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Social Work Practice and Reflective Communication SWP22REC

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Title: Social Work Practice and Reflective Communication SWP22REC


1
Social Work Practice and Reflective
Communication SWP22REC
  • Lecture Two
  • Slides prepared
  • by
  • Dr Trish McNamara

2
What is the science of communication?
  • Making sense of the messages given and
    received through
  • Physiology of the senses
  • Psychology of cognition
  • Psychology of emotion
  • Linguistics

3
Perception
  • Self
  • Others
  • Culture
  • Empathy
  • Adler and Rodman (2006) pp 33-73

4
Perception
  • Perception is information which is taken
  • which is taken in by the senses, processed by
    the brain, stored in memory and which produces
    some form of physical and mental activity.
  • Ellis and McClintock (2nd ed., 1994) Ch 1

5
Sensory information
  • Smell taste touch (experiment)
  • Absolute sense thresholds
  • Brain processes interpreting the information
    gained from our senses
  • The Muller-Layer illusion
  • Ellis and McClintock (2nd Ed, 1994) Ch 1.

6
Perception (cont)
  • Storing in memory (round red object apple ball
    cherry, Pythagoras theorem)
  • Expectancy sets (glowing red pot is hot can lead
    to prejudice dislike of people or group of
    people)
  • Subliminal perception (at the extreme limits of
    human senses body odour/ pupils dilate)
  • Selected perception (regular flashing vs
    intermittent flashing adverts accommodating to
    sleeping near busy road)

7
Communication models
  • Maps, flow charts, diagrams
  • Attempt to describe a theory, a process, an event
    of communication
  • Ellis and McClintock (1994) p.64

8
The Shannon-Weaver Model(Transmission-Process)
  • S - T - R - D
  • send transmit receive dispatch

9
Key concepts of Shannon and Weavers Model
  • Channel of communication (post or phone)
  • Coding or encoding (English or Japanese)
  • noise (anything that disrupts or interrupts
    communication flow)
  • Channel overload (everyone talking at once)
  • Redundancy
  • Entropy

10
Redundancy
  • Jack and --- went up the hill
  • Mary --- a little lamb
  • Old King Cole was a --- old soul

11
Entropy
  • a measure of the disorder within any system

12
A Morning!B Morning!A Nice day, isnt it?B
For a murder..
  • Last line is entropic unexpected,
    unpredictable, difficult to decode

13
Semiotic School of Communication Theory
  • Concerned with how we interpret and ascribe
    meaning to the messages sent

14
Peirces Model
  • Focuses upon the interconnectedness between the
    sign,
  • the object and the interpretant

15
Newspaper advertisement
  • First year apprentice wanted for trendy North
    Carlton salon.
  • Call Tuesday after 10am. Ph 93476666

16
Words and meanings!
  • Hairdresser Hello
  • Caller May I speak to Tuesday?
  • Hairdresser There is no one by that name working
    here
  • But the ad said call Tuesday!
  • Hairdresser (and listening audience) silenced by
    laughter..

17
Can you think of any context in which the word
dog is used to describe anything but a four
footed animal?
18
Perceiving the self
  • Moods and feelings
  • Appearance and physical condition
  • Social traits
  • Talents you possess or lack
  • Intellectual capacity
  • Strong beliefs
  • Social roles
  • Adler and Rodman (2006) p. 48

19
Language and meaningAdler and Rodman (2006)
Chapter 3
20
The nature of language
  • Language is symbolic
  • Meanings are in people, not words (John Howard on
    anti- terrorism laws)
  • Language is rule governed

21
Language is rule governed
  • Phonological rules the sound when pronounced (
    buch, book)
  • Semantic rules the specificity of meaning
    (Tuesday)
  • Pragmatic rules helps us to shape the meaning
    to the context

22
The power of language
  • Language shapes attitudes
  • Language reflects attitudes

23
THE WAR AGAINST TERRORISMTHE WAR AGAINST
TERRORTHE WAR AGAINST IRAQTHE WAR IN IRAQ
24
Language reflects attitudes
  • Power
  • Affiliation
  • Attraction and interest
  • Responsibility
  • Adler and Rodman (2006) pp.85-88

25
Troublesome language
  • Misunderstanding (no)
  • Evasive language (I am very sympathetic to the
    people of your street becoming desensitized to
    hate words - A and R p97)
  • Disruptive/angry (No! You are not sympathetic!)
  • Relative words (large and small)
  • Slang and jargon (bacon and eggs legs in
    Cockney)
  • see
  • Don Watsons
  • (2003) Death Sentence The decay of public
    language
  • and
  • (2004) Weasel Words Contemporary cliche?s, cant
    and management jargon

26
Gender and language
  • Content (sport, media personalities vs family,
    weight, food and fashion???)
  • Reason for communicating (women need same sex
    conversation offer/receive support men want
    same sex conversation to assert
    authority/viewpoint)
  • Conversational style (fluid, dynamic, aggressive,
    strong vs tentative and aesthetic)
  • Non-gendered variables (cooperative versus
    competitive feminist versus non-feminist)
  • Sex roles (feminine speakers are more tentative
    and inclusive masculine speakers are dominant
    and aggressive)
  • Adler and Rodman pp.98-100
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