4. - The elements of communication are
essential tools or components for
effective communication between
sender and receiver.
- Communication elements are also
known as the components of
communication.
5. 9 ELEMENTS OF COMMUNICATION
CONTEXT, SENDER, ENCODER, MESSAGE, CHANNEL,
DECODER, RECEIVER, FEEDBACK, AND NOISE
6. 1. CONTEXT IN COMMUNICATION
context refers to the circumstances of the situation in
which communication is taking place.
Types of Communication Contexts:
-Interpersonal Communication
-Intrapersonal Communication
-Group Communication
-Public Communication
-Mass Communication
7. Intrapersonal Communication - involves one person; it is often called
“self-talk”.
Interpersonal Communication - normally involves two people, and
can range from intimate and very personal to formal and impersonal.
Group Communication - is a dynamic process where a small number
of people engage in a conversation.
Public Communication - one person speaks to a group of people.
Mass Communication - involves sending a single message to a
group.
8. SENDER IN COMMUNICATION
sender is the individual who initiates a message
and is also called the communicator or source
of communication.
The sender might be a speaker, a writer, or
someone who merely gestures. The individual
or the group of individuals who responds to the
sender is called the receiver or audience.
9. is the process of turning thoughts
into communication. The encoder
uses a ‘medium’ to send the
message — a phone call, email, text
message, face-to-face meeting, or
other communication tool.
ENCODING IN COMMUNICATION
10. MESSAGE IN COMMUNICATION
is the content of the communication
process. The originator of the
message in the communication
process is the sender. The sender
conveys the message to a receiver.
11. is the means of passing information
from a sender to a recipient.
Determining the most appropriate
channel, or medium, is critical to the
effectiveness of communication.
CHANNEL IN COMMUNICATION
13. RECEIVER IN COMMUNICATION
s the listener, reader, or observer—
that is, the individual (or the group
of individuals) to whom a message
is directed.
14. FEEDBACK IN COMMUNICATION
is the response or reaction of the
receiver after perceiving or
understanding the message. It enables
the sender to evaluate the effectiveness
of the message.
15. NOISE IN COMMUNICATION
refers to influences on effective
communication that influence the
interpretation of conversations. While
often looked over, communication noise
can have a profound impact both on our
perception of interactions with others and
our analysis of our own communication
proficiency.
20XX presentation title 15