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Without context, a piece of information is just a dot. It floats in your brain with a lot of other dots and doesn’t mean a thing. Knowledge is information in context… connecting the dots.
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—Michael Ventura
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The meaning of any communication, for both the creator and the receiver of the message, is shaped by its context.
As the quotation above suggests, when an individual processes a piece of information, they do so by connecting it to things they already know or believe. So, one aspect of communication context is the set of pre-existing assumptions which affect a person’s understanding of a particular message. These assumptions are created by our:
- Culture
- Experiences
- Beliefs
- Values
Culture can be described as the patterns of learned and shared behaviour and beliefs of a particular social, ethnic, or age group.[1] Culture has a strong, and often subconscious, influence on our assumptions. Ways in which culture can affect business communications include cultural attitudes to social hierarchy, expectations of formality, humour, and approaches to expressing disagreement.
Experiences that individuals have had in their life can also shape our assumptions. These may be experiences from any aspect of life, including education, family, social relationships, and/or health. Any of these elements can affect someone’s interpretation of a message, even in a business setting. For example, if a person has been made to feel inadequate at school, this feeling may carry over into a lack of confidence in the workplace, where they may perceive personal criticism in an email which others, with different experiences, would find acceptable.
Beliefs include the religious or political beliefs that an individual holds. For example, an individual’s religion may require that they should not work on a particular day of the week, or that they should only eat certain types of food.
Values are ethical beliefs about the importance of some thing or action.[2] They are often strongly influenced by an individual’s culture and/or beliefs. They will affect a person’s attitudes to such things as family commitments, animal welfare, or honesty.
For communication to be effective, and to avoid misunderstandings, it is important for both the source of the communication and the receiver to take all these contexts into account.
Another way of looking at the context of communication is to consider the number of communicators and the direction of communication . This is discussed in the reading below.
Read
Section 1.3 Communication in context, in Saylor Academy (Ed.) 2012. Business Communication for Success. (See page(s) 22 – 26 in PDF version.). (You do not need to do the chapter exercises for this section.)
The reading introduces intrapersonal, interpersonal, group, institutional, and mass communication contexts, their advantages and disadvantages, and appropriate and inappropriate uses. It is important to remember that each context influences the communication process differently, and that contexts can overlap.
Thinking about different communication contexts described in the reading, in which context do you think an audience would pay the least attention to a written communication? Which context is most characterised by intimacy, and which is most likely to involve a group?
Please share your thoughts in WENotes.
You must be logged in to post to WEnotes.
Your comment will be displayed in the course feed. Don’t forget to look in the feed to see what others have posted.
- ↑ Lumen learning: What is culture?
- ↑ Wikipedia
—Michael Ventura
The meaning of any communication, for both the creator and the receiver of the message, is shaped by its context.
As the quotation above suggests, when an individual processes a piece of information, they do so by connecting it to things they already know or believe. So, one aspect of communication context is the set of pre-existing assumptions which affect a person’s understanding of a particular message. These assumptions are created by our:
Culture can be described as the patterns of learned and shared behaviour and beliefs of a particular social, ethnic, or age group.[1] Culture has a strong, and often subconscious, influence on our assumptions. Ways in which culture can affect business communications include cultural attitudes to social hierarchy, expectations of formality, humour, and approaches to expressing disagreement.
Experiences that individuals have had in their life can also shape our assumptions. These may be experiences from any aspect of life, including education, family, social relationships, and/or health. Any of these elements can affect someone’s interpretation of a message, even in a business setting. For example, if a person has been made to feel inadequate at school, this feeling may carry over into a lack of confidence in the workplace, where they may perceive personal criticism in an email which others, with different experiences, would find acceptable.
Beliefs include the religious or political beliefs that an individual holds. For example, an individual’s religion may require that they should not work on a particular day of the week, or that they should only eat certain types of food.
Values are ethical beliefs about the importance of some thing or action.[2] They are often strongly influenced by an individual’s culture and/or beliefs. They will affect a person’s attitudes to such things as family commitments, animal welfare, or honesty.
For communication to be effective, and to avoid misunderstandings, it is important for both the source of the communication and the receiver to take all these contexts into account.
Reading
Another way of looking at the context of communication is to consider the number of communicators and the direction of communication . This is discussed in the reading below.
Read
Section 1.3 Communication in context, in Saylor Academy (Ed.) 2012. Business Communication for Success. (See page(s) 22 – 26 in PDF version.). (You do not need to do the chapter exercises for this section.)
The reading introduces intrapersonal, interpersonal, group, institutional, and mass communication contexts, their advantages and disadvantages, and appropriate and inappropriate uses. It is important to remember that each context influences the communication process differently, and that contexts can overlap.
Reflection
Thinking about different communication contexts described in the reading, in which context do you think an audience would pay the least attention to a written communication? Which context is most characterised by intimacy, and which is most likely to involve a group?
Please share your thoughts in WENotes.
You must be logged in to post to WEnotes.
Your comment will be displayed in the course feed. Don’t forget to look in the feed to see what others have posted.