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Week 1: Professional Communication Theory
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Week 1: Professional Communication Theory
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Course: Jan 2026 - English II Difficulty: Intermediate Focus: The mechanics of communication, channels, and professional clarity.
1. The Communication Process
Communication is the strategic transmission of data and meaning. In professional environments, it is evaluated by its effectiveness—how well the received message matches the intended message.
1.1 The Transactional Model
Modern communication is a two-way street.
- Sender: Encodes the message using words, tone, or visuals.
- Channel: The medium used (e.g., verbal, written, digital).
- Receiver: Decodes the message based on their background (schema).
- Feedback: The receiver's response, confirming the message was understood ("Closing the Loop").
- Noise / Barriers: Anything that disrupts the message.
- Physical: Poor internet connection, loud environment.
- Psychological: Bias, stress, emotional state.
- Semantic: Using jargon the receiver doesn't understand.
1.2 Channel Richness
Not all mediums are equal. Choose the channel based on the complexity and sensitivity of the message:
- High Richness: Face-to-face, Video calls. Allows for immediate feedback and transmits body language/tone. Best for complex discussions or sensitive topics (like feedback or firing).
- Medium Richness: Telephone, Instant Messaging (Slack, Teams).
- Low Richness: Email, Formal Reports, Memos. One-way, no tone or body language. Best for objective data, documentation, and routine updates.
2. The 7 C's of Effective Communication
Professionalism in writing and speaking is often judged by these seven principles:
- Clear: Use simple, direct language. One main idea per sentence.
- Concise: Eliminate redundant words. Respect the reader's time.
- Poor: "At this point in time, we are currently experiencing a delay."
- Better: "We are currently delayed."
- Concrete: Provide specific facts and data rather than vague adjectives.
- Correct: Ensure grammar, spelling, and factual accuracy are flawless. Mistakes destroy credibility.
- Coherent: Ideas must flow logically. Use transition words (However, Moreover, Consequently) to connect thoughts.
- Complete: Answer the 5 W's (Who, What, Where, When, Why) and 1 H (How). Leave no room for guessing.
- Courteous: Adopt the "You Attitude" (focusing on the reader's perspective) while remaining polite and professional.
3. Active Listening
Communication involves receiving just as much as sending.
- Sensing: Physically hearing the words and observing body language.
- Evaluating: Processing the meaning within the proper context.
- Responding: Providing feedback, nodding, or asking clarifying questions to demonstrate engagement. Paraphrasing ("If I understand correctly...") is a powerful active listening tool.
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