Module VI Final
Module VI Final
Module VI Final
PURPOSES OF COMMUNICATION
Introduction
When people communicate with each other, they exchange various forms of
meaning of ideas and information through a common system of symbols. Typical
communications can include writing in a diary, watching television, talking with friends,
speaking over the telephone, etc. As observed, people spend time communicating more
than they spend on any other complex activity of life. Human communication takes
place in many levels, from the simplest interpersonal and small-group exchanges
among friends through mass communication like social media, as experienced in public
speeches, in reading magazines, or listening to news broadcasts.
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2. To whom is the message addressed?
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3. What is the purpose of the announcement?
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Source: https://articleofenglish.blogspot.com/2013/07/examples-of-announcements.html
Let’s Learn!
Are you aware that communication serves five major purposes? These are to inform,
to express feelings, to imagine, to influence, and to meet social expectations. Each of
these purposes is shown in a form of communication found in the following matrix:
Let’s Do this!
With reference to the matrix given above, identify what form of communication is each
item below and its purpose. In the 2nd column write either INFORMATIVE, AFFECTIVE,
IMAGINATIVE, PERSUASIVE, or RITUALISTIC; in the 3rd column, write either to
inform, to express feelings, to imagine, to influence, and to meet social expectations.
To test your skill, read carefully the following explanation essay, A MANSION OF MANY
LANGUAGES by Danton Remoto (2017):
1. In 1977, my mentor, the poet and National Artist for Literature and Theater Rolando
S. Tinio, said: “It is too simple-minded to suppose that enthusiasm for Filipino
as lingua franca and national language of the country involves the elimination of
English usage or training for it in schools. Proficiency in English provides us with all
the advantages that champions of English say it does. It gives us access to the vast
fund of culture expressed in it and mobility in various spheres of the international
scene. This is especially true in those spheres dominated by the English-speaking
Americans. It also helps us to participate in a quality of modern life of which some
features may be assimilated with great advantage.”
2. Professor Tinio continues: “Linguistic nationalism does not imply cultural
chauvinism. Nobody wants to go back to the mountains. The essential Filipino is not
the center of an onion one gets at by peeling off layer after layer of vegetable skin.
One’s experience with onions is quite telling: Peel off everything and you end up
with a pinch of air.”
3. English enrolment rising
Written 40 years ago, these words still echo especially now. By some quirk of
history and economics, enrolment in English courses are rising. This is so because
there are many vacant positions for teachers of English and literature in private and
public schools. Moreover, there are many vacancies, still, for jobs in call centers
with entry-level pay of P18,000 plus a signing bonus. It is also a career that will
make you earn twice your present salary in just a few years. With the opening of
the doors of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), more Filipinos
are being hired to teach English in the region.
4. Why? First, Filipino teachers will accept a pay scale lower than their Western
counterparts, a pay scale that is still higher than what they would get in the
Philippines. Second, they are conversant with American popular culture, a happy
(or unhappy) result of colonialism and neo-colonialism. Third, they are still
Southeast Asians beneath their skin and are thus familiar with Asian cultural
practices, whether said or unsaid. One is the importance of saving face.
5. The meaning of “maybe” or “I will try” to an invitation means the invited does not
want to hurt you by giving a vague answer. Another is the primacy given to family.
Already in his 50s, one is still called Totoy or Baby or Blue Boy, and still lives with
one’s parents and extended family in the warm cocoon of home. Meals are shared,
stories swapped, Netflix passwords given away, to kin who live just an arms’ length
away from you. You can see that, as well, in the other Southeast Asian countries. In
these places, families are nuclear and not split. Food is communal and not eaten in
siloed cubicles. I have lived in Singapore and Malaysia, and food is one good way
of keeping friends.
6. Mastery of two languages
Three long decades of teaching English and Filipino to students have shown me
that the best students in English are also the best students in Filipino. And how did
they master the two languages?
7. One, they had good teachers in both languages in their early years. Two, they have
inhabited the worlds of both languages—English in school; they spoke English in
social media, Tagalog at home, and Taglish with friends. Three, they have gone
beyond the false either-or mentality that hobbled their parents’ generation. This
either-or mentality was a product of weak critical thinking.
8. Let me explain
My best students in English and Filipino were taught by the crème de la crème,
many of them teaching in the private schools in Metro Manila and the regions. At
the Ateneo de Manila University, we used to have classes in Remedial English,
since renamed Basic English or English 1. These were six units of non-credit
subjects. These were intelligent students from the public schools and the provinces.
Lack of books and untrained teachers hindered them from having a level playing
field with the other freshmen. A year of catching up was necessary for them to have
the skills to put them at par with the other students.
9. Moreover, I introduced them to the worlds of the language they were studying. This
can be in the formal realm of the textbook. It can also be found in films,
documentaries, graphic novels, YouTube video clips or animes. I encourage them
to keep a journal as well, which was not a diary where you wrote what time you
woke up and why. A journal, or its cyberspace cousin, the Web log or blog, aims to
capture vivid impressions or moods on the wing. If at the same time it sharpens the
students’ knowledge of English, then the English teacher is ready to sing hallelujah.
5. What are the explanations he provides for the phenomenon you identified in
#4 above? Give three answers.
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6. How does the author end his essay?
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Source: Madrunio, M., 2018. Purposive Communication: Using English in Multilingual Context. C.E. Publishing, Inc.
Lesson 2
WEB-BASED COMMUNICATION
Introduction
Trending nowadays are the different platforms of communication in the social
media. As observed, it has many positive offers to the users such as an avenue to earn
for a living, for a wholesome entertainment, for education, etc. It cannot be denied that
there are also negative impact brought about by the abuse use of technology and these
platforms or channels.
The web has quickly become the dominant way that many companies,
organizations, and individuals provide information to others. Its dominance as a
communication medium points out the importance of understanding how to present that
information in a way that people can quickly and easily comprehend and use it.
Let’s Learn!
Web Based Communication Channels are websites that allow you to talk and
communicate to other people around the world through the internet
1. Blog is a written document that people would write about something like a topic
or issues and share internet links so other people can see them. Examples of
people using blogs would be people in a business and students in a school or
college as they can share information on a project or document they are working
on.
2. Vlog is the same as a blog but you would discuss your topic though the use of a
webcam. The best site to find Vlogs would be YouTube or blogging web sites like
blogger or word press as they would contain a lot of people who would post
something like that online.
3. Podcasts are recording about topics or issues and then puts them on the internet
so that people can download them and listen to them on their computer or mp3
player etc. Example: BBC radio’s website would have mainly upload podcasts
regularly on their website as the radio station is very popular and many people
would listen to the show as well as the podcasts.
4. Web Pages are sites that allow you to post a comment about what you are
thinking and your friends will be able to read them and comment on them.
Good examples of Web Pages are sites like facebook and twitter as they will
allow you to write down whatever you’re thinking and people will be able to
respond to what you have said.
Let’s do this!
Read carefully the following article and answer the questions following it.
Human Computer Interaction (HCI) is the design and study of how people (Users)
interact with technology interfaces. HCI is everywhere and not just restricted to the
home PC or laptop, HCI also refers to other technologies from mobile phones, MP3
players, IPads to microwave ovens, digital radio and even remote controls.
HCI – Human Computer Interaction Communication between a human and a
computer system, referring in particular to the use of input/output devices with
supporting software. John Daintith. – A Dictionary of Computing. 2004.
There are many different properties that go into HCI design. Though I am only
going to cover 5 here since that is what I am currently being taught, there are many
more such as:
Requirements Engineering
Interaction Design
Personas
Disruptive Innovation
Visual Aesthetics
Affordance
Affordance in terms of design means how an object should
physically be used, we should be able to visually see what
that object or thing should be used for. Let’s do a quick example
of affordance, check out my wheelie bin
The design is instantly recognisable and we automatically know
what to do with it. The two handles at the top are designed to
pull, so that is one affordance. The wheelie bin also has two
handles on the back so we can pull it behind us, yet another affordance. We also
put our recycling inside, that’s yet another affordance.
There are also affordances for which the wheelie bin was not originally designed to
do. Light does not pass through it, so we can hide behind it. We can climb inside if
we wanted to! There are hundreds of things we come in contact with on a daily
basis where the design is intuitive. Affordances are things we think about without
even knowing.
Perceivability
A website user should be able to perceive when or if an action should be carried
out. The website itself should be designed so users get visual
clues about what to do and where to go next. Designers use
a call to actions for this process, in the form of text, graphics
and other elements such as sound. The less time the user
spends trying to work out what to do next the more
perceivability the website has. Most designers will try to
abide by universal standards, such as placing a search box in the upper right-hand
area of the website. To help aid in the searching process it is universally known that
the search button is to the right of the search bar itself.
Feedback
Giving the user feedback whilst processing an action is fundamental when it comes
to HCI design. If a user does not get the proper feedback, they may think something
is wrong or they did not perform the action, therefore they
will perform the action again and this could lead to errors.
Feedback comes in many shapes and sizes. When a user
clicks an action we want the outcome to happen as soon as
possible and in the fastest time, certain actions need a little
bit more time to process. We as humans have very little
patience, so to counteract this, designers incorporate features that give us
feedback. For example, just say you want to search for something on a website,
depending on the search it could take some time. So the designers can place a
loading box element with some text such as “We are just searching your results,
please bear with us…”. Since we can now see feedback and that our action is
actually “doing something”, we have a little bit more patience to await the results of
the search. Here are some typical user feedback examples:
Mouse graphic turning into a sand timer
Flashing red lights on a TV indicating the remote control action has worked
Led light on a kettle telling us that it has been switched on
A “Waiting…” graphic on a website after an action has been carried out.
Constraints
Constraints are when the interactive options and functions of a product are
restricted. Since we have all filled them out at some
point, we shall look at website forms. When we fill out a
form online, whether it be for a registration,
subscription, book an appointment or other, they are
generally the same in the sense they require
information.
Forms use constraints to stop us from making
frustrating errors. For example, until we type in
the *required information the form needs, we are
prevented from pressing “Submit” or “Send”.
Many years ago this system was not in place, the form would actually let you send
after partially completing it and then complain it was incorrect, this meant we had
to re-type the form back out, very frustrating! Apart from forms, there are other
constraints used in everyday life such as menu items being disabled on a website
because they are not being used. A button in a life which is greyed out as that
particular button is not being used. There are a lot of different ways to sway the
user from wasting time by placing constraints. There are also two different kinds,
physical and psychological. Take a set of traffic lights, for instance, the light is
on red, we can physically go but psychologically we shouldn’t.
Consistency
Consistency tells us the way in which I make sense of the world, including products
we interact with. As humans, we create and work out patterns in almost everything
we do, this helps us to decide what our next steps are to achieving our ultimate
goal.
The same is true for interactive products. If I said to you “Website Menu”, you are
instantly thinking that the menu is somewhere near the top of the website. That’s
because it’s universally known that website menus appear at the top of all pages.
On the other hand, if the menu items linked to different pages each time a user
followed it, the website would be almost impossible to use and very inconsistent.
It is just not enough that website elements need to be perceivable, they must also
be designed and organised with consistency, since interacting with them needs to
yield the same results each and every time.
One last example is the sharing buttons on the bottom of this very post, just one
glance and we already know that they are for sharing on Facebook, Twitter,
Google+, LinkedIn, Pinterest and finally Reddit.
3. What do you think of the visual features of the blog, specifically, the images,
layout, colour, graphics, etc.?
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Paper: Letter
Margin: Normal
Orientation: Portrait
Column: Your choice
Font style: Arial
Font size: 12
Spacing: 1.5
Lesson 3
TYPES OF SPEECHES
How we deliver a speech is just as important as the basic message we are trying
to convey to an audience. If you have worked hard on preparing the verbal part of your
speech, you may feel that delivery is just an “extra” that should not require much time or
effort. All the while the speech has been carefully planned, researched, and polished.
It has been carefully constructed, logically crafted, ethical message, thus, its words
alone would engage audience’s attention and interest—right?
1. They are well-prepared. One of the most important qualities of a good speaker is
preparedness. Generally, a topic is given to focus on for any kind of public
speaking. This may be for the purpose of sharing your ideas, elaborating on your
company, or just to spread the word about a certain issue. If a speaker is prepared,
he/she can captivate an audience. To be prepared, start by creating an outline or
make a draft of the topic. While rehearsing, try to vary your presentation in whatever
way you can because a monotonous way of speaking might bore your audience.
2. They deliver unique messages and ideas. One of the qualities of a good public
speaker is the ability to deliver a unique message. Audiences don't want a repeat of
something that they have heard before. They want to hear a fresh new perspective
and want a new take on things. One of the easiest ways to deliver a unique and
powerful message while speaking in public is to just stay true to yourself and your
beliefs. Everyone can offer a fresh new perspective on life and elaborating on that
can help you develop a unique message.
3. They provide actionable content. A good public speaker doesn't always deliver a
speech or talk just to pass the time. Their public speeches are generally designed to
help the audience to improve on what they do or the way in which they think. The
best example of this is someone talking about their new start-up business. Imagine
they have the opportunity to talk to a large audience about the new company and all
that it does. They can focus on simply getting information across to the audience
but will greatly improve engagement if they use an action-oriented approach,
providing advice for the audience to take away.
4. They can make the complex simple. One quality good speakers possess is the
ability to make even the most complex of theories simple. Remember that your
audience might not even know the basics of what you are talking about, and you
should draft your speech in a way that allows them to understand everything from
the very beginning.
5. They are charismatic. One of the hardest things to do is to captivate your
audience while talking in public. The best approach is on the way you deliver your
message, your charism. The main point to keep in mind is to sound relatable in the
way you talk, and be confident in the way you move. Maintaining eye contact,
standing tall with great posture and using appropriate hand gestures and facial
expressions is always important. The pace at which you talk can also make a
significant difference.
6. They are always open to questions. One important point in public speaking is to
always be open to questions so that you can engage more with your audience.
Successful people encourage feedback. They pay attention to what is being said to
them and listen with interest and an open mind. They act and answer questions
with empathy. They are empowered by positive feedback, and they thrive on
negative feedback. They learn to control being defensive. They are open to
sentiment and criticism while not taking it too personal.
7. They share instead of sell, give instead of take. This is one point that applies to
those who are going to be speaking in public about their company, profession or
product. Instead of trying to sell your product or idea, try to share your thoughts on
it. This makes the talk seem more genuine and can result in the audience opting for
what you have to offer. This also helps the audience relate to you or your company
more.
Activity:
Let’s Learn!
Effective preparation requires identifying the purpose of your speech. Once you have
identified your purpose, you can move on to the objective of your speech.
Name: ______________________________________________
Course/Year/Section: ___________________________________
Class Schedule: _______________________________________
A. Prepare a Demonstrative Speech of not less than 300 words with an Introduction,
Body and Conclusion. Memorize then perform this in front of a video camera. (No
time limit) Wait for your teacher’s instruction as to when and where to submit your
video clip.
Eye Contact - 10
Knowledge of Process - 15
Confidence/ Enthusiasm - 10
Preparedness - 10
Content - 15
Total 60 points
B. For those who cannot do the video recording, write your demonstrative speech in
the space here provided.