Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Week 5 -- Theory. Core Questions Who am I as a communicator? What resources enable me to communicate? How am I different from other communicators? How.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Week 5 -- Theory. Core Questions Who am I as a communicator? What resources enable me to communicate? How am I different from other communicators? How."— Presentation transcript:

1 Week 5 -- Theory

2 Core Questions Who am I as a communicator? What resources enable me to communicate? How am I different from other communicators? How do other people see my behavior? How do I change from one situation to another?

3 What is a theory? A generalization about a phenomenon, an explanation of how or why something occurs. A system of generalizable statements logically linked together to explain, describe, predict and/or control human phenomena in given context. A set on interrelated constructs (concepts), definitions and propositions that present a systematic view of phenomena by specifying relations among the variables, with the purpose of explaining and/or predicting the phenomena.

4 Four functions of a theory Describe Explain Predict Control

5 Levels of Communication Interpersonal Group Public communication or rhetoric Network / Organizational Mass / Macroscopic / Societal

6 Levels of Communication (Powers) Tier 1 – The content and form of the messages Tier 2 – Communicators as…  Individuals  Participants in social relationships  Members of cultural commodities Tier 3 – Levels of communication, including…  Public  Small group  Interpersonal Tier 4 – Contexts and situations in which communication occurs  Health care, politics, organizations, religion, etc.

7 Individual as Communicator Bring a special set of characteristics and resources to any encounter Perspectives are never completely unique, but always shared to some extent with others Communicator interpretations and actions…  are always organized according to certain expectations, ways of understanding, and categories of thought  change over time through interaction with others

8 Public Relations Theory Harold Lasswell Propaganda Research He is well known for his comment on communication:  Who (says) What (to) Whom (in) What Channel (with) What Effect and on politics:politics  Politics is who gets what, when, where, and how.

9 Lazwell’s framework Who?Says what?In what channel? To whom?With what effect? CommunicatorMessagesChannelReceiverEffect

10 Carl Hovland Experimental Psychologist Yale Studies on Attitude Change and Persuasion Scientific approach  Experiments, attitudes and communication  Sleeper Effect  Learning was greater when the audience perceived the communicator to be trustworthy and credible.

11 Jim Grunig You must first consider the wants and needs of the subject.  Only then can the communication meet those needs and be successful. Assumption – All Public Relations is situational. Press Agentry / Publicity vs. Public Information

12 Grunig’s model

13 Press Agentry & Publicity Propaganda Truth not essential One-way Sports, theatre, product promotion

14 Public Information Information dissemination Truth is important Reputation Management

15 Step Theories One Step  Injection  Magic Bullet Theory Two Step  Opinion leaders to masses Multi-step  Reverse grapevine  Guerilla / viral

16 Diffusion Theory (Rogers) Three phases  Information acquisition  Information evaluation  Adaption or rejection Five stages or groups  Innovators: may be originators or introducers  Early adaptors  Early majority  Late majority  Laggards

17 Other Theories Cultivation Theory  Media provides viewers with unrealistic view, but one that many take to be realistic  Exposure over time changes views  Mean World Theory Uses and Gratifications  People interact with media because of its utility and rewards  Promise of reward / effort required = probability of selection Agenda Setting  Media sets the societal agenda  They determine what the important issues are  Framing

18 Functions of Mass Media Entertain Persuade Inform Legitimize or status conferral Narcotize Enforce societal mores or introduce new mores


Download ppt "Week 5 -- Theory. Core Questions Who am I as a communicator? What resources enable me to communicate? How am I different from other communicators? How."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google