This document discusses three types of speech context:
1. Intrapersonal communication is self-centered communication where the speaker is both the sender and receiver of messages composed of their own ideas and emotions processed internally in the brain.
2. Interpersonal communication involves the exchange of information, feelings, and meaning between people through verbal and non-verbal messages during face-to-face interaction. There are two kinds of interpersonal communication: dyads between two people and small groups where all members can interact with each other.
3. Public communication involves a single speaker presenting a formal, continuous discourse of general interest to a sizable audience.
This document discusses three types of speech context:
1. Intrapersonal communication is self-centered communication where the speaker is both the sender and receiver of messages composed of their own ideas and emotions processed internally in the brain.
2. Interpersonal communication involves the exchange of information, feelings, and meaning between people through verbal and non-verbal messages during face-to-face interaction. There are two kinds of interpersonal communication: dyads between two people and small groups where all members can interact with each other.
3. Public communication involves a single speaker presenting a formal, continuous discourse of general interest to a sizable audience.
only the speaker as the sender and receiver. The message is made up of the speaker’s ideas and emotions in which the channel is his brain that processes them.
The widely used model of intrapersonal
communication is the Wisemann and Barker self communication framework. According to them, intrapersonal communication is, “creating, functioning and evaluation of symbolic processes which operate within the originating or responding communicator.” (1974, cited by Bulan and De Leon , 2002).
The process is taking place in the intrapersonal
communication is internal since the eight stages identified in this framework are happening within the individual’s brain.
B.Interpersonal - communication is the process by
which people exchange information, feelings, and meaning through verbal and non-verbal messages: it is face-to- face communication.
Oral Communication Page 1
Interpersonal communication is not just about what is actually said - the language used - but how it is said and the non-verbal messages sent through tone of voice, facial expressions, gestures and body language.
Kinds of Interpersonal Communication
1. Dyad- this is the most basic kind of interpersonal communication by which two persons mutually share information, ideas or even arguments.
2. Small Group- refers to a group small enough in
size to facilitate every member’s interacting with every other member’s interacting with every other member and whose members perceive themselves as a cooperative unit, create a structure of role relationships and develop a normative patterns of relating to one another. (Buerkel- Rothfuss, 1985)
C. 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 sizable number of other persons. (Bulan and De Leon, 2002).