes. Discipline, liberal arts, empowerment are
abstract words. Although they are sometimes necessary in order to express certain ideas and
experiences they are easier to misinterpret than concrete ones. Concrete words refer to
tangible objects, specifically people, places and things. Blue book, lips, jeep are
concrete words. They evoke more precise mental pictures in your listeners minds. In order
to avoid ambiguity, move from abstract to concrete and general to specific.
Compare the choice of words in the following sentences pairs.
The patient is making a lot of improvement.
The patient can now breathe on his own.
I will not tolerate dishonesty in the classroom.
I will not tolerate cheating on tests in the classroom.
Business is good.
For the first quarter, the volume of car sales increased by 25 %.
I have a dog.
I have a pit bull terrier.
In the first sentence of each pair, the italicized items are general and abstract. In the second
sentence of each pair, the italicized items are concrete and specific. Make a conscious effort
to be less general and abstract and more specific and concrete in your language.
Imprecision may result from exaggeration. Words like awesome, colossal,
stupendous, and terrific have immediate and strong appeal. However, when there
superlatives are used indiscriminately to describe anything and everything, they can cause
misunderstanding.
c. A third attribute of clarity is simplicity. Use a short, simple common word for a long
unfamiliar one. A listener will have difficulty deciphering meaning if difficult words are
used and too specialized vocabulary or technical jargon is employed. Say difficult to
understand, rather than esoteric, large rather than elephantine, to avoid rather than
to eschew or building rather than edifice, imprisoned rather than incarcerated.
A local insurance group has found the value of simplicity even in the face of high-tech
sophistication. It recently introduced a new look in its policy contracts with insured parties
by reducing the number of words to the barest minimum and eliminating legalistic terms in
favor of laymens language. Thus, the first page of this firms insurance policy now reads:
We pay the face amount to you if the insured is alive on its termination date or to the
beneficiary if the insured dies before the termination date, subject to the provisions of this
policy.
Here are some suggestions to achieve simplicity of language style.
Avoid verbosity or wordiness. Wilson cites that economy in language involves the right
choice of words, in the right amount and in the best order for instantaneous intelligibility. It is
relative to the topic and the receivers needs. In addition, spoken language is understandably
more ample than the written form because the listeners cannot review unless enough words
are used by the speaker. This however, should not be an excuse for verbosity.
Use short and simple sentence construction. Clarity can be enhanced if sentences are not
too lengthy. This is particularly true of persuasive messages. Ragsdale found that brief
messages produced significantly more attitude change than wordier versions of the same
message that were indirect, repetitive, or included numerous compound sentences.
Avoid tautology and redundancy.
Say innovation, not new innovation. An innovation is new.
Say refer to not refer back to. Refer just needs a to.
Say revert to not revert back to. Revert actually means go back so just add a to.
Say proceed, not proceed on. Proceed only goes one way: ahead or forward.
Say unique not more or most unique. Unique means one of a kind.
Say reason, not reason why or reason. . .because. Reason, by itself, means
explanation.
The following paragraph further exemplifies this language problem:
Meet Tautological Tessie. Shes planning to redo her house over. A man she trusted
turned out to be a dishonest crook. She likes the true facts and doesnt care to drive at a
fast speed. At parties, she serves sherry wine. She was once courted by a rich millionaire
and she thinks young teenagers are cute. It is her conviction that when studying a new
subject she should learn the basic rudiments. She always sends flowers to sick invalids,
and if theres anything she hates its a gloomy pessimist. Fragrant perfumes attract her. A
neighbor of hers was held up by a crazy psychopath. Youll never catch her going to see
sad tragedies, as she prefers funny comedies. At a sideshow once she saw a tall giant
(White).
Avoid hackneyed phrases or trite expressions. Examples of such commonly used terms are
last but not the least, at this point in time and in the last analysis. In conclusion let me
say and in the eventuality of can similarly be avoided. Reword your intentions. Substitute
these phrases for more original and fresh expressions. Also do away with verbal intrusions
such as you know, basically, actually, I mean, okay and really in your oral
speech. Eliminating such verbal fillers will help you convey your ideas more clearly.
d. A fourth attribute of clarity is understandability. Define your terms. When explaining an
unfamiliar or difficult concept, for example, you can define by using a dictionary definition.
You can also trace the words historical and linguistic development. You can explain how a
particular authority views the term. You can define by negation. Or you can give familiar
examples. You may even define by analogy by comparing the term with a known or familiar
entity. You really have many options to choose from when presenting unfamiliar or difficult
concepts.
Avoid technical jargon, slang and uncommon foreign words. Jargon is the technical
language of a professional class. Lawyers, physicians, stock brokers and even professors
have a specialized vocabulary that their respective professions use. Before using jargon,
determine whether or not your audience or receivers share your technical or specialized
vocabulary. For example, it would be understandable among doctors to say singultus
spasm for hiccups or bilateral periorbital hematoma for blackeye. But to use such terms
among laymen would confuse rather than clarify.
Slang is another kind of sublanguage, a variation from the general language. It is especially
appropriate in contexts of extreme informality. Although used by the general public, it is not
considered proper in polite conversation or appropriate in formal written communication.
Words such as humungous, turn off, hush money, booze, woozy, go with the flow, get my
drift are examples of slang. When used frequently, slang words are incorporated into the
general language as acceptable terms.
There are a number of foreign words which are commonly used and understood by
Filipinos. Some of these are vis--vis, coup detat, non sequitor, bon appetit, de rigueur
and bona fide. If you have to use other foreign terms, make sure that your listeners understand
their meanings. Otherwise, use uncommon foreign words sparingly.
2. Effective oral language is direct and conversational.
When you are conversing with a friend or delivering a speech, you have a live listener or
audience. Remember that it is an audience that is listening, not reading. Readers can go back to
reread or even pause at their own leisure to ponder upon what the writer has said. This advantage,
however, is not available to the speaker. Hence, you must make sure your language is instantly
intelligible. This concern with instant intelligibility results from the simple fact that speech sounds
are evanescent meaning they fade rapidly. So if your words are too technical, too difficult or too
high-brow they may not be received at all. Blankenship suggest that language for spoken
communication must be oral in style: it must be quickly comprehensible, less formal, contain more
restatement, be more direct and personal and easily spoken.
Here are some suggestions to achieve oral style.
Use short words instead of polysyllabic words. Conversational speech is elliptical, meaning it is
marked with extreme economy of words. Use phone, instead of telephone, co-ed dorm for coeducational dormitory.
Use personal pronouns to help you identify with your listeners. Say our future, I believe and
We can change.
Use contradictions such as isnt, arent, wont and didnt in order to add an air of informality.
Use shorter sentence length.
Use simple but graphic words.
Use direct and rhetorical questions. Oral or spoken language demands a response. Interrogations,
both direct and rhetorical, evoke quick responses from listeners. Direct questions are answered
by the speaker while rhetorical questions allow listeners to ponder upon the idea or subject.
Employ idiomatic expressions.
Use the active voice rather than the passive voice. Instead of saying It is hoped that active verbs
will be used in the oral style say Use active verbs in order to achieve a more effective oral
style. The active voice is a stronger and more vigorous verb form.
Again, because of the temporal nature of the speech act, more repetitions and restatements must
be used to ensure comprehension.
Lastly, since you confront your audience face-to-face, refer to them more directly, as well as to
the time, place and immediate occasion.
3. Effective oral language is appropriate to the listeners, the occasion, the speech purpose and the
speakers personality.
a. Effective oral language is appropriate to your audience. Adapt your language to your
audiences needs, attitudes, interests, knowledge and field of experience. Use words that they
will understand, accept and respond to. Your words should reflect respect and friendliness
toward your receivers or listeners. Audience analysis will help you determine if you should be
formal or informal. The varsity basketball coach of the UP Maroons might address the players
of the team as you guys while the speaker in a more formal situation such as a conferment
rites for a visiting dignitary will start with ladies and gentlemen or distinguished guests.
Although you can use certain words when conversing with your close friends, those same
expressions may not be suitable for a public audience.
Professions such as medical, legal, engineering, etc. have developed jargon that is relatively
incomprehensible to outsiders. If you were speaking before an audience of doctors, you will be
understood when you say parotitis when referring to a viral disease marked by the swelling
of one or both of the parotid glands. But if you were addressing a non-medical group, you will
probably need to simply say mumps.
Here are two versions of the Lords prayer played regularly over a local Christian radio
station. Read each one carefully. Note the differences in word choice. How well does the
second one (childrens version) adapt to the special needs of child listeners?
The Lords Prayer
Our Father who art in heaven
Hallowed be Your name
Your kingdom come
Your will be done on earth
As it is in heaven
Give us this day our daily bread
And forgive us our trespasses
As we forgive those who
Trespass against us
(Doronila)
Auditory imagery calls attention to details of sounds which you are describing. These may include
loudness, rhythm, pitch and quality. Gustatory imagery provides the opportunity for your audience to
taste what you are describing. Details may include saltiness, tartness, sweetness or tanginess, sourness.
Olfactory imagery allows your audience to smell the odors and aromas associated with the matter
you are describing. Tactual imagery is concerned with the sensations which we get through physical
contact, particularly sensations of texture and shape, pressure, heat and cold. Kinesthetic imagery
concerns muscle strain and movement. Organic imagery details internal feelings such as hunger,
nausea, dizziness.
Use as many of these types of imagery in your speech.
Language is the system of symbols human beings utilize in the construction of verbal messages. To be
able to effectively use words in the construction of verbal messages, we should understand the
characteristics of words. Words are only symbols. Their meanings are created in users minds. Language
is dynamic and constantly changing. Words have different types of meanings. Effective oral language is
characterized by clarity and appropriateness to the listeners, the situation, the speakers purpose and
personality. It must have directness and vividness.
1. Prepare a language intensity chart consisting of three columns. Label the first column, uncomplimentary
synonym; the second column, neutral word, the third column, complimentary synonym. List down five
neutral words or expressions in the middle column. For each of these terms, find a word that you think
may cause your receivers to respond negatively toward the term. Also look for a word that you think
may cause your receivers to respond positively toward the word. Place the synonyms in the appropriate
columns. (Monroe and Ehninger)
2. Clip a short feature story from a newspaper or magazine. Imagine that you are to read this story to a
new and different audience each time. Rewrite the article making sure that the language is appropriate
to the each of the following specific audiences: an audience of your peers, a professional group and
elementary school pupils.
3. Listen to an advertisement over tv or radio. You may evaluate a print ad. Check for the use of loaded
words. How does the use of such words affect your logical response to the product. Substitute neutral
or more objective words or expressions. Does this change weaken the persuasive power of the ad?
Share your observations with the class.
4. Listen to the way college students or your classmates talk. Take notes. What adjectives would
characterize their language style. Make similar observations of other groups (professional and nonprofessional) and jot down your observations.
5. Choose one concept or abstract entity from the list below. Prepare to JAM (speak or the topic in just a
minute). Pay attention to clarity and other details. Keep language as specific and concrete as possible.
Empowerment
Courtesy
Character
Honesty
Globalization
Family Cohesiveness
Dedication
Human Rights
Gentlemanliness
Tact
Ecotourism
Sibling rivalry
Embarrassment
Kindness
Responsibility
Discipline
Fidelity
Pinoy English
6. Rewrite a complicated message (insurance policy, agreement for a credit card or loan, difficult
passage from a textbook, clause from legal agreement or treaty) in simple words. Do not sacrifice
accuracy of language. Read both entries to the class. (Gronbeck)
7. Describe orally one of the following. Try to use language that is vivid and original.
Your college crush (female or male)
The buffet table at your favorite restaurant
A view of the Sunken Garden
Traffic at a busy intersection
Last two minutes of a basketball game
Sounds in an amusement arcade in SM
Baird, A. Craig, and Knower, Franklin H. Essentials of General Speech. International Student Edition.
New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1968.
Baird, A. Craig, Knower, Franklin H. and Becker, Samuel. Essentials of General Speech
Communication. New York: McGraw-Hill, Inc., 1973.
Beard, Henry and Cerf, Christopher. The Official Politically Correct Dictionary and Handbook. New
York: Vilard Books, 1992.
Blakenship, Jane. Public Speaking: A Rhetorical Perspective. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1966.
Bryson, Bill. The Mother Tongue English and How It Got That Way. New York: William Morrow and
Company, Inc., 1990.
Clevenger, Theodore, Jr. and Matthews, Jack. The Speech Communication Process. _Glenview, Illinois:
Scott, Foresman and Company, 1971.
Condon, John C., Jr. Semantics and Communication. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1960.
DeVito, Joseph A. Communicology: An Introduction to the Study of Communication. 2nd edition. New
York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1982.
Gamble, Teri and Gamble, Michael. Public Speaking in the Age of Diversity. Needham Heights,
Massachusetts: Allyn and Bacon, 1994.
Hayakawa, S.I. Language in Thought and Action. New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, Inc., 1963.
Kacirk, Jeffrey. Forgotten English. New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1997.
Korzybski, Alfred. Science and Sanity: An Introduction to Non-Aristotelian Systems and General
Semantics. Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Science Press Printing Corporation, 1933.
Nierenberg, Gerald I. and Calero, Henry H. Meta-Talk, the Guide to Hidden Meanings in Conversation.
New York: Cornerstone Library, 1979.
Ogden, C.K. and Richards, I.A. The Meaning of Meaning. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, Ltd.,
1923.
Ryan, Halford. Classical Communication for the Contemporary Communicator. Mountain View,
California: Mayfield Publishing Company, 1992.
Sitaram, K.S. and Cogdell, Roy T. Foundations of Intercultural Communication. Ohio: Charles E.
Merrill Publishing Company, 1976.
Verdeber, Rudolph F. The Challenge of Effective Speaking. Belmont, California: Wadsworth Publishing
Company, 1994.
White, Eugene E. Practical Speech Fundamentals. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1960.
Wilson, John F., Arnold, Caroll C. and Wertheimer, Molly Meijer. Public _Speaking as a Liberal Art.
6th edition. Needham Heights, Massachusetts: Allyn and Bacon, 1990.
6
USING the VOICE to COMMUNICATE
Objectives
After reading this chapter, you should be able to:
1. state why every persons voice is unique
2. describe the stages in voice production
3. identify the types of breathing
4. explain the various aspects of voice usage
5. identify the steps to improve the quality of ones speaking voice
6. identify the causes of poor articulation
INTRODUCTION
What kind of voice do you have? Is it rich and resonant, soft and alluring, thin and nasal? Is it deep and
raspy, or harsh or irritating? Whatever the characteristics of your voice, you can be sure it is unique.
Because no two people are the same physically, no two people have identical voices. This is why
voiceprints are sometimes used in criminal trials as guides to personal identity.
The second major element of a speakers presentation is the voice. Vocal delivery involves the
mechanics of vocalization, vocal characteristics (including pitch, volume, rate and quality) and
pronunciation. Inexperienced speakers often pay little attention to their vocal delivery, and that the voice
cannot be altered in any way. Even though ones physical makeup influences vocal quality, much can be
done to vocal delivery.
THE PHYSIOLOGY OF SPEECH
Two separate but related mechanisms are involved in the production of speech: the voice-producing;
mechanism and the mechanism of articulation.
Voice Production
1. Respiration
You need a supply of air not only to survive but also to produce the sound needed for an effective
vocal delivery. It is the diaphragm that is primarily involved in inhalation. The diaphragm is a dome
shaped muscle attached to the base and sides of the lower ribs separating the abdomen from the
chest. When you inhale, the diaphragm contracts and moves downward, while the ribs move upward
and out.
As seen in Figure 1, voice production involves the passage of air from the lungs, through the
trachea, and into the larynx. As you relax and contract your diaphragm and abdominal as well as
chest muscles, air through the process of respiration is forced from the lungs into the larynx. The
larynx, commonly known as the voice box, is connected above and below by muscles, which move it
up and down. Sound is produced during exhalation when the vocal folds inside the larynx come
together until there is only a slit between them. Air is forced up the trachea and through the vocal
folds causes the folds to vibrate and produce a weak sound.
If you gasp for air or raise your shoulders when you inhale, you are possibly using clavicular
breathing, or respiration from the top of your lungs. Clavicular breathing may cause unsteadiness in
the air supply and creates tension in the neck and throat. Diaphragmatic breathing is feeling your
stomach muscles move forward as you inhale. A good steady breath from the diaphragm produces
the constant supply of air needed to produce sound.
2. Phonation
In simple terms, this process by which air is pushed through the vocal cords, which then vibrate to
produce sound is phonation. This is not the sound others hear when you speak. The process of
phonation is not complete until the sound produced in the larynx is resonated throughout the vocal
chamber of the mouth, nose, and throat.
3. Resonation
The spoken voice first goes through a process of resonation in which qualities are added to the
sound as it passes through a series of air chambers in the throat and head. Resonance is responsible
for both the amplification and enrichment of the vice. The principal resonators of the voice are the
upper part of the larynx, the throat, the nasal cavities, and the mouth. The role of these chambers can
be understood by focusing on the role of the mouth to produce vowel sounds. As the mouth opens and
closes, the size and shape of the oral cavity changes, and the vowel sound produced changes with it.
The sound of your vowels is determined, in part, by the size and functioning of these resonators.
4. Articulation
The tongue, teeth, lips, jaw, gum ridge, the hard and soft palates, in addition to the nose, throat and
oral cavities modify the resonated sound, enabling us to articulate it in the form of distinct speech.
Through the movements of these articulators of speech, the size and shape of the oral cavity for the
production of specific consonants and vowels can be changed. The quality of the spoken voice
produced by these physiological mechanisms is expressed in terms of several vocal characteristics
that add variety to speech.
ASPECTS OF VOICE USAGE
The aspects of voice you should work to control are volume, pitch, rate, quality, pauses, emphasis,
variety, pronunciation, articulation, and dialect.
1. Volume
Volume is the intensity or loudness of your vice. Each of us has a volume range that allows us to
project various degrees of loudness, ranging from a whisper to a scream.
At one time, a powerful voice was all but essential for an orator. Today, electronic amplification
allows for even the most feeble speakers to be heard in any setting. However, in the classroom, you
will speak without a microphone. When you do, you have to adjust your voice to the acoustics of the
room, the size of your audience, and the level of background noise. If your audience cannot hear you,
your speech serves little purpose.
While the most important point is simply to be heard, you can also adjust volume to add to your
overall presentation. Variation in volume makes you sound more dynamic. It can also emphasize
your main ideas and add impact to the verbal message.
2. Pitch
The pitch of the voice refers to how high or low the voice sounds. A persons natural pitch is
determined in part by the length and width of the vocal cords. Womens vocal cords are
characteristically thinner and longer than men, and so they have high pitched voices. The faster sound
waves vibrate, the higher their pitch; the slower they vibrate, the lower their pitch.
In speech, pitch can affect the meaning of words or sounds. Pitch is what makes the difference
between saying yes is an upward pitch as if to ask a question and saying it in a downward pitch to
mean affirmation.
When you have developed control of your pitch you use this skill through your advantage. Through
pitch variations, color and vitality is added to your delivery. It can also be used as means of
emphasis. The most boring speakers use little pitch variety, ending up speaking in monotones.
3. Rate
Rate refers to the speed at which a person speaks. Most speak within the range of 120 and 160
words per minute. Rate is another important vocal characteristic that helps audience comprehension.
If you speak too quickly, the audience will not be able to keep pace. At the other extreme, if your
speaking rate is slow, the audience is bound to lose interest and get bored. An effective speaker will
vary the rate of speech, pausing and slowing down to give emphasis to some material and speeding
up at other points.
Speech tension may affect your normal pattern. Under the pressure of giving a speech, you might
speed up or slow down. Rate is also affected by delivery style. If you read a manuscript rather than
speak extemporaneously, your rate of speaking is affected. In addition to message comprehension,
research has shown that the speech rate also affects the ratings of speaker competence and social
attractiveness. One way to monitor the rate of your speech is recording your voice on tape.
4. Quality
One of the most difficult characteristics is vocal quality. Vocal quality refers to the timbre of the
voice, a characteristic that distinguishes one voice from another. A resonant quality is desirable, so
that the voice sounds deep and mellow. Voices that are too thin, strident, nasal, or breathy sound
unpleasant and should be improved. Each of these qualities is the result of poor phonation.
5. Pauses
Learning when and how to pause is a major challenge for most beginning speakers. However, as
you gain more poise and confidence, you will discover how useful the pause can be. Pauses add
color, expression, and feeling to a speech. They are used deliberately to achieve a desired effect like
pausing when you introduce a new idea, giving your audience time to absorb what you are saying, or
make a dramatic impact to a statement. Pausing also helps in verbal phrasing, as you move from one
thought to the next.
Some speakers talk continuously until they are out of breath. Others pause every three to four
words resulting to a choppy delivery. Those that read their speeches may pause at the wrong times.
Proper pausing can communicate self-confidence because you deliver the nonverbal message that
you are relaxed enough to stop talking for a moment.
6. Emphasis
Think of the many ways you can saydepending on how they are said together with a nonverbal
behavior. These changes give meaning to a word or phrase. By emphasizing certain words you add
color and avoid monotony in your speeches. Note how the meaning varies with the word being
emphasized:
WE must fight terrorism
We MUST fight terrorism.
We must FIGHT terrorism.
We must fight TERRORISM.
Emphasis can be achieved by applying several techniques. You can change the volume of your
voice throughout the speech to emphasize contrast. You can also vary your pitch to avoid monotony,
letting your audience know what you are saying is important.
Changing your rate at which you speak and pause can also draw attention to what is to be said
next. Finally, emphasis comes naturally when you speak with emotions or expressing your deep
feelings about the topic of your speech.
7. Variety
Just as variety is the spice of life, so is it the spice of public speaking. A flat, unchanging voice is
no comparison to a lively, expressive voice in delivering a speech. To effectively communicate your
ideas and feelings, you have to vary the rate, pitch, volume, and pauses in your speech. Vocal variety
is a natural feature of ordinary conversation. There is no reason then why it should not be as natural
a feature of your own speeches.
FACTORS INFLUENCING YOUR VOICE
There are other factors that can influence your voice. The first of these is your physical makeup. This
factor involves the various parts of the vocal mechanism described during phonation like the lungs, vocal
cords, larynx, and resonating organs.
Psychological factors also influence a persons voice. When you are anxious or excited, the tension
may create a higher pitch than normal. In contrast, if you are relaxed and at ease your voice will sound
more pleasant.
Another factor that influences voice is past and present environment. Members of the same family
often seem to have similar voices, which is genetic as well as environmental. You have a tendency to pick
up inflections from the people around you like family and friends.
In addition to the influence of immediate circle of acquaintances, your voice is also affected by
regional dialects. Different regions of the Philippines have varying speech and voice patterns that make
their use of voice and language unique. Even intonation patterns can make a difference in the meaning of
words. Most often though, regional differences usually affect your pronunciation patterns voice quality.
Your voice will reveal your basic personal adjustment as you experience different emotions like
anxiety, anger, and defensiveness. It can also be further enhanced through formal training like voice
lessons. Finally, your voice is affected by your reactions to particular communication situations like
public speaking such as being a confident, nervous, indifferent, or enthusiastic speaker.
CHARACTERISTICS OF AN EFFECTIVE VOICE
Knowing how the voice is produced and its various aspects of voice usage, you should analyze your
voice to enable you to initiate a program of planned and directed practice. The characteristics of an
effective voice are audibility, being pleasant, fluency, and flexibility.
1. Audibility
To be heard is good but to be understood is better. This characterizes audibility, which is an
effective use of force and the need for vocal projection. A speaker must be able to adjust the volume
of his/her voice to the size of the audience and to competing noises.
Exercises in improving breath control and projection are recommended for proper audibility. For
breath control, breathe deeply and utter the alphabet in one breath, maintaining a steady, clear tone
throughout a to z. Another exercise is to pant several times, later substituting it for counting numbers
as a platoon leader counting cadence.
An exercise for projection is uttering a sentence four times, each on a different breath in the
following situations: first to a friend within three to four feet; the second time, conversing around the
table with twenty friends; the third time, to a calling out to a neighbor across the street; an the fourth
time, speaking before an audience of over a hundred people.
2. Pleasant
Your voice is said to be a blueprint of your personality. Therefore being pleasant is associated
with a speakers appearance, likeability, and personality. To produce pleasing vocal quality, ones
speaking mechanism must be relaxed. This will produce a well-modulated, smooth and resonant
voice. Unpleasant voices are those that are nasal, shrill, raspy, breathy, weak and whiny.
Achieving optimum pitch at your natural pitch, your voice will sound most pleasant. You can
determine this by singing on a scale from do to do. The tone in the middle range will be your
optimum pitch. The term habitual pitch is what you have been used to and not necessarily your
natural pitch.
3. Fluency
Fluency is the smooth, easy and ready flow of utterances. This can be produced by a general
tempo suited to the occasion, message, or the speaker. The use of appropriate pauses and eliminating
hesitations are necessary for a speakers fluency.
4. Flexibility
Vocal flexibility helps hold attention, clarify meaning, and gets the desired response. The proper
use of the aspects of voice such as pitch, rate, volume and quality enhances the meaning and mood to
be conveyed. A stage actor or even a newscaster will be able to deliver their messages in a variety
of pitch and force to capture the audiences attention.
PRONUNCIATION
Pronunciation describes the combinations of vowels, consonants, syllables, and accents that a speaker
chooses to emphasize a specific word. Pronunciation can be important to the improvement of both speech
and voice.
Standards of pronunciation are often determined by geographical area or imposed by occasion or
education. Certain situations such as job interviews or press conferences require careful pronunciation.
Any person speaking before an audience should pay special attention to pronunciation. The audiences
attention may be temporarily distracted when a speaker makes a pronunciation error, thus creating a bad
impression at times.
Education affects pronunciation because the exposure to language through reading, speaking, listening,
and writing results in increased vocabulary and knowledge of the way different words are produced. If
you are unsure of the way a word is pronounced, look it up in the dictionary.
The International Phonetic Alphabet is the standard guide for pronunciation for vowels and consonants.
ARTICULATION
Articulation is the process of forming meaningful oral symbols through the manipulation of the
articulators the tongue, soft and hard palates, teeth, gums, lips and jaw. Pronunciation and articulation
are not identical. The failure to form particular speech sounds as crisp and distinct is a result of sloppy
articulation. It is one of the many causes of mispronunciation but not all errors in pronunciation are results
from poor articulation. For example, you can articulate a word perfectly and yet mispronounce it like
sounding the p in pneumonia.
There are many common articulation problems among Filipinos. Substitution of the vowels (long or
short sound of a, e, i, o, u) and consonants (f to p, b to v, th to t and vice versa).
Examples:
Vowels
Consonants
divine dip (i) flower people (f p)
deep-delimit (e) very beautiful (v-b)
pot nook(o)
think tough (th-t)
ham educate (a)
useful shut (u)
There can also be omissions like the letter h in words like heavy and prolonging the letter s in sneakers,
sparkles. There are additions like adding the consonant i before words beginning with s like (i-stair, istep.)
Errors in articulation can be from organic causes like a cleft palate or a large tongue; social
conditioning like the influence of your family and friends. It cam also be from physical problems like
wearing braces or spaces in your teeth; and from nervous tension.
If you have sloppy articulation, work on identifying and eliminating your common errors through
practice. The results will be worth it as your speeches will be more intelligible.
DIALECTS
Most languages have dialects, each with a distinctive grammar, accent, and vocabulary. Philippine
dialects are based on regional or ethnic speech patterns. Over the years, linguists have conducted
researches on dialects. Their conclusion is that no dialect is inherently better or worse than any other nor
is there linguistic badges of inferiority or superiority. They are shaped by our regional and ethnic
backgrounds and so every dialect is right for the community and people who use it.
When is dialect appropriate in public speaking? The answer depends on the composition of the
audience. Heavy use of a dialect may spell trouble for a speaker if the audience does not share the dialect.
In such a situation, members of the audience may make negative judgements about the speakers
personality and competence. Therefore, using a dialect should be with caution after an extensive audience
analysis.
The impact of a speech is strongly affected by how (be speech is delivered. You cannot make a good
speech without having something to say. However, having something to say is not enough. You must know
how to say it. A primary factor in delivery is the speakers voice.
The physiology of speech involves the mechanism of voice production and articulation. Volume, pitch,
rate, pausing, emphasis, and variety determine voice quality. Patterns of articulation, and
mispronunciation can be affected by regional dialects.
Voice is the relative highness of your voice, and pitch is the relative highness or lowness. Rate refers
to the speed at which you talk. Pauses, when carefully timed, can add impact to your speech. Vocal
variety refers to changes in volume, pitch, rate, and pauses. Dialect should be used only if it is
appropriate to the occasion.
1. She feeds the three geese. They eat peas, beans and seeds.
2. Give dill the tin dish. It is filled with pins and rings.
3. Ted spent ten cents for eggs. He left them under the red bed.
4. The black cat sat on the hat. Dan patted him on the back.
5. Mother said, Run and get some butter. We must not eat mud for supper!
6. Don wanted a car. Bob wanted a doll.
7. Walk along the wall. Can you see the ball on the lawn?
8. Our cook hit her foot on the wood. So she put the book on the table.
9. Ruth had two shoes. One was blue.
10. Do you like music? A few boys do.
11. Oh, it is so cold in the snow. Let us go home by the stove.
12. The brown cow looked at the house. Out came a mouse.
13. James ate the cake. However, he stayed away from the table
14. I have a white kite. It can fly high in the sky.
15. The boy saw Roy. So Roy hid his toys.
16. When summer comes, Mary moves to the farm. We stay home and swim.
17. Guess what the man with the gun found in the nest a spoon, a penny, and ten nuts.
18. Peter drew an apple and a pig. The he put the pencil on top of the paper.
19. The king had a ring on his finger. He rang the bell a long time.
20. Bobby was a big boy. He had a black bird, two rabbits, and a boat.
21. Ted had a little cat with white feet. He fed it meat on a plate.
22. Old Ed got off the red ladder. He called his dog and went away into the woods.
23. Bill filled his pocket with cookies and crackers. When the clock struck, he ran out the back door.
24. The girl found a big dog in the wagon. Go away! Go away! she said.
25. Harry read a story about the rabbit. A bird that had no feathers was in the same story.
26. Little girls had to play with dolls. Boys like to play ball.
27. Fred found a calf on the farm. He also found five goldfish and saw a butterfly.
28. I have put on my gloves. Now we can shovel coal into the seven stoves.
29. The trees are thick on both sides of the path. Do you think you can see anything?
30. My brother likes this red feather but not that one. So do father and mother.
31. Sister eats soup and ice cream with a spook. She also likes to sew her dress.
32. The bees are buzzing in my ears. Their music makes me lazy.
33. While she washed the dishes, the men fished. The she looks for shells along the shore.
34. On this occasion, the treasure was found in the usual place.
35. Harry held his hat in one hand. He said, I have a horse at my house.
36. Which wheel came off? Was it the white one? Where did it go?
37. We wash our windows with soap and water. Are we doing the right way?
38. You may not lay in the yard yet. You may play there next year.
39. The child sat on a chair in the kitchen. He watched the teacher choose some matches and a piece of
cheese.
40. Jimmy ate the bread and jam with two oranges. He put a jar of jelly in his pocket.
Fisher, Hilda B. Improving Voice and Articulation. 2nd Ed. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1975.
Lucas, Stephen. The Art of Public Speaking. New York: McGraw-Hill Inc., 1995
Makay, John J. Public Speaking 2nd. Ed. Theory Into Practice. Florida: Rolt, Rinehar and Winston 1995.
Metcalfe, Sheldon. Building a Speech. Philadelphia: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1994.
Zeuschner, Raymond. Communicating Today. 2nd Ed. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1998.
7
NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION
The Potent Hidden Language
Objectives
After reading this chapter you should be able to:
1. define the term nonverbal communication and related concepts;
2. explain the nature of nonverbal behaviors;
3. illustrate nonverbal behaviors;
4. differentiate the three primary elements of nonverbal communication;
5. identify categories/dimensions of nonverbal behaviors;
6. analyze the supportive function of nonverbal behaviors; and
7. synthesize the universal elements of nonverbal communication.
INTRODUCTION
Edward Hall is quoted in Mark L. Knapps book (1972) as saying: Those of us who keep our eyes
open can read volumes into what we see going on around us. Likewise, we can add: Those of us who
keep our ears open can hear tomes from the voices and sounds resonating around us.
If many of us heretofore thought that we could communicate effectively by just using our ears to listen to
the words or sentences uttered by another, this chapter teaches us theres more to human communication
than reaches the ear. Concepts like kinesics, paralanguage and proxemics among others will guide oral
communicators to attain a more attentive posture, a refinement of our communication stance, so to speak.
But first, what is nonverbal communication? Ruesch and Kees (1956) took the point of view that if
words are neither written nor spoken, they are nonverbal in nature. All those nuances which surround or
accompany words, such as tone of voice, pitch range, articulation control, fall under this definition of
nonverbal or what is frequently termed paralanguage. A simple definition is given by social psychologists
Vaughan & Hogg (1998), thus: nonverbal communication is the transfer of meaningful information from
one person to another by means other than written or spoken language.
CATEGORIES OF NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION
What then are the primary elements of nonverbal communication? Nonverbal forms can be broadly
categorized, thus:
Sign language which includes all those codes in which numbers, words, and punctuation signs have
been supplanted or replaced by gestures, e.g., from a simple hitchhikers thumb-up gesture to such
complete codes like the language of the deaf.
Action language encompasses all movements that are not used exclusively as signals. Walking and
drinking, for instance, serve a dual function. They can serve personal needs as well as make statements
to those who perceive them.
Object language embraces all intentional and non-intentional display of material things, such as art
objects, implements, machines, architectural structures, and the human body and whatever clothes it.
DIMENSIONS OF NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION
What dimensions of nonverbal communication are evidenced by studies in the field? Knapp (1972:5)
enumerates seven dimensions, as follows:
1. body motion or kinesics
2. physical characteristics
3. touching behavior or haptics
4. paralanguage
5. proxemics
6. artifacts
7. environmental factors
Joseph de Vito (1986) presents a slightly different typology than the one above. He classifies nonverbal
communication into:
1. body communication
gestural communication
facial communication
eye communication
touch communication
2. space communication
proxemics
territoriality
aesthetics and colors
3. silence, paralanguage, and temporal communication
silence
paralanguage
time
Other classification schemes would include olfactory communication as well as gustatory
communication. With time this listing could expand. But how important are these concepts to human
communication? Why should we all be concerned with nonverbal communication?
PRINCIPLES OF NONVERBAL MESSAGES
Let us therefore examine certain principles that underlie nonverbal messages. De Vito (1986) outlines
seven universals pertinent to nonverbal communication:
1. Nonverbal communication, like verbal communication, is contextual.
Take away its context or a circumstance, a given nonverbal act is undecipherable. A mothers
tears at her daughters wedding would mean something different from a mothers tears upon hearing
the news of her sons death. At times, though, given the full details of the context, we may still be
unable to decode nonverbals. Like good communication, it takes practice or exposure.
2. Nonverbal behaviors are wholes not parts or segments.
Movements involving use of the hands, eyes, or muscular tone occur in packages or clusters where
all parts of the human body work together to express a particular meaning. When various verbal and
nonverbal behaviors reinforce or build on each other, the condition called congruence results. For
instance, when you scream in fear your body parts are all in unison to communicate said emotion. It
cannot happen that only your eyes mirror fear and the rest of your body does not.
And since nonverbal behaviors are accompanied by verbal messages, we take notice when
contradictory messages are sent. We may conclude that a man does not mean his verbal compliment
to a lady when he mumbles while looking at her with a half-turned body.
3. Nonverbal behaviors always communicate.
Regardless of what one does or does not do, his/her nonverbal behavior always says something to
someone. If a student were feeling bored in class but did not particularly want his teacher to notice
such state, he would look out the window more often than not, slouch in his chair, or pretend to be
writing down notes. Or his mere silence or non-participation in the discussion would communicate
this boredom. But sitting silently may have two angles, a negative and a positive nonverbal.
Principle
Nonverbal communication cannot be isolated from its context.
Nonverbal behaviors occur in dusters; usually consistent with
other nonverbal and verbal messages
All nonverbal behaviors send a message.
It follows rules embedded in culture.
All nonverbal behaviors occur with some reason, identifiable or not.
Nonverbal cues are more highly believable than verbal ones. {see
Shapiro study, 1968)
It refers or comments on verbal and other nonverbal messages, by
reinforcing or contradicting.
give the other a chance, or be more interesting. The verbal mm-hmm would be the equivalent of
the head nod. These are like habits so internalized that they occur almost involuntarily.
e) Adaptors These are nonverbal behaviors most difficult to define because they are believed to
have been first learned during a given situation with conditions that triggered them. For instance,
leg shaking among males or females (a few) may have started in anxiety conditions where the
persons shook their legs or hands to escape from the interaction. Many nonverbal acts started and
developed in childhood mainly to satisfy needs, perform actions, manage emotions, or develop
social contacts. We are generally unaware of adaptors.
2. Physical Characteristics (non-moving or static)
These influential nonverbal cues emanate from physique or body shape, general attractiveness, body
or breath odors, height, weight, hair, and skin tone or color.
3. Touching Behavior (Haptics)
Touch is an important if not crucial factor to child development. Touching behavior among adults is
likewise considered important. Touch conveys a whole array of emotions or affective states. Some
categories may include the following: stroking, patting, hitting, greetings and farewell, kissing, hugging,
holding, guiding anothers movements, and a host of others.
4. Paralanguage
Knapp simply puts it as a concept that deals with how something is said and not what is said.
Paralanguage has essentially two components (Traeger, 1958):
a) Voice Qualities Qualities like pitch range, pitch control, rhythm control, tempo, articulation
control, resonance, glottis control, and vocal lip control are included here.
b) Vocalizations Vocal characterizers, qualifiers, segregates
Vocal characterizers. This includes such things as laughing, crying, sighing, yawning,
belching, swallowing, heavy inhaling or exhaling, coughing, clearing of throat, hiccupping,
moaning, groaning, whining, veiling, whispering, sneezing, snoring, stretching, grunting, and
many others.
Vocal qualifiers. This includes intensity (too loud to too soft), pitch height (too high to too
low), and extent (extreme drawl to extreme clipping).
Vocal segregates. These are such things as uh-huh, um, amm, ah, and other forms thereof
Included also under this category would be: silent pauses (beyond junctures), intruding or
interrupting sounds, speech errors, and others.
5. Proxemics
This is the study of how man uses his personal and social space in relation to others. One facet of
this study is called small group ecology whose concern it is to study how people respond to spatial
relationships in informal and formal settings. Such studies consider seating arrangements, spatial
arrangements related to leadership, communication flow, and the task at hand. Architects and builders
study what features to build into residential communities because of proxemic behavior. Spatial
relationships in crowds and dense populations are likewise studied. Mans personal space is studied in
the context of conversational distance. Territoriality deals with mans personal, untouchable space or
turfsimilar to animals. Between two or more persons talking, distance ranges from intimate to social.
Speakers in many public speaking situations talk across what Edward T. Hall terms as public
distance.
The following is a classification of interhuman distance according to Gronbeck, Monroe et al
(1994):
a) Intimate distance: ranges up to 11/2 ft.
b) Personal distance: ranges from 11/2 to 4 ft.
c) Social distance: ranges 4 to 12 ft.
d) Public distance: ranges from 12 feet up
6. Artifacts
These are objects or things in contact with the interactants that may serve as nonverbal stimuli.
Perfume or scent clothes, bags, shoes, wigs or hairpieces, lipstick, eye glasses, false eyelashes, other
beauty aids are included in this category.
7. Environmental Factors
These are elements in the surroundings that impinge on the human relationship but are not directly a
part of it. Included here are furniture, architectural style, interior dcor, lighting, smells, colors,
temperature, noise or music, and such conditions where interaction occurs. Traces of action belong to
this category as well. For instance, you may see cigarette butts, bits of torn paper, or fruit peels lying or
strewn somewhere and this scene may precede your interaction with another.
FUNCTIONS NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION
At this juncture, it is useful to repeat the notion of interrelationship or interrelatedness between verbal
and nonverbal behavior. Nonverbal communication occurs in the context of verbal communication. So
how do nonverbal behaviors support verbal behaviors?
1. Repeating
Nonverbal communication simply repeats what was said verbally. Yes, yes! can be accompanied
by a head nod or a no-no by a head shake. These are repetition of the verbal message.
2. Contradicting
Nonverbal messages or cues are usually consistent with verbal messages. But at times nonverbal
behavior contradicts or opposes verbal behavior. For instance, a parent says to a child, I do love
you, but a big frown casts his countenance in doubt over his endearing message. Some nonverbal
behaviors can be faked but not all. Others are harder to make a show of. The Shapiro study challenged
reliance on nonverbal cues in contradictory situations by presenting findings where respondents were
extremely consistent in their reliance on either linguistic cues or facial cues when asked to select the
affect being communicated from a list of incongruent facial expressions and written messages.
3. Substituting
Nonverbal behavior can alternate for verbal behavior. Instead of saving. I flunked my Math exam,
the students wry face can substitute for the verbal message. Or a widows sad mien can expresses the
message Ive just lost my husband.
4. Complementing
Nonverbal behavior serves to modify or elaborate on verbal messages. When a teenaged son faces
his angry father because he came home from last nights party with a dented fender, his muscle tone
tenses up, his jaw drops, and his grip on the car key tightens. But all this changes into a relaxed posture
or stance when he hears he is forgiven. Complementing behavior signals ones attitudes and intentions
toward another person.
5. Accenting
Behavior of the head or hands usually serves to stress, emphasize or make a verbal point stronger.
Extreme cases can exhibit the nonverbal behavior of foot thumping. Ekman (1964) found that the face
mainly exhibits emotions, but the body carries the most accurate indicators of the level of arousal or
intensity.
6. Relating and regulating
These are nonverbal behaviors that maintain and control or regulate the communication flow
between two or more persons. A slight nod of the head may mean Go on, to (he other person talking;
a shift in sitting position may signal Be more interesting! or an upraised index finger may say I want
to say something too.
By sheer magnitude of nonverbal communication in the daily life of humans, its importance cannot be
relegated to the background. It needs to be understood and appreciated in relation to verbal
communication. Birdwhistell, a noted authority on nonverbal behavior makes the following estimates:
a) the average person speaks words for a total of 10 to 11 minutes daily, the standard spoken
sentence taking only about 2.5 seconds;
b) less than 35% is carried by the verbal component in a conversation of two persons, the 65% plus
being carried on the nonverbal band.
Social psychologist Edward T. Hall outlined 10 different kinds of human activity, which he called
primary message systems but only one of them is language.
Nonverbal communication is the meaningful exchange between two or more persons by means other
than written or spoken language. Paralanguage consists of all those nuances that accompany the spoken
message, such as pitch control, articulation control, tone and volume of voice, and others. The universals
of nonverbal behavior are: they are contextual; they are packaged; they are rule-governed; they are
communicated; they are motivated; they are credible; they are metacommunicational. The dimensions of
nonverbal behavior are: body motion or kinesics, physical characteristics, touching behavior or haptics,
paralanguage, proxemics, artifacts, and environmental factors. The supportive function of nonverbal
behaviors consists in: repeating, contradicting, substituting, complementing, accenting, relating and
regulating verbal communication.
1. What do you notice about the nonverbal behaviors of people in varying degrees of intimacy or
relationship? Describe them in detail.
2. Between introverts and extroverts, are there differences in their proxemics? What could the reasons be
for sure differences?
3. Why is there complementarity of relationship between verbal and nonverbal behavior?
4. Could you describe the behaviors of children and adults who were deprived of touch in their
developmental stages? How would this affect their communicative abilities?
1. Choose two clusters to sit up front: one group of male students, smother group of females. The rest will
observe the two groups for a minute then verbally comment on their nonverbals. After description, the
class will interact by applying which universals were obtaining in the situation.
2. Draw a rough figure of the human body. Indicate the nonverbal behaviors or gestures or actions
opposite the head (face), the torso, the legs, the feet, and so on. This exercise should look closely at
Filipino nonverbal behaviors.
3. A related project: Members of groups will combine, collate, synthesize their Filipino nonverbals and
discuss the salient features of such by means of a group presentation.
Gronbeck, McKerrow, Ehninger & Monroe. Principles and Types of Speech Communication (12th ed.
New York New York: HarperCollins College Publishers, 1994
DeVito, Joseph A. The Interpersonal Communication Book (4th ed.). New York, New York: R.R.
Donnellev & Sons Company, 1986.
Knapp, Mark L. Nonverbal Communication in Human Interaction. New York: Holt, Rinehart and
Winston. Inc., 1972.
Vaughan, Graham M. and Michael A. Hogg. Introduction to Social Psychology (2nd ed.) Sydney,
8
COMMUNICATING with ANOTHER PERSON
Objectives
After reading this chapter you should be able to:
1. describe the importance of dyadic communication in personal and professional interactions
2. cite examples of dyadic communication from you own experiences and observation
3. define dyadic communication and explain its nature and functions
4. understand the principles to observe in the stages of a dyadic encounter
5. identify the types of interviews and their purposes
6. explain the process of preparing for an information-gathering interview
7. identify and illustrate the different types of interview questions
8. differentiate the various question sequencing types
9. conduct an information-gathering interview
10. evaluate the results of an information-gathering interview
INTRODUCTION
For nearly all of us, interpersonal communication is the most common form of oral communication.
Most of our daily communication experiences take place on this level. We exchange pleasantries with
acquaintances. We consult with our doctor when we are ill. A client requests legal advice from an
attorney. A customer speaks with a store manager about defective merchandise. As students, you consult
with your professors regarding your class standing. You often converse on the telephone with friends.
You may share stories with either parent about school events. Or you may go job hunting in the summer.
Dyadic communications are not only the most familiar but also the most important. Through
interpersonal communication, we get to know ourselves and others better, resolve conflicts and find
solutions to problems.
In this chapter, we will examine the characteristics, functions, forms, stages and principles of dyadic
communication. We will investigate dyadic communication in one specific context, interviewing. The
techniques of interpersonal communication find specific application in the process of interviewing.
Special attention will be directed toward understanding the information-gathering interview.
THE NATURE OF DYADIC SPEECH COMMUNICATION
Dyadic speech communication is described as communication occurring between two people who
engage in face-to-face interaction for purposes of social facilitation or fulfillment or the exchange
of ideas and information. The two parties share the responsibility for successful interaction. What other
characteristics can further describe the interpersonal relationship?
1. Speaker-listener roles are frequently alternated. Figure 1 shows how the two persons involved in the
interaction alternately assume the sending and receiving functions in the communication.
2. The purpose in dyadic transaction may range from casually purposive to highly purposive. The latter
characteristic is most evident in a formal interview.
3. The interaction may be coincidental, unplanned and unstructured as in a chance meeting of two
classmates at the bus stop, or it may be scheduled and pre-structured.
4. Dyadic communication is usually less formal than other human communication contexts
5. The degree of psychological intimacy or closeness is expected to be greater in the dyadic
relationship than in public speech.
6. Physical proximity affords the communicators the opportunity to monitor nonverbal responses. Be
particularly observant of how these special qualities influence your future dyadic encounters.
THE FUNCTIONS OF DYADIC COMMUNICATION
According to De Vito (1991) there are four significant purposes of dyadic interpersonal
communication. These are personal discovery, discovery of the outside world, establishing meaningful
relationships and changing attitudes and behaviors.
Interpersonal communication allows us to learn about our selves as well as the other person in the
encounter. Our self-images are built and made even stronger in this level. Also, we gain information about
things and events around us. Our dyadic interactions with other students, teachers and parents have
influenced our beliefs, attitudes and values.
Furthermore, through interpersonal communication we are able to establish and maintain close
relationships with other people. Belongingness and love needs such as our need for love and affection of
parents, close friends, children, or spouse as well as our need to be part of a social group find
satisfaction on this particular level. Finally, we use dyadic communication for interpersonal persuasion
that is, to influence the attitudes and behaviors of others. Recall your attempt to persuade a classmate to
join your organization or to shift courses perhaps or vote for your fraternity brod for a Student Council
seat.
FORMS OF DYADIC COMMUNICATION
Pace (1979) describes three types of communication that occur in dyads: conversation, dialogue and
interview. These dyad forms are based on seriousness, purposiveness and intimacy.
1. Conversation is friendly and informal exchange between two people. It has no formal purpose, and
is less serious and less intimate than other dyadic encounters. The conversational topic of a friendly
chat between two teachers may not be all that serious but the conversation provides pleasure and
relaxation for them.
2. Dialogue is a type of dyadic communication in which the deepest, most intimate and most personal
relationships are formed. Trust, openness, warmth and concern are needed for a sustained
relationship between two people. Marital communication is one such example. Dr. Faith Escobars
doctoral dissertation (1992) on the patterns of communication between husbands and wives in
different occupations noted that both verbal and non-verbal communication are significant
components of effective marital relationships.
3. The interview is the most purposive of dyad forms. Interview objectives are varied. These goals are
discussed in detail as they relate to the types of interview. Structure is another distinguishing
characteristic of the interview. Like a speech, it is organized consisting of an opening, a body and a
closing.
STAGES OF A DYADIC SPEECH TRANSACTION
Whether formal or informal, purposive or otherwise, a dyadic speech transaction proceeds through the
following stages.
1. EXPLORATION STAGE. This initial phase is sometimes called the fencing period. What
transpires during this part of the encounter is quite similar to the initial stage of a fencing match
where we find the players trying to feel their way and assess each others strengths and
weaknesses. This stage aims to establish rapport and break the ice. The mutual goals of the dyadic
encounter are also clarified at this time. In an interview, a preview of the areas or subtopics of the
conversation will be helpful. This puts the interviewee in the right mental perspective.
2. INTERACTION STAGE. The second phase is the substantive part. Here the subject matter is
explored by the participants. It is during this time that goals of the encounter are being accomplished.
3. TERMINATION STAGE. This is the final stage where the transaction is completed and terminated.
The major points of discussion may be paraphrased for proper interpretation.
GUIDELINES AND PRINCIPLES TO OBSERVE IN EACH OF THE STAGES
To allow for more productive and meaningful dyadic encounters, Monroe and Ehninger (1974) suggest
that the following guidelines and principles must be observed.
A. Establishing initial rapport.
1. Build rapport by adhering to conventions which apply to dyadic speech transaction. Culture is an
important determinant of what is considered acceptable behavior in interpersonal situations.
2. Build rapport by dwelling on a topic of mutual interest. Search for similar experiences in politics or
sports perhaps. Finding a common bond of interest will set things off to a good start.
3. Build rapport by showing interest in what your partner in the transaction is sharing. Provide positive
verbal and non-verbal reinforcement.
4. Build rapport by learning to put the other person at ease. At the onset, you may have your partner talk
about himself or touch on a subject that is familiar to him.
5. Build rapport by inspiring the other persons trust and confidence in you.
6. Build rapport by setting aside preconceptions about the other person.
7. Build rapport by being yourself. Avoid pretense and artificiality.
8. Build rapport by being problem or subject-oriented. Avoid irrelevant personal attack. Focus on the
subject matter or issue at hand.
9. Build rapport by asking open questions. They break initial barriers and serve as springboards to a
more interesting transaction.
B. Maintaining interactional throughout the conversation.
1. Maintain interaction by providing signs of reassurance. Express agreement through non-verbal means
such as a smile or nod. Do not hesitate to express disagreement either. Do this tactfully and
remember to focus on the subject matter rather than on the person. Avoid being threatening so that
your partner will be encouraged to open up.
2. Maintain interaction by sharing the communication channels equally. Do not monopolize or dominate
the conversation.
3. Maintain interaction by being flexible. Since most interpersonal encounters are dynamic and
unrehearsed, learn to adjust to the conversation as it moves along.
4. Maintain interaction by learning how to resolve conflicts and differences of opinion. Do not skirt
issues but rather face them objectively.
5. Maintain interaction by listening carefully to what your partner is saying. A common bad listening
habit is feigning attention. Another is the tendency to use the time to rehearse your own remarks.
These may cause you to miss out on what the other person is sharing.
6. Maintain interaction by being cooperative. Both parties must share control of the channel so the
objectives of the encounter can be met.
7. Maintain interaction by being objective towards your partner, the mutual topic and yourself.
8. Maintain interaction by understanding, respecting and trusting your partner.
C. Terminating the transaction
1. Know when to terminate the transaction. As soon as the goal of the conversation is accomplished,
you may bring the conversation to a close. A good sense of timing is needed in this regard especially
if the exchange becomes long.
2. Observe the usual conventions in closing a conversation. Express your gratitude.
3. Review and summarize the key points missed in the exchange. The closing phase provides the
opportunity for the other party to make additions and corrections, if necessary. Thus avoiding
misinterpretation by the parties involved.
4. Arrange for a future encounter if matters have not been fully resolved. Determine what steps or
arrangements must be made.
Let us now take a closer look at person-to-person communication in a structured context, the interview
THE INTERVIEW DEFINED
DeVito (1991) defines the interview as a particular form of interpersonal communication involving
two persons interacting largely through a question-and-answer format to achieve specific goals.
Interviews usually involve two persons although some involve three, four or even more. The two-person
interview is the most common one with the interviewer asking the questions and the interviewee
answering them.
KINDS OF INTERVIEW
Interviews may be categorized according to the objectives of the interviewer and/or the interviewee.
The informational interview, the persuasive interview, the problem-solving interview, the job-seeking
interview and the counseling interview fall under this category. With the advances in technology,
mediated interviews may be listed as another interview type.
1. The Informational Interview. The aim of an informational interview is to elicit information,
opinion, insights, beliefs, perspectives and viewers from the interviewee. The interviewee is usually
a person of reputation and accomplishment, someone who supposedly knows something others do not
know. A journalist may have to interview the author of a controversial piece of legislation in order
to come up with a credible news story. A census-taker going on a house-to-house campaign as part
of the on-going national census does an information-seeking interview. The interviewer may also
give the information as he presents facts and opinions to the respondent. A doctor explaining the
details of the special diet to his diabetic patient is an example of an information-giving interview.
Police investigations, courtrooms cross examination of witnesses and interviews of celebrities for
the newspapers, radio or television are other examples of informational interviews
2. The Persuasive Interview. The goal of a persuasive interview is to change the interviewees
attitude or behavior. An example would be a prospective car owner interviewing a car salesman
who in turn will attempt to get him to buy a particular car model.
3. The Problem-Solving Interview. The interviewer and the interviewee try to identify the causes of a
problem and together arrive at possible solution(s). An example would be a teacher and a parent
discussing the reading difficulties of the pupil.
4. The Counseling Interview. This is sometimes referred to as a helping interview. In this case, the
interviewer tries to give advice and provide guidance in order to help the interviewee deal more
effectively with personal problems. This interview type is closely related to the problem-solving
interview. An example could be a social psychologist or therapist who poses questions to help
victims of a natural calamity such as the Mt. Pinatubo eruption. Another would be a social worker
who screens applicants for a relocation project of the government.
5. The Job or Employment Interview. The job interviewer aims to learn about the job applicant, his
qualifications, interests and talents. The applicant on the other hand aims to learn about his
prospective employer, the nature of the company, its benefits and its advantages and problems.
6. The Mediated Interview. Mediated interviews are conducted by means of two media, namely the
computer and the telephone. Computer network interviews involve computerized data gathering and
information dissemination. We can now communicate with our local legislators on the Internet thus
providing them with suggestions and questions that will aid them in the task of legislation. The
Office of Alumni Relations (OAR) in Diliman communicates with U.P. alumni here and abroad via
E-mail.
Telephone interviews on the other hand are used for research purposes by media survey groups.
Also, sophisticated satellite communication provides the opportunity to conduct person-to-person
communication even as the parties involved may be separated by time, place or electronic
technology. Heads-of-state while on trips abroad are able to keep in touch with members of their
official family. Video or tele-conferencing enabled former Pres. Fidel V. Ramos while on a trip to
New York to attend the golden anniversary of the founding of the United Nations, to schedule many
one-on-one talks with our local officials.
As indicated at the start of the chapter, we shall he concerned with one of the most basic and
important type of interview, the information-seeking interview. Let us now learn the necessary
steps an interviewer needs to undertake to conduct an effective interview
PREPARING FOR AN INFORMATION-SEEKING INTERVIEW
An interview requires planning and preparation. The following steps are recommended in preparing
for an information-seeking interview. It is assumed that the Communication III student is acting only as
interviewer.
1. Determine the purpose of the interview.
2. Choose the informant.
3. Obtain the informants cooperation.
4. Learn about the informant and the interview topic.
5. Choose the interview format.
6. Prepare the interview plan or guide.
7. Conduct the interview.
8. Evaluate the interview
1. Determine the purpose of the interview.
What information do you need? What is the precise purpose you wish to achieve as a result of the
interview? Do you wish to learn about the techniques of creative photography? Are you interested in
the moral and ethical implications of organ donations? Do you want to know more about alternative
Philippine music?
Defining the goal or objective of the encounter helps assure the direction of the interview. Word it
as a precise statement. Are there time considerations? If so, make sure you cam adequately cover the
topic with your informant within the time limit. The interview purpose must be definite and focused
in order to facilitate eliciting the information that you need.
2. Choose the informant.
Choose the right subject for your interview. He must be able to provide the desired information
you need. He must be accessible and available. If the topic is rather controversial, choose an
individual who can look at the subject matter objectively. It would be helpful for your personal
purposes if the informant can communicate his ideas clearly and interestingly.
3. Obtain the informants cooperation.
Get the informants permission to conduct the interview. Better results may be obtained if early
arrangements are made. Ambush interviews do not produce desirable results. Inform your
interviewee of your purpose and the length of the interview so that he or she can mentally prepare. If
the need arises, be prepared to draft letters asking for permission or authorization to interview.
4. Learn about the informant and the interview topic.
Once the informant has agreed to be interviewed, you will have to find out as much as you can
about the person you will be talking to as well as the subject matter of the interview. Doreen
Fernandez (1995) in her book Face to Face: The Craft of Interviewing recommends that
interviewers research, in other words do their homework. To ask Philippine National Artist for
Literature Nick Joaquin what he has written would not speak well of you as the interviewer.
Thoroughly research on the interviewee. Learn about your interviewee: his work experience, if any;
his stand on the topic: and other pertinent background data. Know about these from preliminary
conversations with your interviewee, from others and from reading up on him. This background
information on your subject will help you frame provocative questions and interpret his responses to
your questions.
Monroe (1974) states that as a rule, no interview should be scheduled until adequate research on
the topic of the interview is done. Knowing a good dead about the subject of the interview will not
only help you draft more intelligent and interesting questions but will you give you more confidence
in guiding the conservation
5. Choose the interview format.
With the interview purpose clear in your mind and the background information on you interviewee
and topic carefully gathered, you are now ready to select the interview format you will follow in
conducting the interview. There are three types of interview formats to choose from: (1) the
structured interview format, (2) the non-structured interview format, and (3) the guided interview
format.
1. In a structured interview format the interviewer prepares the questions before hand. They are
precisely worded and systematically arranged. The interviewee is not given the chance to add,
delete, nor make changes to the question. The interviewer is expected to stick to the questions and
the order in which they will be asked. The informants responses are then noted down. Although
interaction is rather limited in this format type, it has its advantages. It is most useful for an
interviewer who wishes to reach out to a large number of respondents who belong to a
heterogeneous group. This format allows the interviewer to accomplish the interviewing task in
little time
2. The non-structured interview format on the other hand allows for greater flexibility for the
interviewer. It is still carefully planned and the purpose clear and defined. The interviewer words
his questions as he proceeds with the interview. No fixed sequence or order of questioning is
followed. He may revise or delete the queries as he finds practicable and useful to the
circumstances. Though time-consuming, this format allows for greater opportunity to draw
significant information and points of view from the respondent.
3. In between these extremes we have the guided interview format. It combines the structure of the
first type and the flexibility of the second format type. This allows for a more relaxed and less
formal encounter. The questions may be prepared and arranged in advance. The interviewer has
the freedom to depart from the prepared list of questions as the circumstances dictate. He may
wish to probe further into more meaningful areas or skip portions. It is the interview format type
recommended for the interview project in Communication III.
Generally, more skill is required as the interview format becomes less structured. The choice of
the interview format will depend on its suitability to the purpose(s) of the interview, the topic being
explored and the interviewee.
6. Prepare the Interview Plan
An interview plan or guide is a list of questions designed to accomplish the interview purpose.
Sometimes referred to as an interview schedule, Gronbeck (1994) describes the plan as your effort
to organize specific questions to systematically elicit the information and opinions you are looking
for. The way that these questions are worded has a significant impact on the way the interviewee
will respond. Prepare your primary questions first. Determine the sequence or order in which they
might best be introduced. Plan possible secondary questions.
In order to conduct an effective interview, it is important to understand the types of interview
questions. Use a variety of question types as described below.
TYPES OF INTERVIEW QUESTIONS
a. Primary Questions
A primary question is a question that introduces a new topic or subject area. The questions Could
you tell me about the immersion project you had last summer? and Have you thought about
pursuing an MBA? are examples of this type. Before conducting the interview a good interviewer
should prepare a sufficient number of primary questions. These questions must cover what you deem
the most important subtopics of your interview objective or purpose
b. Secondary Questions
This is a question that follows up on a primary question. The secondary question is posed when
die response to a primary question is incomplete or unclear. If the earlier question on the immersion
prefect needs to be detailed, a secondary question would prove useful. One may ask Were you able
to utilize your full potential in this project? This type of interview question is also raised when in
the course of the conversation, another interesting aspect of the issue or topic becomes worth
pursuing.
c. Probe Questions
The probe question is a special type of secondary question. It is posed when the questioner wishes
to detail the previous response as in the question What do you mean by his political stance is
inconsistent? Remarks such as Could you elaborate further? or Do you have any other
reasons? are probe questions which encourage further comment on previous answers. Brief phrases
such as What else? and I see prompt the informant to continue talking. They encourage the
interviewee to continue alone the same line or direction of the conversation with more depth.
d. Mirror Questions
A mirror or reflective question is another special type of secondary question. It usually restates or
rephrases the response to the preceding question. It is posed to check the correctness of the
interviewers interpretation. Thus if the interviewee answered. I do not approve of the tuition fee
increase. a mirror question such as You say that the tuition fees should not be raised? may be
asked. The statement It is my understanding that you are in favor of the commercialization of U. P.
assets. mirrors a previous reply. Asking mirror questions is a helpful technique to encourage the
respondent to reflect further on his answer.
e. Open or Open-end Questions
Open questions ask the respondent to give information or express and support an opinion. Much
like an essay question on a test, open questions give the s respondent more freedom and leeway to
reveal his ideas, thoughts and feelings. Examples of open-ended questions would be: Why did you
choose this particular field of study?, What circumstances led you to your conversion to the
Buddhist faith? or Will you describe how you felt upon learning that you were accepted to the
University? Open question are good conversation-starters. Since they are effective in establishing
rapport and easing another persons reluctance or shyness, these questions are suggested for the
initial stage of most dyadic encounters or when introducing new topic areas.
f. Closed Questions
This question type specifies the direction of the response. Closed questions demand simple, short
and direct answers. How old were your when you migrated to the States? and What high school
did you attend? are examples. The possibilities for the response may be further narrowed down as
in the questions Which do you prefer: acting on stage, in the movies or acting on television? The
alternatives may be on opposite ends of the continuum such as when the closed question invites a
simple yes or no answer. In which case it is termed a yes-no or bipolar question. Do you plan
to run for chairman of the student council? is clearly a yes-no question. Note that the responses to
these sample questions although vital to the discussion will do little to keep the conversation
moving. As such, they are sometimes called conversation-stoppers. Use them as follow-ups to the
answers provided to open questions.
g. Neutral Questions
Neutral questions are interview questions that give no hint or clue of the desired or preferred
answer. The queries How would you rate the campaign of the last university student Council
election? and How do you intend to vote on the issue of the Visiting Forces Agreement? are
neutral in tone. They do not show any sign of the interviewers desired response.
h. Leading Questions
If neutral questions do not indicate a preferred response, leading questions indicate the way the
interviewee is expected to answer. The question leads the interviewee to give the answers or
information which the interviewer which feels are better than others. The question Wouldnt you
agree that the last university council election was the dirtiest to be forced upon the studentry? leads
to a specific response. Gouran, Wiethoff and Dolger suggest that skilled interviewers should learn to
recast the question from a leading one to a neutral form in order to get unbiased responses from the
informant. You can rephrase the question so that it allows you to give your preferred answer. If you
are the potential interviewee, do not hesitate to resist the pull of the question.
i. Loaded Questions
Loaded questions are strongly leading questions which are often presumptuous and are
characterized by the use highly emotional or inflammatory language.
Interview questions are the basic tools of the interview. The depth and the length of the interview
are determined by questions posed. Remember to blend interview question types. Ask enough closed
questions to get significant details. Dont have too many open questions. Although they give the
informant a lot of leeway to respond, posing too many of them may extend the interview time
unnecessarily. Avoid leading and loaded questions. Begin with questions that will arouse the interest
of your interviewee and stimulate him to open up. Probe into difficult and sensitive areas of the
chosen topic with other interview question types.
SEQUENCING OF QUESTIONS
Question sequencing is another important consideration in interviewing. Brooks (1993) suggests that
the interviewer attempt to order or arrange the questions according to anyone of the following sequencing
types: the funnel, inverted funnel, tunnel, covert and quintamensional.
1. The funnel sequence moves from broad and open questions to less broad and closed ones.
2. The inverted funnel sequence involves the reverse: that is asking closed and restricted questions
first and progressing to open and broad question types.
3. The tunnel sequence utilizes questions that are all open or all closed. The covert sequence places
individual topics at the most advantageous position in the interview. We may sometimes save for
last the questions that dwell on difficult matters. Investigative journalists usually position the most
threatening question at the heart of the interview.
4. The quintamensional sequence consists of five steps. One or more questions in each of the
following five areas/stages are asked in order to probe the interviewees attitudes.
Filter dimension stage: What do you know about the rice shortage?
Free answer stage: What do you think are some of the reasons for this current rice shortage?
Dichotomous stage: Do you approve of the governments move to import rice?
Reason why stage: Why do you feel that way?
Intensity stage: How do you feel about the liberalization of rice importation?
Note how the interviewer determines the extent to which the respondent is informed about the topic,
gives him a chance to discuss the subject in his own way, to answer yes or no questions, to explain his or
her responses and finally to probe the intensity of the opinion provided.
Other guidelines in questioning
Aside from incorporating a variety of question types in the interview plan and sequencing them
accordingly, remember these other important guidelines.
Each question must have a rationale for asking. Dont pose questions just to kill time. There must be a
good reason or motive for asking the question.
Phrase the question in order to systematically elicit the information or opinion needed. If you wish to
know what the psychological impact of the interviewees brief incarceration had on him, word it
clearly. Avoid vagueness.
It must also seem reasonable for the interviewee to answer. In other words ask a question you know
your respondents can more or less answer.
Ask one question at a time. Avoid asking compound questions. The question What are the causes and
effects of environmental pollution? has two parts. Often times the respondent will answer the first
part of the question and forget the second part
Develop your questions so that each question logically follows the previous one. Follow these
responses with probe questions.
7. Conduct the Interview
Begin by introducing yourself to the interviewee. Reveal the purpose of the interview early in
time. Explain clearly what the interview is about. This provides focus and direction to your
conversation. Apply other pertinent principles and guidelines suggested in the earlier discussion.
Provide the necessary transition from the fencing stage to the body of the interview. As you
proceed, always keep the interview purpose in mind. Remember to keep your questions simple,
clear and direct to the point. Do not rush the interview nor allow it to drag. Keep it moving at a
lively pace. Hurrying will not allow you to explore the topic with sufficient depth. Prepare followup or secondary questions for this purpose. On the other hand, extending the conversation
unnecessarily may provide an excuse to dwell on unecessary details. Keep constant tab of the time.
Focus on your interviewee. Talk about his experiences, not yours. Do not use the time to argue or
debate over the topic. Remember, your aim is to gather information, not to reveal your personal
views or position about the matter. Instead of parading your knowledge of the topic, show your
expertise by formulating effective questions.
Be very attentive. Listen not only to what your interviewee says but also to how he says it. Nonverbal cues and body language can supplement your understanding of the verbal responses. Listen to
the tone and volume of the voice, to pauses and silences and to smiles and frowns. The interview
project in the Communication III class provides a good opportunity for you to practice critical
listening. Listening is a crucial skill not only in successful interviewing but effective interpersonal
communication as well.
Before the final question is asked, signify directly or indirectly that the interview is coming to a
close. End the conversation with a summary of major points and your understanding of the responses.
Conclude with an expression of gratitude for you interviewees cooperation.
Determine the right place and time for the interview. The place must be private and free from
distractions, comfortable and conductive to a smooth interaction. One student realized too late that
taping an interview with a stage actor on set during rehearsal time was not a wise decision. The
director was shouting at the top of his voice and the rest of the cast was busy rehearsing their lines.
If you are taping your interview, follow good recording practices in order to accurately record the
data. Be sure to test everything just before the interview. An extra set of batteries and even a tape
recorder may come in handy for those emergencies. Use the right tape length.
Dyadic communication is face-to-face interaction between two persons who assume alternately the role
of speaker and listener for the purposes of exchanging information and ideas of mutual concern or
engaging in conversation simply for the pleasure that may be derived from it. It is the most common and
important form of communication. We see dyads in at least three forms: conversation, dialogue and
interview. Dyadic communication, which proceeds from the exploration stage, the interaction stage and
finally, the interaction stage, was studied in one specific context interviewing.
Interviews may be classified according to the objectives of the interviewer and/or the interviewee.
These types are the informational interview, the persuasive, the problem-solving. the job-seeking and the
counseling interview. Since an interview requires planning and preparation, important steps in preparing
for and conducting an information-gathering interview must be followed. There are various interview
formats that may be followed. Using various types of interview questions and question sequencing types
can enhance the interview situation.
1. Cite two examples of dyadic speech communication from your own experience and observation. What
functions or purposes did these encounters serve?
2. You have been asked to interview the University Registrar regarding changes in the Registration system
in the University. Formulate two questions for each of the question types discussed in this chapter.
3. Describe two main advantages of the guided interview format.
4. Clip a printed interview from a newspaper or magazine. Read it carefully and identify the question
sequencing type used. What do you suppose is the reason for the choice of sequence?
5. Identify five specific guidelines to follow in conducting an information-seeking interview.
Types of Speech Communication. 12th edition. New York, New York: HarperCollins College
Publishers, 1994.
Junnio, Maria Gillian A.. A Survey of the Status of Teaching Speech Communication in the Colleges
and Universities in Dagupan City, Unpublished undergraduate thesis, University of the Philippines,
1999.
Knapp, M.L. and Millerm G, R. (Eds). Handbook of Interpersonal Communication. Newbury Park.
California: Sage, 1985.
Lambino, Rachelle Piedad C. A Description of the Interpersonal Communication Patterns Among
Siblings in a Filipino Family: An Exploratory Study, Unpublished undergraduate thesis. University
of the Philippines. 1999.
Mirafelix, Minela. Influence Strategies Used by Male and Female Managers to Motivate
Subordinates: A Case Study. Unpublished undergraduate Thesis, University of the Philippines, 1999.
Monroe, Alan H. and Douglas Ehninger. Principles and Types of Speech Communication. 7th edition.
Glenview. Illinois: Scott. Foresman and Company, 1974.
Morales, Anna Aurea. Leave-Taking Patterns in Intimate Relationship: An Exploratory Study.
Unpublished undergraduate thesis. University of the Philippines, 1999.
Mordeno, Jose M. Dyadic Interaction as an Enjoyable Approach to the Teaching of Impromptu
Speaking. Masks and Voices. II. No. 1 (November. 1994). 14-20.
Munoz, Tristan Duane. Net-Chat: the Language Used by the Visitors of the UP Channel Chatroom.
Unpublished undergraduate thesis. University of the Philippines, 1999.
Pace, R. Wayne, Brent D. Peterson and Dallas M. Burnett. Techniques for Effective Communication.
Philippines: Addison-Wesly Publishing Company, 1979.
Tubbs, Stewart L. and Sylvia Moss. Human Communication. 7th edition. New York: McGraw-Hill. Inc.,
1994.
9
GROUP DYNAMICS
Objectives
After reading this chapter you should be able to:
1. draw a perspective of group dynamics by understanding its essentials;
2. pinpoint the individual roles that group members can performmembership and leadership;
3. define and elaborate on the principles of group effectiveness/cohesion;
4. develop group/team skills for problem-solving situations; and
5. understand and appreciate certain personal traits necessary for productive group discussion,
especially the Filipino values.
INTRODUCTION
.......To work together, we Filipinos have to learn to trust each other, and to trust each
other we have to learn to communicate with each other not from our surface selves, but
from deep down in our true selves......
Jaime Bulatao, S.J.
The Family as the smallest group
The smallest unit of society is the family. The Filipino family serves as societys smallest think-tank,
critic, initiator, correlator of events, and transmitter of values and traditions. Fundamentally, it is the
building block of every society, modern or primitive. If a society is weak, its because its families are
weak; if a society is strong and tenacious, its because its families are solid. Therefore, the vitality of a
country rests upon the familys relationship system or group dynamics. Within this basic social structure
patterns of communication result in harmony or disharmony, unity or disintegration. Within this miniature
state exists certain values, attitudes, and beliefs that lie at the very root of its existence.
If you can visualize society being represented by a progression of concentric circles, the family would
be the innermost circle. The family extends its identity and influence to the neighborhood, school, church,
barangay/town, and organization or workplacethe outer concentric circles. When members of these
circles band together to solve problems of common interest, the community benefits as a whole. When
individuals admit to one another of their inadequacy to solve common problems, they begin to pool their
unique and respective strengths to figure out solutions to these problems. Likened to our native broom,
walis-tingting, a group becomes strong when knit or tied together by a common interest or goal.
BASIC HUMAN GOALS: WHY GROUP DYNAMICS?
Bulatao (1965 : 1) sums up under three headings the goals that human beings set for themselves:
1. To understand better the world in which one lives, especially the people in it, and ones relations
with them and oneself;
2. To plan a course of action for solving the problems that one encounters; and
3. To act in concert upon this plan, to leave this world better than they found it.
Wisdom or knowledge for its own sake is of intrinsic value. Knowing more about the world and about
ourselves is gratifying enough. This is the first goal. The second has to do with things that we can change
or improve upon. Filipinos are wont to say, Talagang ganyan na iyan! in abject surrender. Rather than
confront, they take a passive stance where there is little or no conflict. Attitudes and perceptions come
into play when individuals work together. The success of a course of action depends upon the attainment
of the first two goals. Time expended in understanding a problem is time spent well. Clarity of vision
naturally flows into fruitful action. Most importantly, however, self-knowledge precedes action.
What then is group dynamics? Let us look at some useful terms or concepts.
NATURE OF SMALL GROUP COMMUNICATION
Group dynamics is synonymously referred to as small group communication, group process, groupcentered interaction, and group discussion.
Group discussion is defined by Monroe and Ehninger as a cooperative and relatively systematic
process in which a group of persons exchange and evaluate ideas and information in order to understand a
subject or solve a problem. Fr. Jaime Bulatao (1965) calls it thinking in cooperation with others.
Another psychologist-author (J. W. Pfeiffer, 1973) defines group dynamics as a form of human interaction
that deals with such items as morals, feeling tone, atmosphere, participation, influence, styles of
influence, leadership struggles, conflict, competition, cooperation and so forth. R. Eugene Moran, S.J.
(1978) describes group process as the interaction between the relationship issues and the work issues in a
group. From these ideas, we could draw a simple basic definition: Group discussion is a process of
cooperative thinking and sharing between three or more persons for the attainment of common
interests, needs, or goals.
PRODUCTIVE THINKING
Thinking is in mans nature to do but the hardest to do as well. Daydreaming and weaving fantasies are
a form of thinking, the less productive kind because they are not anchored on reality. Productive thinking
in discussion leads the thinker to ask himself questions like, Is this true? Are my assertions buttressed
by experience? What are the facts? Are there other possible explanations for these facts?
In many instances, we tend to think carelessly, even loosely, in capsules or stereotypes. We say that
fathers know best or there are no delinquent children, only delinquent parents. Lumping together
aspects of a problem without careful analysis will lead us to a dead-end. In cooperative thinking, there is
a need to validate ones thinking in light of realistic experience, thus, probing reality further. Sometimes
this is called thinking hard on a subject or putting reality to the test.
Can mentally ill individuals think? They can but cannot validate their thoughts vis--vis reality. But
most mentally healthy people are able to modify or change their views in light of others experiences.
They are able to dialogue with others and by fusing two views create a third, more realistic because it is
more broadly based.
SHARED CREATIVITY AND REALISM
Bulatao (1965: 2-3) avers that cooperative thinking taps the groups potential for shared creativity and
sense of broad realism. Many fruitful endeavors have emerged from people discovering that others think
similarly as they do within their innermost selves; herein arises the desire to act, made firmer because it
is rooted on common belief and conviction.
MAIN OBJECTIVES OF GROUP DISCUSSIONS
According to Monroe & Ehninger (1974: 90), groups get together to accomplish either one of two main
objectives, namely: a) to exchange or share ideas, information on a subject; b) to arrive at a decision
or course of action on a problem or difficulty. Study groups, club meetings, art-enthusiast groups, and
others meet to share ideas or information of common interest, thereby growing in knowledge and
understanding of certain fields or areas. Action groups or task-oriented groups meet to gather and arrive
at a consensus for problem-solving or action implementation.
GROUP EFFECTIVENESS: Collective Strengths
1. Thoroughness
There are occasions when a group decision may take long and thus not be expedient. There are times
when a well-informed individual may expeditiously offer a solution to a problem. Or a team of two
persons who possess the needed expertise and wealth of experience. But these individuals acting alone
or in twos may fail to consider all aspects of a matter which action can be carried out by good group
interaction and a lively exchange of ideas, experiences, and information.
2. Involvement and loyalty
Moreover, since people acting as a group arrives at a group consensus, they would be more
predisposed to implement a decision they helped make. The ensuing results would be satisfying and
permanent. A worthy project brought to completion earns accolade for all the team members, thus
boosting morale and self-confidence in each one. A shared goal inevitably leads to greater
involvement of the individuals belonging to the group, and produces in each one a sense of
responsibility for the success of the shared goal. And when the cooperative venture brings positive
results, every member readily affirms his common identity with said group, or his loyalty to the group.
3. Democratic decision-making
Finally, group process utilizes a more democratic interaction than individualized or autocratic
decision-making. The individuals feel they have a voice; the need to be consulted before arriving at an
important decision boosts participation.
ESSENTIALS FOR EFFECTIVE INTERACTION: The Group and its Individual Members
Monroe and Ehninger (1974: 91) stipulate certain requirements for effective interaction of the group as
a whole and for the individual participants as well. However, the underlying principle of group
participation is that the individuals must be capable of contributing worthwhile or significant ideas, and
the behavior of the group must be such that it will ensure an objective and systematic examination of the
subject matter at hand.
Essentials for the Group as a Whole
1. The first prerequisite for fruitful discussion is orderliness. It does not mean formality or rigid
adherence to procedure. It implies, however, that a definite and agreeable plan of procedure be
followed. Courtesy at all times is an element of orderliness.
2. Second, every member of the group must display a cooperative rather than a competitive attitude.
Openness to the views and opinions of others will boost any group process. If there are
disagreements, reasonable compromises must be forged in order to arrive at a decision. Criticism if
dealt with constructively and gently would help the group in the right direction. What can we
accomplish if we work together? What will happen if we dont work together? These are
questions every member would do well to ask himself.
3. Third, a group needs a sense of accomplishment. To have a sense of accomplishment, a group must
have a goal or direction. This is primarily accomplished by posing a simple and impartially phrased
open-ended question. With this as a takeoff point, the group can proceed with interest and
anticipation. In the interim, a member can interpose running summaries of points and issues
discussed so that the groups progress can be monitored and in order to keep sight of the goal.
Essentials for the Individual Participant
What makes a good member? Can you tell whether an individual participant has been listening or
not? One often experiences the situation where the person youre talking to makes a remark thats
completely off the topic. It is a two-sided affair. You have not been aware that he wasnt listening; he
knows that he has not been listening. A good member should listen at all times for he has to contribute
his ideas and views to the group. A good member builds upon what previous speakers have said
(Bulatao, 1965:15).
Moreover, the good member makes sure that his co-discussants have heard him and understood
his remarks. He maintains eye contact with the rest to check whether he is coming across or not. He is
therefore sensitive to feedback, like any good speaker. Then he makes the necessary move, i.e.,
explains further; stops.
Finally, according to Monroe and Ehninger (1974:92), the good member is equipped with a
thorough knowledge of the subject to be discussed, has a close acquaintance with the others, and
capable of making meaningful contributions to the group.
Thus, how do we prepare for meaningful participation in a group?
GENERAL PREPARATION FOR SMALL GROUP COMMUNICATION
How do you ensure that you will contribute your best? Monroe and Ehninger (1974: 93) suggest two
fundamental steps. First, you must study and analyze the specific problem to be solved or subject to be
explored. Second, you must find out all you can about the other members of the group.
1. Analysis of the Subject or Problem
There is a misconception that persons who participate in small group discussions need not prepare
as carefully as for a public speech. The truth is just the contrary. In group communication, you cannot
on your own narrow the subject matter or determine the specific purpose in advance. You cannot
foretell the groups direction either. So, in order to have broader, readier, and more recent knowledge
of the problem to be tackled, make the following analysis:
a) Review the facts/information you have at hand. Go over this information and organize it mentally.
b) Make your knowledge current or updated. Are there trends or changes affecting the situation?
c) Fit or reorganize this recent information into what you already know.
d) Formulate a tentative point of view on each of the important issues. Plan your stance; make up
your mind what your attitude will be.
e) Anticipate the effect of your ideas or proposals on other members of the group, or the organization
of which the group is a part. Be ready to consider all other views.
2. Analysis of the Groups Authority and Constituency
If a group wields authority or power to act on a decision, the group acquires more leverage in
considering its options. Maximization of the results of a decision is also ensured because of a groups
range of authority. If a group has official status or power, it follows that it has resources at its command
and the probability of implementation is great.
In order to analyze a groups constituency, you will need to know a profile of each of the individuals
who compose itstatus, beliefs, attitudes, profession/work, personality, expertise, competencies, and
so on. Knowing such individuals as much as possible will prepare you to contribute maximally, or to
adjust to each of them. You may even take on the responsibility of a leader or facilitator.
moving forward in the solution of the problem. Any member when he sees this should take responsibility
and initiative to get the group back to its task. The takeover should be timed well so as to mobilize
group energies towards the main task of solving the problem.
THE RESOURCE PERSON
There are occasions when the group finds itself lacking the proper information or technical knowledge
needed to arrive at the solution to a problem. This is the time when the group calls for an expert or
technical resource person to supply what is lacking. His role, however, is analogous to an encyclopedia
waiting to be removed from its shelf, and returned when it has been consulted. The group members are
still responsible for the solution to the problem, not the resource person.
MECHANICS OF AN ORDERLY AGENDA
Now that we know the essentials of group and individual participation as well as the general
preparation for small group discussion, let us look at the mechanics of an orderly agenda.
1. The Discussion Format
A typical discussion goes through the following steps:
a) Proposal of a Question The question is proposed usually by the leader or chairman.
b) Clarification of the Question The question is clarified, sharpened, and finally agreed upon by
the group.
c) Formulation of Tentative Answers Debate ensues, while more and more facts are gathered,
and opinions are elicited and assimilated by the group. Prevalence of One Answer or Solution.
One answer or solution gradually prevails, usually after modification and improvement by the
group.
d) Arrival at a Consensus A summary is made which is given the groups approval.
2. Types of Questions Suitable for Discussion
Some adjectives describe suitable topics for group discussion, like the following: familiar, downto-earth, realistic, relevant, experiential, observable, not-too-technical, and so on. Not all questions,
therefore, are suited for group dynamics. The most suitable questions are those whose answers lie
within the members experience or realm of activities, those involving a weighing of facts which are
readily supplied by the members themselves (Bulatao, 1965: 10). Often the best questions are those
that concern the group members themselves.
The question will naturally arise from the nature and purpose of the group. A university student
council will not stray far from home and will discuss matters like housing for students, tuition
increases, academic freedom, cafeteria food, and the like.
A social action group will have a predilection for matters involving opportunities for street
children, rehabilitation of drug dependents, and daycare for children of working parents. These are
questions within the ambit of their experience and interest.
How does the group come up with a problem or question? One technique is for the group to list
down a fairly reasonable number of topics from which unanimity can be obtained. If not, the topic
which is preferred by the majority. Another technique is the posting of problems. In this technique
the leader poses before the small group the question: What is the main problem faced by this
organization? The various problems facing the group will then come out and be listed on the board.
Subsequent meetings of the group will choose the priority or most pressing problem of the group.
3. Phrasing the Question
Some rules may help the group in formulating the question for discussion. They are:
a) The statement of the problem should encourage freedom of thought. It should not stifle
thinking or imply a solution or suggest alternatives. One does not ask: Which is better:
presidential or parliamentary form of government? The better question might be What
conditions are conducive to a presidential form of government? Another question might be
What major factors in the Philippine setting allow for a parliamentary form?
b) The statement of the problem should bring about interaction and even a clash of opinions.
Avoid simply enumerating or listing items. A question like What is the students main
objection to the STRATPLAN? generates lively debate because issues come forth and their
significances compared.
c) The statement of the problem should be brief. The problem should be stated in a simple,
direct question, without elaboration. One question might be How can culture shock among
Filipino overseas workers be minimized?
4. Posing the Question
The discussion leader or chairman usually presents the problem to the group in an overhead
manner, that is, he aims the question not towards any single person but to the group as a whole.
Furthermore, the question is not his but one which everyone has to face.
A pause is generally expected after the question has been posed. This is a time for reflection and
consolidation of thoughts among the group members. Silence at this time creates a vacuum to draw
the members out (Bulatao, 1965 : 12).
5. Agreeing upon the Question
Of crucial importance to success in group discussions is the members understanding and
acceptance of the question. Usually the first move following the pause after the posing of the question
will be a request for clarification of some aspect(s) of the question. The leader throws the question
back to the group to form its own understanding of the question. Such demands for clarification,
followed by the groups selection of the aspect under which the question is to be resolved, are the
groups positive attempts to assimilate the question and adapt to its own abilities to answer. The
group needs this time to gel the problem and allow the question to sink in (Bulatao, 1965 : 12-13).
To prevent the process from bogging down, in case someone in the group becomes too
preoccupied with the proper definitions of terms, the thing to do is agree upon an operational or
working definition. Since this is realistic and observable, there will be ready acceptance and the
group can proceed.
6. Physical Arrangements
The physical or external setting is a contributory factor to the success of any group discussion.
Hence, it is expedient to consider such aspects as a) atmosphere, b) size of group or cluster, c)
seating arrangement, and d) duration or length of discussion (Bulatao, 1965 : 6-13)
a) Atmosphere How should we prepare for a group discussion in such a way as to draw lively
participation or maximum interaction? For one, different groups work best at varying levels of
formality and informality. All agree that formality to some extent is needed; otherwise the
The responsibility for the successful outcome of any group discussion lies in the leader utilizing
leadership skills and sensibilities that are group-directed, in the individual member who is expected to
contribute significantly and meaningfully to the probing or problem-solving process, and in the group
members who through a sense of shared responsibility interact, debate, and arrive at a consensus on the
question or problem at hand. Respect, openness, trust, knowledgeability on the subject, and flexibility for
compromise if needed, are necessary traits for a fruitful group process.
1. Let 5-6 members cluster. Try to even up males and females. Let them engage in conversation on any
topic of interest among themselves. Finish in about 15 minutes and present observations on their
conversational dynamics. A process-observer is needed to record data.
2. Choose at least two small groups to present in class prior to the graded group discussion. Allot a
reasonable time for listening and evaluating the good and weak points of each group. Let the groups
choose topics that are timely, relevant, and interesting.
3. Knowing that a suitable question for discussion should be simply, briefly, and objectively stated, frame
a question on each of the following subjects suitable for a) a study or learning group and b) for a
decision-making or problem-solving group :
College Dropouts among STFAP Recipients
The Philippine Military Modernization Program
Government support for inventors and scientists
Safety features in Cars/Automobiles/Airplanes
Mass Transportation in the Urban Centers of Population
The Growing Squatter Problem in Metro Manila: Boon to Politicians
Major Implications of the CPDP
Major Problems of our Philippine Overseas Contract Workers
Culture Shock
Separation from the family
Language barrier
Psychological unreadiness
Worker rights
Coping mechanisms
Most Common Problems of UP College Students
Academics-related problems
Emotional problems
Monetary problems (economic)
Psychological adjustments
Bulatao, Jaime, S.J. The Technique of Group Discussion. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University
Press, 1965.
Monroe, Alan H. and Douglas Ehninger. Principles and Types of Speech Communication. Glenview,
Illinois: Scott, Foresman and Company, 1974.
Moran, R. Eugene. A Conceptual Model of Group Development Process. A Paper read at a
conference of the Philippine Institute of Applied Behavioral Sciences (PIABS), 1978.
Ortigas, Carmela D. Group Process and the Inductive Method: Theory and Practice in the Philippines.
(2nd ed.). Loyola Heights, Q.C.: Ateneo de Manila Press, 1990.
Pfeiffer, J. William. What To Look for in Groups. Reproduced from the Annual Handbook for Group
Facilitators (ed.). La Jolla, Calif.: University Associates Publishers, Inc., 1973.
10
COMMUNICATING in PUBLIC
Objectives
1. describe the nature of public communication
2. understand the nature, symptoms and causes of public speaking apprehension
3. manage public speaking apprehension or stage fright in communicating ideas
4. demonstrate a basic understanding of the essential steps in speech preparation
5. use an appropriate method of presentation in delivering a speech on a topic that is of interest to the
audience and meets the demands of the occasion
6. evaluate your own presentation and others with respect to the suggested essential steps in speech
preparation
INTRODUCTION
Why speak in public? There are many reasons why you may have to speak in public. Perhaps in your
sociology class you have to report on your groups summer immersion project. You may find yourself
involved in school politics and campaigning for a University Council seat. You may have to defend your
thesis during your senior year. You may be asked to give a talk on your hobby to another group. Your
social life may also lead to various public speaking engagements, from proposing a toast at a wedding of
your best friend to giving an after-dinner speech in a high school reunion. A future job may have you
delivering a talk in a sales conference. As head of a firm you may be the obvious person to give a speech
on behalf of your company in a radio or television program. At some time or another we all have to make
a speech.
For centuries public communication has been the glue that holds societies together. In the first chapter
you learned how public speeches perform important functions for the community. Speeches are used for
self-definition, spreading information, debating questions of fact, value and policy and bringing about
individual and group change. Gronbecks speech communication transaction model which incorporates
six elements and their varying aspects shows how public speaking is a complex transaction.
Speechmaking is not an easy task. Certain skills and competencies are needed to be an effective speaker.
Although a good number of people have a natural gift for public speaking, many still face such a prospect
with fear and apprehension. After this unit, you should be able to face up to the challenge and give a good
speech.
In this chapter you will become acquainted with the nature of public communication. In order to make
the idea of delivering your first speech less threatening, you will learn about the nature of public speaking
apprehension or stage fright and the ways to overcome it in order to communicate poise and selfconfidence to your listeners. You will learn the important steps in speech preparation. Finally, you will
know how to choose the right presentational method for your speech and how to critique speeches of
others as well as your own.
THE NATURE OF PUBLIC COMMUNICATION
Monroe and Ehninger describe public communication as involving a single speaker who, in a
relatively formal tone and manner, presents a continuous, uninterrupted, informative, persuasive or
entertaining discourse of supposedly general interest to a sizeable number of other persons. This level of
communication is invariably referred to as public speaking, public address and one-to-many interaction.
Note the following characteristics of public communication.
There is constant role stability in public communication. The speaker remains speaker and the listener
remains listener throughout the speech event. Figure 1 diagrams this speaker-listener relationship.
The degree of formality in public communication is usually high. This results from the appreciable
physical distance which separates the speaker from the listener. A certain degree of psychological
distance may also be evident.
The language employed in public speaking is more restricted and less personal than private
conversation.
Because of greater audience diversity, audience analysis and adaptation become more difficult.
Thus, there is need to prestructure the message. The speech should be adapted to the occasion and the
needs of the audience as a whole. There are prescribed time limits in the length of speeches and the
interaction between speaker and audience.
The opportunities for the speaker to perceive and adjust to listener feedback are comparatively few.
STAGE FRIGHT
Are you becoming increasingly nervous at the thought of delivering a classroom speech? You can take
comfort from the fact that you are not alone. You are in good company if the thought of delivering a speech
causes you some concern. Even the most experienced speakers or performers have felt some degree of
stage fright. Famous stage and movie actress Helen Hayes, singer Barbra Streisand, the late U.S.
politician Robert Kennedy, comedian Carol Burnett, local television and movie actress Boots AnsonRoa, director and writer Behn Cervantes have all confessed at one time or another how nervous they have
felt prior to a performance or a presentation. Speech anxiety is felt by many people. It is not restricted to
speakers nor is it unique to a group of people. Varsity players, job applicants, interviewers, teachers and
musicians experience this phenomenon at one time or another and affect them in varying degrees of
intensity. For as Bradley puts it, public speaking apprehension is a normal form of anxiety, or emotional
tension, occuring in anyone confronted with a situation in which the performance is important and the
outcome uncertain.
What exactly is stage fright? The term stage fright is a misnomer. One need not be on a stage or
platform to feel the anxiety reaction. Also, a speaker is not really experiencing fear that is associated with
physical danger but rather an anxiety or apprehension about the performance or presentation. It is referred
to by other labels namely, public speaking apprehension, speech anxiety, communication apprehension,
reticence, shyness, public speaking nervousness.
Stage fright is a normal response. The physical symptoms you experience are a positive sign mat your
body is preparing itself for the public speaking event. Adrenaline pours into the bloodstream and then you
feel a physical and psychological charge. A certain amount of nervous energy is in fact necessary for
successful public speaking. According to E. R. Robinson, the complete absence of feelings of
apprehension is neither normal nor a desirable state. Without the tension, your performance may be
lifeless. Some tension is constructive for it enlivens your presentation.
On the other hand, excessive nervous tension can be harmful. A speaker experiencing a high level of
anxiety may fail to channel this energy positively. He may use the energy in random behavior and fidgeting
or withdrawal from the situation. So long as you are able to understand this phenomenon and harness the
tension to useful outlets, you should be be able build your self-confidence as a speaker.
We never know when stage fright will occur. We do know that it occurs more frequently in public
speaking situations. The researches of Punsalan and Caparas confirm that many U. P. students experience
stage fright or speech anxiety, especially in public speaking situations. Caparas study revealed that when
university students were asked what their most serious speech communication problem was, many
admitted that stage fright was at the top of the list. Lack of preparation, lack of fluency in English and
negative reactions from the audience were determined to be some of the causative factors. Punsalans
study, on the other hand, revealed that students who spoke in Filipino had a more positive attitude
towards speech communication and experienced a lesser degree of stage fright.
What are the symptoms of stage fright? Many speakers have felt a sinking feeling, dry mouth, butterflies
in the stomach, clammy hands, excessive perspiration, weak knees, cracking voice and mental blocks.
Other symptoms have been observed of speakers by their audiences such as withdrawal behavior (looking
at the floor or ceiling, out the window), excessive random behavior, blushing or blanching, rapidity of
speech rate, vocal hesitation, nonfluency and indirect eye contact. Organic activities, such as pounding of
the heart, increase of pulse rate and blood pressure have been experimentally measured.
You can manage your fear of public speaking. Stage fright can be controlled and its severity reduced. It
would be essential to begin by knowing the nature, symptoms and anises of stage fright in order to
reduce the emotional responses which produce it. You must develop the right attitude about public
speaking anxiety. Realize that the physiological changes you are experiencing or bodily reactions you are
feeling are a sign that your body is getting ready. Know that nervousness dissipates or is reduced by the
act of speaking. Should your mind go blank, refer to the matter humorously. If other symptoms become
obvious, do not apologize. This will only cause undue attention. Use the energy to improve your
concentration. Make it work for you, not against you.
Develop the right attitude about listeners. They are really a friendly group. They want to see you
succeed in your public communication efforts. Although your Communication III audience (classmates and
teachers alike) will be listening to you with paper and pencil they really would like to see you perform a
good job. Look forward to their praises as well as the suggestions for further improvement. Analyze your
audience and their expectations at the outset.
Prepare thoroughly for your speaking assignment. Know fairly well what requirements you have to
satisfy. Choose topics that interest you. Make use of available preparation time in gathering materials for
your speech, writing a clear outline, rehearsing and preparing for your audio or visual aids. Do not
memorize. This practice usually causes you to worry about forgettting. Speak extemporaneously instead.
Use effective bodily action. Directed bodily activity will help dissipate excess energy and aid you in
more effective communication. If you find your hands trembling when you get to the front or up the stage,
remember once again that your body is preparing for physical and mental efficiency. This is your bodys
way of eliminating the excess tension. Harness this energy by moving from one side of the table or lectern
to another, using your pointer to refer to your diagram, smiling, looking at your audience more directly.
Look positively at other opportunities there might be to communicate interpersonally. Take part in
varied speaking situations. Actively participate in classroom discussions. Engage in conversations with
your friends and teachers. Contribute your ideas in meetings of your organizations. Take up the challenge
to speak in public. The exposure in these different settings will certainly boost your confidence.
Delivering a speech could be a pleasant and meaningful experience the next time around.
THE STEPS IN SPEECH PREPARATION
As with most other skills, there are no short cuts to learning how to speak in public. Following are the
important steps in speech preparation.
1. Choose a topic that is appropriate to you as the speaker, the audience and the occasion.
2. Gather materials for the speech.
3. Outline the body of the speech
4. Develop the body of the speech through the use of verbal and non-verbal supporting materials chosen
in terms of their appeal to one or more of the factors of attention.
5. Develop the Introduction of the speech
6. Develop the Conclusion of the speech.
7. Rehearse the speech orally
STEP 1: CHOOSE A TOPIC
The first step in speechmaking is selecting a topic that is appropriate to yourself as the speaker, your
audience, and the speech occasion. A consideration of these factors will help you arrive at a carefully
selected topic which must be phrased suitably to convey a specific speech purpose.
To begin with, the topic must be appropriate to you as the speaker. It must grow out of your
experience, interests or knowledge. You must also have genuine enthusiasm for the subject. If you have
the option to choose the topic for your classroom public speech, a good starting point is to review your
own interests and knowledge. Talking about a subject which you have learned from a personal experience
will give you more confidence and poise. Some students when faced with the task of deciding what to talk
about in their Communication III class often feel a sense of helplessness. Little do they realize that
everyone knows something or has at least done things he can talk about in a speech.
Here are a few examples of speech topics that have grown out of the students personal experience and
knowledge. A coed from Sulu explained the versatility of the malong as she described its different uses. A
member of the U.P. Divers Club spoke on the dangers of scuba-diving. A student who took a summer job
as a student research assistant in the Senate decided to deliver a persuasive speech on the need to
regionalize the election of Philippine senators. A male student who loved to cook during his spare time
shared a family recipe for a no-bake cheese cake. Capitalize on you personal experience and you will be
surprised at the wealth of potential topics to choose from for your speech.
Sometimes, a topic simply interests you and you would like to know more about it. You may want to
explore the subject matter even if it has not touched you directly. The speech then becomes a learning
experience for yourself as well as your audience. Suppose you are interested in psychic healing but do not
know much about it. This would provide a good opportunity to research on a topic that intrigues you and
turn it into an interesting talk.
Speech communication teachers have often heard the following comments: Maam, Im only a
sophomore and I have nothing to talk about. I dont believe in women in the military. I dont know
how to cook. Im scared of the water. WHAT am I going to talk about? You should have no reason
to feel desperate about a speech topic. There are other leads that you can pursue to get you started. The
course you are enrolled in is one. An Architecture student talked about the Bahay na Bato. A Human
Kinetics major spoke on the practical uses of arnis de mano. An Anthoropology student gave a speech on
the colorful traditional costume of the Tboli women. Still another, a Theater Arts student, shared with her
classmates the humorous situations that arose in the casting and production of the Dulaang U.P.s theater
season.
Another suggestion is to revisit your hometown and get reacquainted with its unique and colorful
traditions. A Baguio girl delivered a speech on a ritual that she herself witnessed: the Canao festival. If
you have traveled around the Philippines, this can certainly provide some ideas to talk about. An Arts
Studies major who joined her Humanities II classmates to Pakil, Laguna chose to speak on the art of
wood-carving. Another who revisited Corregidor described the potential of the island as a tourist
destination.
Have you had the privilege to travel outside the country? You can share your observations and insights
of people and places you have visited. One student who visited Spain and witnessed the opening of the
bullfight season in Plaza de Toros in Seville described the event in very vivid detail for her informative
speech. Some foreign students have used the speech class as an opportunity to acquaint their Filipino
classmates with the culture of their respective home countries. A student from Hong Kong gave a
persuasive speech on his personal stand regarding the reversion of Hong Kong to Mainland China in
1997. Another, a Korean coed spoke on the traditional costume of Korea called the hanbok. A Pakistani
student demonstrated how pita bread is made.
Talk about you hobbies. Unusual hobbies, like raising an iguana, making ethnic jewelry and jungle
warfare are certainly interesting. Stamp collecting, cross-stitching and comic book collecting continue to
be worthwhile diversions that you can talk about for your speech.
For speeches outside the classroom, topic selection is seldom a problem. Usually the speech subject is
determined by the occasion, the audience and the speakers qualifications. When former Philippine
President Corazon C. Aquino delivers public lectures, she is often invited to speak on the gains of the
EDSA revolution and people power. Ms Laurice Guillen will discuss movies and directing. Senator
Leticia Ramos-Shahani might share her views about foreign affairs and women in politics. The same is
true of ordinary citizens. The drug counselor is asked to talk about the dangers of drug abuse. The stock
broker discusses initial public offerings (IPOs) while the teacher might talk about new trends in teaching.
The topic must also be suitable to your audience. The subject of your talk must be suggested by the
interests, knowledge, attitudes and needs of your audience. It must also add to their knowledge. The fact
that you are a photography buff, a vegetarian or a bowling aficionado does not mean that your audience
will be equally interested in these topics which initially interest you. How then will you determine what
is interesting, fresh and important to your listeners? You will need to do audience analysis. Verdeber
defines audience analysis as the study of audience knowledge, interests and attitudes. Essential
demographic data must first be gathered. Some of these dimensions include age, gender, education and
group affiliation.
1. Age. How old are the members of your audience? Age indicates interests, affects your audiences
ability to understand your topic and also reveals if they have enough experience and years to be
familiar with persons and events you will be referring to. For example, the Japanese Occupation may
be very vivid to your lolos and lolas. Although a younger audience like you may learn about this
historic event in your Kasaysayan classes you may not have the emotional associations of older
people who have experienced the war first hand. Young audiences are described as an energetic,
impulsive, often changeable and fickle lot. Older people, on the other hand are described as more
conservative with more or less fixed attitudes about things. These general traits can be valuable
clues as to what interests your audience, and as to what they believe in.
2. Gender. Is the group primarily male, primarily female or fairly balanced? The gender makeup of
your audience is still an important consideration even as the environment is gradually becoming a
gender-neutral one. Until recently, it was assumed that if you faced an all-male audience you might
expect a higher knowledge and interest level on topics such as auto mechanics and sports. Meantime,
if you had an all-female audience you might expect a higher level of knowledge on such topics as
child rearing and cooking. These are gender stereotypes which are slowly becoming outmoded. The
picture is changing. What we now see is a gradually emerging gender-neutral environment with both
sexes sharing a wider range of interests and experiences.
3. Educational and Intellectual Level. You need to consider both the formal school training and
education gained from experience. These dimensions serve as an index of the intelligence level of
the audience as well as their critical and interactive capacities. A well-educated audience is
perceived to be more open-minded and more willing to listen to new arguments than less well-
educated ones. Research has shown that with respect to the use of propaganda, highly intelligent
listeners are more resistant to emotional appeals and shift their attitudes less in response to
nonrational arguments than less intelligent ones.
4. Group Affiliations. Membership in social, political, cultural occupational, professional, and
religious groups provide valuable clues about your audiences special interests, points of views,
motivations, biases and prejudices.
5. Size. Although this last audience trait does not directly affect your choice of a topic, it can impact
upon your delivery and presentation. You will still want to know how large the audience is. Is it an
intimate gathering or is it a huge crowd gathered at the steps of Palma Hall? Most speech classes in
the university consists of a medium-size audience numbering between twenty-five to thirty. This
should be a comfortable size for beginning speakers. Some can get horrified at the thought of
addressing a large crowd. As you gain more experience, you may welcome the challenge of speaking
to a larger audience.
Once you have completed the demographic analysis of your audience, you are now ready to move a
step further and assess your audiences interest in the topic, their knowledge about it and their attitudes
toward it. Gronbeck refers to this as psychological profiling. These characteristics will help you
determine how well your listeners will accept and understand what you want to say. Note that you do not
keep the audience in mind only when choosing a topic. Every step of the way a sensitive speaker will
anticipate how his listeners will respond.
KNOWING AUDIENCES NEEDS: Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
We have often stressed that your speech must be related to your audiences wants and interests. One of
your important concerns therefore as a public speaker is to know what drives your specific audience to
think and respond in a certain way. You will have to know what needs and desires must be satisfied or
created so that your listeners can be moved to action. Gronbeck refers to these interests and desires as
motive needs.
In Motivation and Personality, psychologist Abraham H. Maslow provides a classification of these
fundamental human needs. Refer to Figure 2 for Maslows hierarchy of motives.
1. Physiological Needs for food, water, air, sleep, sex etc. These are basic biological or bodily
requirements.
2. Safety Needs for security, protection from harm, stability, law and order, freedom from fear
3. Belongingness and Love Needs for devotion and affection with family and friends; need for
acceptance and approval by social groups
4. Esteem Needs for self-esteem based on achievement, competence, confidence; and for esteem of
others (reputation, recognition and status)
5. Self-Actualization Needs for self-fulfillment, to become what you potentially can be, desire to
actualize your capabilities.
These needs function as a prepotent hierarchy. Lower-level needs must first be satisfied in whole or in
part before the higher-level needs can operate. People who rely on a hand-to-mouth existence and worry
about the roof over their heads will have little time to strive for the higher-level needs such as esteem or
self-actualization needs. But once these biological requirements are met, higher level drives can become
operative. On the other hand, individuals who are not financially or economically challenged may find it
difficult to relate to a persuasive speech demanding an increase in the benefits for socialized tuition
because their biological and safety needs have mostly been met or satisfied. Furthermore, Maslow says
that we move from one level to another depending on how our lives progress or regress.
Remember that effective public speaking is audience-centered. You, the speaker, are there to gain a
desired response from your listeners. Even as you have chosen a topic suitable for your listeners, the
audience will continue to influence to a great extent the decisions you make about organizational patterns,
the types of supporting materials and the delivery of your speech.
The topic must also be appropriate to the speech occasion. No matter what the occasion or situation,
audiences usually have a clear idea about the speeches they consider appropriate for the occasion. They
expect to hear political speeches in the Senate floor, homilies in church, eulogies in necrological rites and
commencement speeches in graduation ceremonies. It is apparent then that outside the classroom, the
choice of a topic is most often dictated by the occasion. Speeches during the centennial celebration of the
Philippine Revolution centered on the role our countrys revolutionary heroes played. If the occasion is in
observance of Earth Day, the speeches will focus on the need to respect the laws of nature and to
preserve what ever is left of the earth. Audiences will feel alienated if speakers violate these
expectations as they relate to the speech occasion.
In the classroom, the speech should conform to the project or assignment. If your group decides to
simulate a speech occasion or event, make sure that topic suits the theme of the program. Time is another
important element of the occasion. The question Can I accomplish my specific speech purpose in the
time allotted? becomes an important one. Choose a topic that you can prepare for within the given time
period. Remember too that the speech should be kept within the designated time limit. A common fault of
beginning speakers is to choose a topic that is too broad for the given time. The time allotment for the
classroom speeches is relatively short. It would be quite ambitious for you to attempt to discuss the
history of the Filipino people or the ten greatest Asians of the 20th century in ten minutes. The shorter the
time you are given to speak, the more specific and limited the topic must be. Adapt to the predetermined
time limits to make a more effective speech.
well as nonprint resources, from interviews with experts, from conversations with friends, from on-thespot observations, and from surveys and questionnaires.
You can use yourself as a resource. A natural starting point is to determine what you already know
about the subject. It will be helpful at this point to put your ideas on paper and make an analysis list. An
analysis list, according to White, is simply a tentative list of ideas or points that you might wish to present
in your speech. The list can be further expanded to include the additional information or data that you will
need to secure.
A student afflicted with juvenile diabetes chose to do an informative speech on how one can live with
the disease on a daily basis. He cited statistics on the incidence of the disease in the Philippines. He
talked about the symptoms of the disease and then described his daily regimen. A Theater Arts student
spoke on the trials and tribulations of the Dulaangs U.P. theater season for her speech to entertain. She
was a production major involved in the casting and production of plays for the season.
You may not be a production major, a tennis champ or your stories may not be so dramatic, but using
your own knowledge and experience not only enriches your speech and arouses the interest of your
listeners. More importantly it will give you confidence. If you actually experienced the subject of your
speech and observed it first-hand, it makes a whole lot of difference.
Most of the time, you will find out that what you know is not enough. You will need to work your way
outward and secure additional research materials through the following ways.
1. Reading books, newspapers, magazines, journals and other printed resources can provide specific
information and general concepts relevant to your purpose. You may also access nonprint resources
in the form of taped radio and television programs as well as computerized data bases. Speeches,
discussions and other important events are often broadcast over tv and radio. Some local stations
allow access to these coverages for a fee. You can also access a computerized database. A computer
database is information stored so that it can be retrieved from the computer terminal. Most
computers are now linked to the Internet. Users can browse through the vast collection of information
available from local and international sources.
2. Interviewing people who have expert knowledge about the subject of your speech is another
possible source. The experts can provide up-to-the minute information which may not yet be
available on print. They can also suggest other sources, materials and even situations to observe. Be
sure to apply the techniques of good interviewing discussed in a previous chapter.
3. Conversing with friends is an excellent way to gain insights and views on your topic. Engaging
others in informal discussions is a useful supplement especially when preparing a persuasive
speech. Conversations with friends can provide a testing ground for your arguments and may even
stimulate the production of better ones.
4. On-the-spot observation. If you are speaking on a subject such as raising earthworms in ones
backyard or the need for more dormitories on campus, arrange for a visit to the site, office, or
factory. The experience will provide concreteness to your presentation.
5. Questionnaires and surveys. If you want to know what a group of people know, think or feel about
the subject of your speech, this resource can be quite useful. You may wish to survey dorm residents
to learn their views on campus security or the imposition of the single-fee policy. You may send
questionnaires to a number of people about a controversial topic and compare the answers. The data
gathered from these important tools can provide valuable supporting materials and evidence for your
speech.
Gathering materials for your speech can be an exciting phase of speech preparation. You may uncover
more information and materials than you can use. Begin your research early. Start with a preliminary
bibliography of articles and books that might be helpful. Adopt a efficient note-taking method in your
research. Do not forget to document the sources accurately. Verdeber suggests that in your speech as well
as in any communication in which you use ideas not your own, work the source of your information into
the presentation. This will not only add to your credibility but will enable the listeners to judge the worth
of your ideas.
STEP 3: MAKE THE OUTLINE
Plato, 4th century philosopher, suggests that every speech ought to be put together like a living
creature, with a body of its own, so as to be neither without head, nor without feet, but to have both a
middle and extremities described proportionately to each other and to the whole. In other words, an
effective speech must have a beginning (Introduction), a middle (Body) and an ending (Conclusion). We
will now begin to construct these main parts of the speech.
After selecting an appropriate topic which meets the necessary criteria and gathering suitable
information and materials, you are now ready to organize the body of your speech. Your major task in this
phase of speech preparation is to discover the main headings which will constitute the body of your
speech and to arrange them in the most effective and logical way.
The body is the longest part of the speech, comprising about 80 to 85 per cent of the total speech. The
specific speech purpose is accomplished in the body. It is for these reasons that the body of your talk is
prepared before the introduction or conclusion.
Outlines are essential to effective speeches. An outline is a blueprint for your speech. It is an
abridgment of the body of the speech containing the main ideas, subordinate points and supporting
material arranged systematically according to a meaningful code of symbols and indentations. What
purposes does the outline serve? An outline shows the relationships among the ideas of the speech. It
insures that these ideas have unity and coherence and emphasis. It estimates the length of your speech. As
a preparation outline, you may use it while you rehearse. As a presentation outline, it serves as a guide in
actual delivery.
Steps in constructing the outline of the body of the speech
In constructing an outline of the body of the speech, follow these four (4) basic steps. This should make
your task of organizing the body an easy one.
1. First, word the statement.
2. Second, determine the main points.
3. Third, determine the subpoints.
4. Last, check for minimum essentials of outlining.
1. Word the statement. The statement (thesis sentence) is the central idea of your speech embodied in
a simple declarative sentence. It must be consistent with your specific speech purpose. Remember to
keep it concise and clearly worded. You will find it an easy task to evolve the main points which
will comprise the body of your talk when the thesis sentence is clear and simple. In the examples
below, note how the SSP and the Statements are consistent with one another.
SSP:
to inform the Comm III class of the history and symbolisms of the UP Oblation
Statement: The UP Oblation has an interesting history and symbolisms.
SSP:
structured spatially. A lecture on the dual-brain theory could be presented using geographic order as
the functions of the left and right hemispheres of the human brain are explored. A discussion on the
dangers of scuba diving would entail a similar arrangement. It could organize the risks according to
the varying depths of the water. Note how spatial order is used to arrange the main points in the
following example.
SSP:
I. The coral reefs in Philippine waters are being destroyed at an alarming rate by destructive
fishing, pollution and siltation.
II. If the destruction of the coral reefs in Philippine waters continues, it will threaten the ecology
of our country.
Problem-Solution Order. This sequential pattern is akin to the causal order. This arrangement first
analyzes the disturbing situation and then offers remedies or solutions. Again, the body of the speech
will have two main divisions as seen in the outline below. This order is most suitable for persuasive
speeches. What follows is a general outline using the problem-solution order.
I. This is the problem.
A. This is the importance of the problem.
SSP: to inform my Comm III audience of the differences of various types of bottled water
Statement: Various types of bottled water vary in taste and texture.
Main Points:
I. Mineral water is considered a health drink because of its mineral components.
II. Purified water is water that is filtered through purifier units.
III. Distilled water is the purest type of water.
IV. Natural spring water is best known as ground water.
SSP: to inform my Comm III class of the effects of too much exposure to the sun
Statement: The major effects of too much sun exposure range from the uncomfortable to the
potentially health damaging.
Main Points:
I. Too much sun exposure may result in a severe sunburn.
II. Too much sun exposure may result in prematurely aged skin
III. Too much sun exposure may result in a precancerous condition known as keratosis.
IV. Too much sun exposure may result to skin cancer.
Your outline must have consistency of arrangement. You may choose to organize the main points
of your speech following one method and another method for the subordinate points. For example,
the topical pattern may be used for the main points and then chronological order for the first set of
subordinate points under the first main point. Do not shift the pattern or order within the main points
as this will confuse your listeners.
3. After selecting the main ideas and the organizational pattern, you will have to determine the
subpoints. The subpoints are the second-degree headings of your body outline. They furnish the
development needed to clarify and prove the main points. Subpoints (represented by the A, B, C
headings of their immediately superior Roman numeral heads) are to main points what main points
are to the statement.
4. As a last important step in outline construction, you will need to check for the minimum essentials
of outlining. Follow these standard principles and rules to ensure a good outline.
A consistent set of symbols must be used. Use a standard system of symbols and indentations. The
customary system of lettering, numbering and indenting is shown in the sample skeletal framework
below.
SPECIFIC SPEECH PURPOSE:
SKELETAL BODY OUTLINE:
Traditionally, the main points are identified by Roman numerals (I, II, III, and so on). The subpoints,
the components of the main points, are indicated by capital letters (A, B, C, and so on), The supporting
materials, the components of the subpoints, are shown by cardinal numbers (1, 2, 3, and so on). Beyond
this, there may be other sub-subpoints, in which case, the small letters (a, b, c, and so on) or 1) and 2)
may be used. The number of divisions in the outline will depend on the speech topic.
The main points or the most important ideas are indented farthest to the left. Subordinate points and
subpoints or the less important ideas are indented farther to the right.
Conventionally, each level of the outline must result in at least two entries. If there is a roman I, there
must be a roman II. If there is an A, there must be a B. If there is a 1, there must be a 2 and so on.
Include only one idea per heading. Each heading must express a single idea. What happens when
you run multiple ideas in one entry or sentence? The relationships of the ideas to one another and the
rest of the ideas will not be very clear.
Subordinate the ideas properly. Each main point must directly support the statement or thesis
sentence. Each item should be independent of the other main points. The outline must include only ideas
which are related logically. All subpoints must be linked to the main point under which they are placed.
Each subpoint must directly support the point under which it appears.
Use complete sentences in stating the main points and subpoints. This ensures that the ideas are
developed fully.
Use parallel structure. The ideas must follow a consistent pattern of wording. The parallel phrasing
will make it easier to understand and remember.
Types of outline
There are various types that can be used in public speaking.
1. The phrase outline, sometimes referred to as a key-word outline, has each item expressed in phrases,
key words or sometimes a single word. Although this outline type provides only a rough sketch of the
speech it is helpful as a rehearsal or practice outline and a speaking outline as well.
2. The sentence outline requires that each of the main points and all of the subordinate points are
expressed in complete sentences. Although it requires much effort, this outline type assures that the
ideas developed are complete thoughts. A full-content sentence outline will provide a clear and
comprehensive picture of the whole speech. Usually a 3-level sentence outline will require a set of
main points (represented by Roman numerals), subpoints (represented by capital letters), supporting
materials or pieces of evidences (represented by Arabic numerals) written in complete sentences.
This is the type of outline you will be asked to prepare for your public speaking project.
STEP 4: DEVELOP THE BODY
Thus far we have seen how the outline serves as the principal organizational tool in speech making.
However, up to this point what we have is merely a skeletal framework. The speech must come alive. The
assertions and generalizations must be made clear and credible. The first- and second-degree headings
must be explained and made interesting. We need the supporting materials to intensify, clarify or prove
our points.
If the framework of your speech proximates the represention of the pyramid structure of speech
organization seen in Figure 3, then it is a well-built speech. According to Aristotle, famed Greek
rhetorician and philosopher, a well-built speech is one that can be represented as a hierarchically
arranged network of ideas. Visualize the pyramid with the apex as the central idea (the Statement or
Thesis Sentence as we call it). The main points or most important ideas spread out to the next level. In the
next tier are the subpoints supporting the principal ideas. Finally at the base of the structure are the
supporting materials. If your speech can be represented by such a hierarchy with everything pointing
toward the central focus of the speech or the main idea, it can be a clear, persuasive and pleasing speech.
It is clear from this representation that the smaller units at the base of the triangle are vital for the
development of the speakers ideas. Various types of supporting materials such as the illustrations,
explanations, comparisons and contrasts, statistics and testimony are needed to make the speakers ideas
more concrete. Include a sufficient number of clear and interesting supporting materials whose sources
are properly credited. The skillful use of supporting materials, both verbal and non-verbal, often makes
the difference between an effective speech and ineffective one.
VERBAL SUPPORTING MATERIALS
There are different types of supporting materials that you can use to amplify and prove the major points
of your speech. The examples cited below are taken from the speech plans of Communication III students.
quoting. It is your ethical responsibility to tell the audience from whom you have taken your material.
5. STATISTICS. De Vito describes statistics as organized sets of numbers that help us to see at a glance
trends or other important characteristics of an otherwise complex set of numbers. Check for recency
and reliability of the source for your numerical information. Do not overuse statistics. Your audience
may find too many figures difficult to follow. If you are presenting many, copy them onto handouts or
present them on overhead projectors.
A student who spoke on the importance of fiber in ones diet used statistics to prove his assertion.
A banana a day keeps the doctor away. The banana is an excellent source of potassium (45 mg.
per average banana) and a good source of magnesium (33 mg.) in addition to being an easily
assimilated source of fiber.
Another employed statistical information to emphasize the possible ill-effects of exposure to visual
display units:
Recent studies on the health hazards of VDU or visual display unit operators revealed that the
chances are one in three that pregnant operators will have a miscarriage, stillbirth or a
malformed child.
You may sometimes find good reason to combine two or more supporting materials, as when two
sets of statistics are compared or when statistics are used within an example or description.
Leaking faucets can cause a great deal of water loss. An .8mm diameter hole (as big a ballpen
point) wastes as much as 900 liters of water daily. A 1.6 mm. hole wastes as much as 10,000 liters
of water daily. A 3.2 mm. diameter hole as big as a monggo bean, wastes as much as 14,000 liters
of water daily.
These are the various types of verbal supporting materials that you can use to detail or prove the
main points in the body of your speech. As Monroe and Ehninger suggest, use them generously and
select them judiciously. You will choose them according to their appeal to one or more of the factors
of attention.
AUDIO-VISUAL AIDS
Aside from using verbal supporting materials to clarify, amplify, or prove the main headings in the body
of your speech, you may also present non-verbal supporting material in the form of visual or audio aids
when appropriate. These devises promote clarity, interest and retention. Use audio-visual aids only if
they can enhance your speech. There are many kinds of audio-visual aids.
1. Actual objects clarify your points and provide dramatic impact. To show the various capabilities of
a mobile phone a student brought an actual cell phone to class. Another brought the fresh ingredients
needed for making pizza to show how pizza is easy to make from scratch. A film major showed the
camera equipment he used to shoot footages for a documentary he was making. In certain situations,
you might need living objects as visual aids. A speech major invited his Korean taekwondo coach to
demonstrate some basic stances. Another brought his pet iguana to the class to enable his audience to
truly appreciate the unique form and color of the animal.
2. Models come in handy when the objects are either too big to be brought to the classroom, too small
to be seen clearly by everyone or perhaps simply unavailable. A foot-high oblation souvenir is an
example of a small-scale model of a large object. A large-scale model of a DNA molecule can be
an effective aid to explain structure and function. Life-size models can facilitate demonstrations. A
life-size dummy of a human torso can be used to explain the techniques of CPR..
3. Photographs can be useful if over-size enlargements are available. Computer-enhanced photos can
be visually attractive. A member of the U.P Mountaineering Club presented 8 1/2 x 11 black and
white pictures taken during their climb to Mt. Giting-giting. If you do not have access to photos this
large, you will be better off with another type of visual aid. Regular-sized photographs are too small
for a public presentation. You will have to pass them around and this can distract your listeners from
your speech.
4. Diagrams, sketches and other kinds of drawings are practical alternatives to photographs. They
are inexpensive and easy to make. One student used a simple diagram of the palm of the hand for a
speech on acupressure. Another presented a set of drawings depicting the three different kinds of
volcanoes according to shape. Maps are another kind of drawing that are useful for topics involving
physical terrain. A student drew the map of her home province Bohol and highlighted the places of
political, historical, and cultural interests.
5. Graphs and tables are effective for speeches which contain statistical data. Line graphs, pie
graphs, bar graphs and pictographs clarify trends and patterns.
6. Charts help summarize large blocks of information. In a speech on noise pollution, one student used
a chart to summarize various loudness levels with the corresponding decibel count. Organizational
charts detail the structure and functions of a particular office. Flow charts help your audience
visualize the stages of a process. Successive charts may be unyeiled through the use of flip charts.
7. Handouts can be helpful aids in a speech presentation. Your audience can also refer to these
materials later, after the speech.
8. The blackboard (chalkboard) and white board are also effective aids.
9. Slides (35-mm transparencies) provide the extra advantages of texture, relationships, color and
shape. They can enhance a travelogue presentation or a talk on abstract painting. Special room
requirements will have to be met to make a good slide presentation.
10. Acetate transparencies can be prepared beforehand and shown with the aid of an overhead
projector. The projector can also be used like a blackboard when the speaker writes on the acetate
sheet.
11. Video tapes and films help audiences to visualize what you are talking about. A speech to inform
on the Pampango Lantern Festival was made more interesting with a video taped segment of the
annual festival held in San Fernando. A student who talked on weightlifting saved himself the trouble
of bringing his heavy gear to class. He simply videotaped the essential jerks and showed the film to
the class.
12. Audio material in the form of cassette or tape recordings, phonograph records, compact discs
are also helpful. A speech on the development of original Philippine music (OPM) will not be
complete unless you allow your listeners to hear the music. Tango music played in the background as
one student demonstrated how to execute some tango steps.
13. Computer-generated graphics can enhance your presentation. With the aid of a computer and a
graphics program or software, you can create transparencies, graphs, slides and drawings. They are
not only easy to make but are more visually appealing than the ones produced manually.
14. You can be your own visual aid demonstrating an action or idea. Yoga positions can best be
appreciated by demonstration.
Prepare your visual aids carefully. Here are some practical tips.
Prepare your visual aids well ahead of time. Preparing them in advance allows more room for
creativity and attractiveneness. This also gives you to practice with them while you rehearse your
speech.
Keep them simple but clear. The audience should be able to decipher the information easily and
quickly. In addition, when making handouts, use only a few type fonts and avoid fancy ones.
Avoid clutter especially with statistics on a chart or graph. Dont use more than three curves per
graph unless you want it to look like a plate of pasta.
Make the visual aid and large enough so that it can be easily seen by the audience. Take the size of the
room into consideration. Check for visibility by standing as far away from it as your farthest listener
will be situated.
For classroom purposes, Bristol board or illustration board should be at least 2 or 3 feet in size.
Make your visuals neat and professional looking. No need to spend extra pesos. Draw neatly, spell
correctly, make your lines proportional and the letters symmetrical. Presenting aids that look that
they have been prepared by a pro will certainly enhance your credibility.
Use dark ink against a white background and an extra-wide marker so that your aid can be seen from
the rear of the room.
Print legends or titles simply and clearly with capital letters. Lettering should be at least 2 to 3 inches
tall.
Mount your visual aids so that they are easy to handle.
If you plan to use the blackboard or whiteboard, practice drawing your diagrams while rehearsing
your speech. Erase when not in use if they distract attention.
Use contrasting colors for emphasis. Use red on white and black on yellow
Number the steps in a sequence. Indicate relationships by lines and arrows
Avoid materials and locations which will produce glare.
Plan how you will set up the place (where to hang the charts or where to prop the objects)
Humor can be used. Cartoons can be exaggerated or distorted.
Here are a few tips in using visual aids
Make sure that the entire audience can see your visual aid. Display it so that it can be seen by the
different sections of the audience (people in the middle as well as to your left and right).
Talk to your audience, not the visual aid. When you point out things on the visual aid, look at the aid
and point at the element of interest. Then turn your attention back to your listeners.
Always maintain eye contact throughout.
Visual aids should be properly introduced. Prepare your listeners for what they are to see.
Explain points of interest carefully and concisely. Summarize and draw appropriate conclusions.
Keep visual aids in your possession, unless each member of the audience can have a copy to look
simultaneously at the matter you wish to call attention to. Handing out items can distract the attention
of at least three segments of the audience (the person who has just had it, the person who has it now
and the persons waiting to get it next). If the audience needs to inspect the a visual aid closely, you
may pass it around. In which case, you have to stop speaking while doing so. Another option is to
wait until your speech is over and then pass the visual aids to them. Remember to gather all your
visual aids before the next speaker takes his turn. It is simple courtesy.
If you want your listeners to reflect on some points in your speech, provide handouts that they can take
home. You can print out the results of a survey you made for your panel discussion and give them
time to digest the figures. Give them the recipe of the delicious lasagna you talked about so they can
make it at home.
Know where to stand. Stand behind or to one side of your visual aid. If you are left-handed, stand to
the left; if you are right-handed stand to the right.
Variety. Build variety or change in the development of your main ideas. Use different supporting
materials which stimulate not just one sense, but a variety of senses (visual, aural, tactile, kinesthetic,
gustatory). Appeal to as many wants and interests of your listener. To alert your classmates to the dangers
of pollution your supporting material can depict a number of elements: Have them think about drinking
toxic residues or about living in glassed-in cities. Have them imagine seeing thousands of dead fish on the
beach or having to wear gas masks on an ordinary day.
Vividness. Develop your supporting materials so that they are vividly impressive. Imagery is an
important aspect of vividness. In a speech to save the Pasig River, a student quoted the words of the
former First Lady Amelita Ming Ramos who said the centuries have not been kind to this (the Pasig)
river. Today, the Pasig River is on the verge of dying. Its hue is the color of mourning and its odor the
stench of despair.
Activity. Change or movement always attracts attention. The activity can be real as in a speakers
movement on stage. It can be suggested by the idea you are discussing; through the description of a varsity
player finishing a triathlon or through the use of verbal imagery (He hurriedly vacated his theater seat)
Humor. Humor that is appropriate, fresh and in good taste is a sure-fire way to capture and hold the
interest and attention of your listeners. It can ease a tense audience and help you establish good rapport
with them. You can use exaggeration, irony, play on words or amusing anecdotes.
STEP 5: MAKE THE INTRODUCTION
The introduction comprises about 10% of the entire length of the speech. It serves two important
functions: to gain favorable audience attention and to clarify the purpose of the speech. In addition, an
effective introduction builds the speakers credibility and goodwill. Most introduction have two parts, the
Attention Step and the Clarification Step.
Here are some suggestions to secure audience attention to your message They are also suggested ways
to accomplish the Attention Step.
1. Refer to the significance of the speech topic
2. Use humor that is fresh, brief and in good taste.
3. Tell an interesting story from your own experience or someone elses. The illustration can be factual
or it can be imaginary.
4. Use a quotation
5. Make a stimulating statement or ask a provocative question.
6. Mention common bonds such as ideals, beliefs, relationships, interests that you share with your
audience.
7. Refer to the speech occasion or purpose of the meeting.
8. Pay your audience complimentary remarks.
Here are some suggestions to prepare or orient the audience for the body of the speech. They are also
ways to accomplish the Clarification Step.
1. State the key idea of the speech. For an informative speech, this would be the thesis statement. For a
persuasive one, this would be the proposition.
almost real. In more technical terms however, virtual or artificial reality is a computer simulation of
concrete and abstract objects. This morning, let us explore the wonder of virtual reality as we learn
about its components, processes and applications.
CONCLUSION
SUMMARY STEP: Such is the wonder of artificial reality. Life as we know it will change radically
through unlimited applications of virtual reality. I hope that you and I will all be ready for it.
Example 2 (from a speech of Ma. Corazon N. Abad, Communication III)
SSP: To inform my Communication III classmates of the general rules to follow in serving wine
INTRODUCTION
I. ATTENTION STEP: During the Middle Ages, a popular way of getting back at ones enemies was to
ask them to dine with them and sometime during the festivities have them partake of a goblet of
poisoned wine. A guest had to be wary those days. Gradually the custom arose for the host to taste the
wine before his guests to allay their fears. Today, the host samples the wine before the guests are
served but this is done only as a means of assuring the host that his wine is in perfect condition.
II. CLARIFICATION STEP: Ascertaining the perfect condition of the wine is just one of the many
considerations in wine serving. Today, I shall explain the rules to follow in serving wine. By the way,
let me assure each one of you in the audience this morning that you are all my friends (not enemies) and
I do not intend to get back at anyone of you.
CONCLUSION
SUMMARY STEP: I would like to emphasize that the rules in wine serving that I have discussed are only
general considerations. In the final analysis, it is the individuals taste and palate that must be satisfied. I
hope that the next time you serve wine or for that matter drink wine, you will do so with more grace and
confidence.
Example 3
To entertain my Communication III class with the travails that a would-be medical student has to
SSP:
endure before being accepted to a good medical school
INTRODUCTION
I. ATTENTION STEP: I saw a psychiatrist last Friday. For the better part of an hour, I found myself lying
on a couch and talking about my Inner Child. It was a totally strange experience. I felt weird. Id like
to assure you however, that I am not psychotic. Neither am I neurotic.
II. CLARIFICATION STEP: What was I doing there if Im not crazy? Simple, I was being interviewed
by a member of the admissions committee of the med school I applied to. It was just the latest of the
countless things I have had to go through in my attempts of get admitted to a good medical school. I
must tell you that getting to med school is no easy thing.
CONCLUSION
SUMMARY STEP: Now that you know how difficult it is to get into med school, you probably wont
consider studying medicine anymore. With all that a would-be medical student has to go through, one
cant help but wonder if theyre indeed crazy. Frankly, after all Ive been through Im feeling a bit
neurotic myself. Do I then deserve to sit in the doctors couch?) After this class, Im going back to the
psychiatrist who interviewed me, Meanwhile, Im getting off this stage before I go completely nuts
Example 4 (from speech by Kathrina Moara Abad, Communication III)
SSP: To entertain my Communication III class by describing to them how to win the battle of the bulge
INTRODUCTION
I. ATTENTION STEP: My topic today is something many, my self included, may consider to be a mission
impossible. How to lose weight is indeed is more often than not a losing struggle.
II. CLARIFICATION STEP: Those of you who arent qualified to join the overweight army may find the
ensuing discussion useless at this point. Then again you can never tell. You may just qualify in the next
few months. Those of you who are already qualified to join the overweights, consider yourselves as
soldiers of war. Get ready to fight. Psyche yourselves up. Remember, we can win the battle of the
bulge!
CONCLUSION
SUMMARY STEP: I sincerely hope that you have internalized all the war tactics I have taught you. I also
hope that I will never have to train you again for blubber combat. Remember, we can win the battle!
Example 5 (from a speech by Joan C. Mosatalla, Communication III)
To convince my Communication III class that demilitarization is the answer to the lost potential for
SSP:
the physical and psychological development of the Filipino children in militarized rural areas.
INTRODUCTION
I. ATTENTION STEP: I was only nine years old when an event happened that shocked my childhood life.
It happened in the summer at my grandparents house in a remote place in the Bicol. What I expected to
be a memorable and happy vacation turned out to be a nightmare.
One night, as my relatives and I were peacefully sleeping, we were awakened by the sound of gunfire
emanating from some distance from our place. I could not sleep the rest of the night. The thought of
armed men barging in kept me awake all night. The next morning was worse. I was shocked to see dead
bodies being paraded in the streets by military men. I went home after a few days not just because of
fear but also because of loneliness. I could not find any children to play with. I have since returned to
the place to visit my sick Lola. But nothing has changed.
II. CLARIFICATION STEP: My friends, this unforgettable experience is the inspiration behind my topic
for this mornings speech. Demilitarization is the answer to the lost potential for development of
children in militarized rural areas. I feel that most of us, having lived in urban places free from military
operations, are not aware that the vast majority of the Filipino youth are victims of war. Militarization
has brought irreparable damage to the physical and psychological well-being of many Filipino
children. I firmly believe that the only solution that will end this tragedy is to remove the military
II. CLARIFICATION STEP: Kiko and Analisa are just two typical streetchildren. There are more than a
million like them in our country today, thousands in Metro Manila alone. This morning, let me give you
a glimpse of the plight of the street children, like Kiko and Analissa. I further seek your support and
invite you to join the Task Force Streetchildren, an organization aimed to give these children hope for
their future.
CONCLUSION
I. SUMMARY STEP: To aim to eradicate the streetchildren crisis overnight is wishful thinking. It is
deeply rooted in structural problems that have long existed even before we were born. But as the
someone once said, a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. This is what the Task
Force Streetchildren (TFS) believes in. Take this small step with us and help alleviate the plight of
Kiko and Ana.
II. ACTION STEP: Application for membership to TFS is ongoing. My TFS friends and I will be at the
A.S. walkway to answer your queries about the organization and other ways you can support the TFS.
Again, I invite you to take this small step with TFS and help save the streetchildren of Metro Manila.
THE SPEECH PLAN
Once you have constructed the outline of the body of the speech and developed the introduction and
conclusion, you are now ready to put all these together in a speech plan. What is a speech plan? A speech
plan is a full-content sentence outline of the entire speech. It has three main sections: the Introduction
(consisting of the Attention Step and Clarification Step written out in full), the Body of the speech in
outline form (at least a 2 to 3-level sentence outline complete with supporting materials) and the
Conclusion (consisting of a Summary Step and an Action Step, when needed; also written out in full). The
speech plan includes the following additional items: the title of the speech, the specific speech purpose
(SSP), the statement or thesis sentence, sources for the research and suggested audio or visual materials
that will be used for the presentation. For your extemporaneous speaking project in your Comm III class,
you will be asked to submit a speech plan. Follow the format of the sample speech plans included in this
chapter.
TRANSITIONS
After drafting the speech plan, you will need to check for coherence and unity in your ideas. You will
have to prepare transitions. Transitions are words, phrases or sometimes complete sentences that link or
bridge one point to another, one part of the speech to another or major sections of a speech. They make
your ideas flow smoothly. They also assist the listeners in keeping track of your main points. Various
types of transitions such as internal previews, internal summaries and signposts tell us where the speaker
has been, where he is and where he is going.
Internal previews tell an audience what a speaker will take up next. They are usually found in the body
of the speech particularly when the speaker starts to discuss a main point.
For example:
In discussing the problem of stage fright, toe shall first look at its nature, second at its causes and
third, at the ways we can cope in order to demonstrate poise and confidence.
Remember this....
Above all....
Keep this in mind...
The most important thing..
Furthermore..
Consequently.....
STEP 7: REHEARSE THE SPEECH
Practicing the speech aloud is the final step in speech preparation. This does not only give you the
chance to hear your speech the way your audience would hear it. More importantly this rehearsal period
will help you establish your ideas and their sequences firmly in your mind resulting in a more poised and
animated presentation.
How do your rehearse? Begin by mentally fixing the speech in your mind. If the talk is extemporaneous,
you should memorize only the sequence of ideas you wish to present. Keep the introduction and
conclusion in your head. You may want to remember some interesting quotes or joke. Pay close attention
to your speech organization and content. Vary the wording of your ideas each time you rehearse. This will
assure spontaneous and fresh delivery.
You may ask a friend to listen to you. Some prefer to practice before a mirror. This allows them to take
note of their facial expressions and posture. Do not however plan you gestures or movement. It is also a
good idea to rehearse with your visual aids. You may even try recording your speech. Remember though
that a large audience and a big room will require increased voice projection. Whatever you decide, keep
your delivery natural and spontaneous.
The choice of rehearsal procedure will depend on you experience and knowledge about the speech
topic. Another factor will be the presentation method of your choice. For example, if you are rehearsing a
speech to be read from a manuscript, always maintain eye contact with your audience.
PRESENTATIONAL METHODS
In delivering a speech, you may speak impromptu, memorize, read from a manuscript, or extemporize.
Your choice of presentational method is usually determined by the nature of the speech occasion, the
purpose of the talk and your personal capabilities. Note the advantages and disadvantages of each mode
of delivery.
Impromptu Method
This is sometimes referred to as speaking on the spur of the moment. There is little or no specific
preparation involved. The speaker simply relies on his general knowledge, experience and skills.
Impromptu speeches are given in rhetorical emergencies (Gronbeck) such as an open forum which
usually follows most symposia, after-dinner events, conventions and even in class. Your economics
professor may call on you to explain the concept of production possibility frontier. Should that moment
come about when you are asked to say a few words, concentrate and attempt to focus on a single idea
which you can support with a few important and interesting details.
The Memorized Speech
This mode requires that the entire speech be written out word for word and then committed to memory.
Some individuals can do a good job of memorizing, but for most of us we are faced with the constant
danger of forgetting. When a speaker memorizes, he usually concerns himself with remembering the next
word or phrase rather than on communicating his ideas. He is also unable to adjust to listener feedback.
Memorized presentations are often stilted, formal, mechanical, hurried, sometimes oratorical or even
elocutionary. As much as possible therefore, avoid the memorized speech.
The Manuscript or Read Speech
The manuscript speech, like the memorized mode, is written out in full. The speaker then leads from the
manuscript. When is reading from the manuscript appropriate? It is appropriate when formality and
careful wording of the speech is demanded such as when the President of the Philippines delivers his
annual state of the nation address. It is appropriate when exact and technical language is required such as
in the presentation of scientific papers in medical conventions. It is also appropriate when careful timing
is essential such as in broadcast speeches. Do not sacrifice communicativeness and spontaneity simply
because you have to read from the printed page.
The Extemporaneous Mode of Delivery Speech
This mode of delivery involves thorough preparation. You will have to accomplish the essential steps of
speech preparation as earlier discussed. Once the speech is developed, it is often suggested that you
commit to memory the main ideas and the order in which they will be presented. It is considered a
flexible method because you word your speech as you go along. Another advantage of this method is the
responsiveness to feedback that it provides. For most situations, including your speech communication
class, use the extempore method of delivery.
CRITIQUEING PUBLIC SPEECHES
In addition to learning the steps in speech preparation, it is also important to learn how to evaluate
critically the public messages/speeches of others. The speech classroom serves as a learning laboratory
for studying and evaluating speeches. It provides the opportunity to hone your critical listening skills.
Begin the task of learning to evaluate speeches by going over the Check-off Evaluation Sheet (see
Appendix). The criteria include speech content, organization, language and delivery. Having set the
appropriate standards and expectations, you can now get set to listen to your classmates. Other evaluative
measures which focus on relevant aspects of the speechmaking process may be suggested by your
teachers. Use them not only in the classroom but in listening to real-life speeches and those broadcast
over radio and television.
There will be opportunities for oral postspeech evaluations in class. These will be oral critiques from
you classmates as well as your teacher. Learn to give constructive criticism for your classmates.
Incorporate the suggestions of your teacher and the rest of the class in future speech projects.
According to Monroe and Ehninger, public communication involves a single speaker who, in a
relatively formal tone and manner, presents a continuous, uninterrupted, informative, persuasive or
entertaining discourse of supposedly general interest to a sizeable number of other persons.
Public speaking apprehension or stage fright is a normal problem whose nature, causes and effects must
first be understood before learning how it is controlled.
In preparing your first speech, follow these 7 important steps. First, choose a topic that is appropriate
to you as the speaker, to your audience and to the occasion and the speech purpose. Second, gather speech
materials. You may discover speech materials from the following sources: your own storehouse of
information and experience, interviews with people, conversations with friends, print and non-print
resources, observation and survey-taking.
Third, outline the body of your speech. Evolve the main ideas which will comprise the body of your
talk from the thesis sentence and arrange them according to one of five patterns: chronological order,
spatial order, problem-solution order, causal order and topical order. A sentence outline is suggested.
Fourth, develop the main points in the body of your speech by employing various types of verbal and nonverbal supporting materials. These must be chosen according to their appeal to one or more of the
different factors of attention.
Fifth, develop the Introduction of the speech. The introduction serves at least two important functions:
to stimulate interest in the subject matter of the speech as well as you the speaker and to orient the
audience to the body of your talk. To orient the audience to the subject, state the purpose of your talk,
explain how you plan to develop the body either through listing the main ideas or preliminary summary of
the main ideas, and provide necessary background information.
Sixth, make the Conclusion of your speech. An effective conclusion should restate the central idea or
statement of the speech. list or review the main ideas presented in the body, summarize using a quotation,
analogy or an illustration. Prepare the speech plan. Use transitions. Seventh and last, rehearse the speech
aloud.
There are various presentational methods: the impromptu, the memorized, the manuscript speech and
the extemporaneous method of delivery.
1. How can stage fright or public speaking apprehension be used to enhance your public communication
or delivery of a speech?
2. Why must a public speaker be audience-centered?
3. What is the difference between the specific speech purpose (SSP) and the statement or central idea of a
speech? Why is it important to formulate these 2 items early in speech preparation?
4. Why is it important to draw on you own knowledge and experience in gathering materials for your
speech?
5. What are the five basic patterns of organizing the main points in the body of a speech? Which are
appropriate for an informative speech? Which are appropriate for persuasive speeches?
6. What role do transitions (internal previews, internal summaries, sign posts) play in a speech?
7. Which of the verbal supporting materials are best suited for logical proof? Which are the least suited?
Why?
8. What are the objectives of a speech introduction? Identify the different methods one can employ to get
the attention and interest of your listeners?
9. Why should you nearly always include a clarification step or a preview statement in the introduction of
your speech?
10. Identify the various ways you can reinforce the central idea of your speech.
1. As soon as you get your teachers approval of your topic for your extemporaneous speech, prepare a
preliminary bibliography or reference list. This may include titles of books, articles, names of people
you may want to interview, places to visit, or events to observe.
2. Plan to conduct an interview for your extemporaneous speech. Apply the techniques of effective
interviewing learned in the previous unit. Determine how useful the information gathered from this
interview will be for your public speech.
3. As an exercise in organization, unscramble the items in the scrambled outline in the appendix. Fit these
items in the skeletal outline which has been provided.
4. Listen to a lecture in your speech communication class. List down as many transitions (internal
previews, internal summaries, sign posts) employed by the instructor. How useful are these for good
organization and note-taking?
5. Before delivering a persuasive speech ask your listeners to fill out a shift of opinion ballot, a form that
will indicate their position (for, against or neutral) about the controversial topic. Immediately after
your speech, have them fill out a similar form and indicate their current position. Note the difference.
6. Listen to your favorite newscaster deliver the news. Analyze the method employed to begin the telecast.
Distinguish the attention step from the clarification step.
7. Read the Introduction of a sample speech in the appendix. How does the writer encourage favorable
attention and orient the listeners to the body of the speech? Evaluate the choice of methods and suggest
ways to make the introduction more effective.
8. Listen to reports made in your other classes. List down some of the ineffective ways or methods that
have been used to close their presentations or speeches.
Agravante, Josefina. Komunikasyon Pasalita (unang edisyon). Diliman, Quezon City: U. P. Printery,
1990.
Angeles, Josefina. Rhetorical Analysis of the Inaugural Addresses of U.P. Presidents. Unpublished
undergraduate thesis, University of the Philippines, 1965.
Angeles, Maria Theresa G. Rhetorical Analysis of 4 Addresses of Pres. Cleofas Bocobo. Unpublished
undergraduate thesis, University of the Philippines, 1982.
Baird, Craig A., and Franklin H. Knower. Essentials of General Speech. New York: McGraw-Hill Book
Company, 1968.
Bunsoy, Renee. Pentad to Taada: An Analysis of Lorenzos Tanadas Speeches using Pentad to the
Speech of Kenneth Burkes Dramatistic Analysis, Unpublished undergraduate thesis. University of
the Philippines, 1999.
Canlas, Alawi, A Comparative Study of the Communication Behaviors in a Public Speaking Situation
of Introverts and Extroverts, Unpublished undergraduate thesis, University of the Philippines, 1999.
Caparas, Ma. Veronica G. A Study on the Presence of Public Speaking Apprehension Among Speech I
Students in UP and its Relationship to Selected Variables. Unpublished undergraduate thesis,
University of the Philippines, 1985.
Clevenger, Theodore Jr., and Jack Matthews. The Speech Communication Process. Illinois: Scott
TOTAL
Scoring
For every almost always encircled, score 2 points
For every usually encircled, score 4
For every sometimes encircled, score 6
For every seldom encircled, score 8
For every almost never encircled, score 10
The average score is 62. You may want to compare our score with others. For an even more objective
assessment, ask your classmates, friends or parents.
Skeletal Outline
Skeletal Outline
Skeletal Outline
1. The woodwinds include the piccolo, flute, clarinet, oboe and the English horn.
I. ____________
2. More than half the average number of players in the orchestra are in the string
A. _________
section.
3. The brass instruments include the trumpet, horn, trombone and tuba.
B. _________
4. The string instruments provide the most important melodic parts of the score.
1. ________
5. The powerful tones of the brass instruments are most often used in fanfares or
2. ________
passages of a brilliant and military nature.
6. The percussion instruments contribute rhythmic life and special effects to the
II. ____________
music.
7. Another division of the string section consists of those instruments which are
A. _________
plucked.
8. The percussion instruments produce sound by the vibration of stretched membrane
B. _________
or metallic bodies.
9. The brass instruments provide the heavy artillery of the orchestra.
III. ____________
10. The woodwinds are next in importance as melodic instruments.
A. _________
11. One division of the string section consists of those instruments played with a
B. _________
bow.
12. Another type of percussion instruments refers to those which produce noises.
1. ________
13. The string section is divided into two.
2. ________
14. The woodwinds produce sound by the vibration of a column of air within the
IV. ____________
tube.
15. One type of percussion instruments refers to those which produce musical notes.
A. _________
16. There are two principal types of percussion instruments.
B. _________
1. His job was to broadcast information about the ongoing fight between the Fil-Am forces and the
Japanese.
2. His refusal to leave the battlefield made him the last man off Bataan.
B. His unrelenting faith in democracy and his fighting spirit became an inspiration in times of
hopelessness.
1. His broadcasts gave encouragement to the weary Fil-Am forces.
2. His other more dangerous job was a liaison between Corregidor and the Bataan frontline.
IV. Romulo was an internationally known and respected diplomat.
A. He advocated the democratic principles of liberty, justice and equality for all races and colors.
1. In many of his speeches, he stressed the dream of the small nations to be granted individual
freedom.
2. He challenged the tyranny of antiquated social systems.
B. He fought hard for upholding our countrys integrity.
C. He fought valiantly in the halls of the American Congress for the welfare of the Filipinos.
1. He exerted efforts for acts to be passed for the reconstruction of the Philippines after the war.
2. He worked for the reparations and social reforms for our countrymen.
D. He worked for the promotion of universal peace and order through the United Nations.
CONCLUSION
Summary Step: It is sad to say that a great man like Carlos P. Romulo cannot live forever. On that
fateful day of Dec. 15, 1985, he passed away peacefully. A person like him, unique, unsurpassable
and special, comes but once in a generation. When once asked how he felt among the tall Americans,
he said, I fell like a dime among nickels. Indeed, Carlos P. Romulo was a dime among nickels.
Sources: Brilliants, Gregory C. Delights and Difficulties of a Diplomat. Philippine Panorama, 5
February 1984, 5.
Joaquin, Nick. The Seven Ages of Romulo. Philippine Panorama, 14 January 1979, 6.
Wells, Evelyn. CPR: Voice of Freedom. New York: Funk and Wagnalla, Company, Inc. 1964.
Zehnpfennig, Gladys. General Carlos P. Romulo Defender. Minneapolis: T.S. Denison and
Company, Inc. 1965.
Visual Aid: portrait of CPR
Time: 6-8 minutes
hospitals.
B. We hang our heads in shame whenever she throws food around in restaurants or even worse,
when she soils her diaper and needs to be changed.
V. This bad girl stole my familys heart.
A. When youre most angry, she has a way of kissing you, hugging you and saying Si, Manong
Mako.
B. When youve had the most tiring, demanding, depressing day at work, school or at home, shell be
waiting for you by the door, waving and screaming in delight so excited to see you.
C. When you leave for work or school, shell be by the window waving good-bye.
CONCLUSION
Summary Step: Now you know how this screaming tornado has transformed our once quiet and sane
family. Call us idiots or lunatics. Shes a bad girl alright but shes the cutest and most adorable bad girl
on this face of the planet. I love my sister ... but one is enough!
Visual Aid: blown-up photo of Anica
Time: 6-8 minutes
__ improved pronunciation
__ to avoid uhs and ers
AUDIENCE
__ to be more sensitive to listener feedback
__ to adapt speech more to the situation and audience
we shouldnt. We owe it to our teachers who taught us patienly despite the low salary, to our parents who
worked so hard for us, and to our people whose blood and sweat built this institution and continue to put
us through school. We owe it to them to become the prophets of this age that will preach the true gospel of
solidarity. Only then can we all be truly one in a world where it would make perfect sense to celebrate
the fact squatter ako, katulong ang nanay ko and we are proud because, and not in spite of, the fact.
Im sure, all of us have issues about which we keep silent because of the power of the lies. This is the day
to be free. I call on you fellow scholars and artists, unite!
*Delivered during the CAL Recognition Rites held on April 15, 2000 at the Faculty Center, University
of the Philippines
Table of Contents
Title page
Contents
Preface
1: Exploring the Nature of Communication: An Overview
2: The Listening Process
3: The Self and Intrapersonal Communication
4: The Speakers Ethos
5: Language
6: Using the Voice to Communicate
7: Nonverbal Communication: The Potent Hidden Language
8: Communicating with Another Person
9: Group Dynamics
10: Communicating in Public
A: Self-Evaluation of Listening Habits
B: Oral Reading Evaluation Sheet
C: Interview Plan Format
D: Sample Interview Plan
E: Evaluation Sheet for Interview
F: Basic Agenda for a Problem Solving Discussion
G: Sample Exploratory Guide (problem of policy)
H: Leadership Evaluation Form
I: Scrambled Outline 1
J: Scrambled Outline 2
K: Scrambled Outline 3
L: Sample Speech Plan (to inform)
M: Sample Speech Plan (to persuade)
N: Sample Speech Plan (to impress)
O: Sample Speech Plan (to entertain)
P: Speech Evaluation Form
Q: Sample Special Occasion Speech
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61
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