ࡱ> q` ZbjbjqPqP 5::RF>\>\>\>\T\t:2d]L^]^]^]^]9^9^9^````d_albl7d$Tfhh[d9^9^9^9^9^[d^]^]pd```9^F^]^]``9^````^]] @JE:>\^``d0d``iy_`i``i``9^9^9^[d[d` 9^9^9^d9^9^9^9^:2:2:2*>\:2:2:2>\rB COM 252 Interpersonal Communication Department of Communication 2nd Floor Grehan Journalism Building University of Kentucky Spring 2007 Syllabus Section 005 Instructor: Don Lowe Office/Office hours: 11:00 to 12:00 p.m. Tues & Thurs and by appointment Phone: 257-2954 E-mail address: dlowe2@uky.edu Course Director: Traci Letcher 233 Grehan Bldg. 0042 859.257.7800 Course Website: comm.uky.edu/courses/com252/ Required Materials: Textbook: Adler, R.B., Rosenfeld, L. B., & Proctor, R. F., II (2007). Interplay: The process of Interpersonal communication, (10th edition). New York: Oxford University Press (ISBN: 0-19-530992-8 for internet shopping). Scan Forms (Optional) Approx. 10 Scantron forms (#882-ES) from the bookstore for taking tests and quizzes. You will also need a #2 pencil for tests and quizzes. E-mail Account: It is required that all students set up and use an approved e-mail account. If you do not already have one, please do so at: u-connect.uky.edu. The benefits you receive in this class are directly proportional to your efforts in keeping up with the assigned reading and actively participating in class to build trust, cooperation, support and mutual respect. COURSE OBJECTIVES AND REQUIREMENTS Many individuals believe that communication is so basic that it is taken for granted and not thought about seriously. Unfortunately, this attitude tends to result in such difficulties as misunderstandings, conflict, avoidance, and stereotyping. We will examine basic concepts, theories, and research findings relevant to initiating, developing, modifying, maintaining, and terminating relationships with an eye to the role of communication in the process. Lecture, discussion, in-and out-of-class observations, and applied assignments will be used to increase student knowledge and behavioral competence in interpersonal communication. Interpersonal Communication is designed to increase your understanding and implementation of effective interpersonal communication behaviors and skills. Throughout the semester will examine basic verbal and nonverbal concepts affecting the communication process between individuals in various interpersonal contexts. This course requires you to participate in written and oral activities designed to develop and improve interpersonal skills and will actually improve the quality of your life if you keep an open mind and participate actively! Topics may include: an introduction to interpersonal communication theory, relationship and conversation management, effective listening, conflict management, ethics in communicating, communication climate, and cultural/gender differences in interpersonal communication. Competencies and Objectives Interpersonal communication introduces students to the complex interaction of social and psychological forces operating in human communication. The course is designed with a dual approach consisting of both theory and application that allows students opportunities to critically evaluate the intricacies of interpersonal relationships and the communication issues surrounding human interaction in various contexts. At the conclusion of the course it is expected that students will demonstrate knowledge and skills in several core areas. Specifically, students should demonstrate an increased understanding of: 1. The options and alternatives for action in a wide variety of interpersonal situations. 2. Individual preferences and an increased appreciation for the differences of others. 3. The dialectical tensions that arise as students use communication to satisfy conflicting personal needs. 4. How the process of perception affects communication behavior. 5. The ethical dimensions of interpersonal communication. 6. The importance of nonverbal communication in successful interpersonal interactions. 7. Defensive and supportive communication climates. 8. Competence and an ability to assess the appropriateness and effectiveness of interpersonal strategies used in various interpersonal relationships. 9. Why and how relationships develop and the role communication plays in determining the nature and quality of interpersonal relationships. 10. Conflict in interpersonal communication and the application of conflict management principles. 11. Competencies related to communication with individuals from other cultures and co-cultures. In addition, COM 252 addresses the following University Studies Program Competencies: 1. Writing: To communicate effectively using standard written English. 2. Reading: To understand, analyze, summarize and interpret a variety of reading materials. 3. Integrated Learning: To think critically and make connections in learning across the disciplines. 4. Creative Thinking: To elaborate upon knowledge to create thought, processes, and/or products that are new to the students. 5. Ethics/Values: To demonstrate an awareness of ethical considerations in making value choices. COM 252 can be taken to fulfill the Oral Communication Skills Requirements in the University Studies Program. If you have any questions about this requirement, please contact Dr. Deanna Sellnow at 257-2886 or the USP Office at 257-3027. General Requirements You are expected to: 1. Be on time for all class meetings. 2. Interact productively in class discussions and group activities. 3. Be prepared daily for discussions and quizzes by reading all assigned material BEFORE the day it is listed on the course schedule. 4. Successfully deliver an instructional group workshop. 5. Submit all written assignments TYPED at the BEGINNING of the class period on the designated date. 6. Complete all major assignments (workshops, class assignments and tests). FAILURE TO COMPLETE THE WORKSHOP WILL RESULT IN AN E FOR THE COURSE - regardless of your accumulated point total. Failure to complete any major assignment will result in a drop of one letter grade for each assignment missed. Classroom Civility There are certain basic standards of classroom civility that should be adhered to, particularly on a communication course. Civility does not eliminate appropriate humor, enjoyment, or other features of a comfortable and pleasant classroom community. Classroom civility does, however, include the following: 1. Displaying respect for all members of the classroom community, both your instructor and fellow students. 2. Attentiveness to and participation in lectures, group activities, workshops, and other classroom exercises. 3. Avoidance of unnecessary disruptions during class such as private conversations, reading newspaper, and doing work for other classes. 4. Avoidance of racist, sexist, homophobic, or other negative language that may unnecessarily exclude members of our campus and classroom community. If a student consistently exhibits behavior that disrupts the class or contributes to a negative communication climate, action will be taken, including forced withdrawal from the course. In addition all university students are expected to abide by the Student Code of Conduct. You can access this five-part document at  HYPERLINK "http://www.uky.edu/StudentAffairs/DeanofStudents/conduct.htm" http://www.uky.edu/StudentAffairs/DeanofStudents/conduct.htm . Reasonable Accommodation If you have a special need that may require an accommodation or assistance, please inform the instructor as soon as possible. We cannot accommodate needs if we do not know what they are, so please notify the instructor right away. Help Available: If you need assistance with oral presentations, contact Cyndy Miller at  HYPERLINK "mailto:CHMiller12@aol.com" CHMiller12@aol.com or call 859-257-6137. If you need help with other skills (writing, time management, etc.), contact The Thomas D. Clark Study, 5th floor in W. T. Young Library, or call 257-3156, or go to:  HYPERLINK "http://www.uky.edu/UGS/study/" www.uky.edu/ugs/study/. Department of Communication Policies Research Policy: The Department of Communication is committed to involving undergraduate students in scholarly research so that they may understand the importance of generating new knowledge at the University of Kentucky as a Research I institution. Students in this class are expected to participate in one research study (approved by the University IRB and assigned for this course). The study may take up to 50 minutes of one regularly scheduled class period during the semester. Academic Integrity: We expect that all of the individual assignments you complete for COM 252 (and in all of your other courses) are always your own work. Please read again the information on plagiarism and cheating from your UK Student Rights and Responsibilities Handbook ( HYPERLINK "http://www.uky.edu/Student" www.uky.edu/StudentAffairs/Code/) and check with your instructor if you are uncertain about what this entails. If you have any questions about whether you may be plagiarizing in your work for COM 252, please be sure to contact your instructor well in advance of the due date for your assignment. COM 252 Policies Cell Phone/Electronic Devices Due to recent increases in photographic and messaging technologies, students are not allowed to use or have out cell phones and pagers during class time. If you carry a phone or pager, before class begins, the ringers should be turned off, and the hones stored in a secure place, out of sight. Cell phone use during class may result in a deduction of participation points. Cell phones seen out during quizzes/exams will be assumed to be used for cheating for which the student will receive a of zero on the exam and subject to other penalties (as described above). Attendance. ATTENDANCE IS REQUIRED. Class attendance and participation are important in accomplishing the goals of this course. Reading, class discussions, group workshops, and in-class activities increase both your understanding if interpersonal communication theory and the development of your interpersonal communication skills. In order to receive credit for attendance you must attend for the ENTIRE class period. Failure to do so will result in an absence for the given class session. Please arrive to class on time. Tardiness is unprofessional and is not fair to your instructor or to your classmates. Consequently, if you are consistently late or leave early, you can expect to have points deducted from your final grade for EACH tardy or early departure. Moreover, do not expect your instructor to cover any missed material specifically for you. If you are a few minutes late for a class, it is YOUR responsibility to make sure the instructor has not marked you absent for the day. This must be done on the day you are late. Otherwise, it holds as an unexcused absence. You will be allowed three unexcused absences during the semester. You cannot make up work missed for unexcused absences you simply receive a zero. For each subsequent unexcused absence over 3, 25 points will be deducted from your final grade. You are given these free absences for special situations for which you have to miss class but would not otherwise receive an official excuse. Do not use these freebies for blowing off class and then come to the instructor later (after you have gone over the limit) when you have a special circumstances and expect an excuse. The freebies allow for emergencies. Please dont abuse this option. The Students Rights and Responsibilities Handbook defines an excused absence as the following: 1. Illness of the student or serious illness of a member of the students immediate family; 2. The death of a member of the students immediate family; 3. Trips for members of student organizations sponsored by academic unit, trips for University classes, and trips for participation in intercollegiate athletic events; or 4. Major Religious holidays. For any officially excused absence, you are responsible for presenting official written documentation for the absence. For university-sponsored absences, this notification is to be given to the instructor prior to the absence. For other excused absences, this documentation must be presented within one week of the absence. If you miss class, please see a classmate regarding class discussions and assignments. Students are responsible for arranging to make up missed work. If you have excused absences in excess of one-fifth of the class contact hours, you shall have the right to petition for a W or the faculty member may require the student to petition for a W. See sections 5.2.4.1 and 5.2.4.2 of the Students Rights and Responsibilities Handbook for further clarification. COURSE REQUIREMENTS This course combines lectures by the instructor, class discussion of assigned textbook readings, group work, audio/video presentations emphasizing certain communication concepts and skills, oral presentations by students, quizzes, exams, and classroom activities which all contribute to your overall understanding of interpersonal communication. Out-of-class work will include written exercises (class assignments), library research of communication concepts and planning of activities that are presented in a group workshop. Assigned chapters should be read before class so that you will be able to make a contribution to the class discussions and activities and perform well on the quizzes and exams. Oral Skill Opportunities Since this is an oral communication skills course, we want to provide you with many opportunities to develop these skills. Aside from general class participation, such opportunities may include performance and/or evaluation of role-playing activities, one major in-class presentations, briefing sessions, and dyadic communication case studies, etc. Readings Your reading assignments are included in the course schedule. In addition to the textbook, you may, from time to time, be required to read other material that will be put on reserve in Young Library. If you do not do the reading, do not expect to benefit substantially from the course. Class sessions are used to supplement rather than to review the reading material assigned. Written Work Although this course meets the oral communication skills requirement, work in the class involves a number of written assignments as evidence that you understand and can apply the principles and concepts of effective oral communication. In all written work you will be expected to use correct spelling in all written work. Use of appropriate grammatical skills in oral and written communication is also very important. Throughout the course you will expand your personal vocabulary through the study of terms related to the course. Your written work will be evaluated on both content and mechanics. Good writing should be reasonably free of mistakes and without composition errors which are called gross errors (sentence fragments, run-on sentences, subject-verb disagreement, misspelled words, and typographical errors which result in such errors). All of your written work MUST BE TYPED or word-processed and are to use APA 5th Edition style guidelines. GRADED ASSIGNMENTS The course grade for COM 252 consists of a number of different elements Writing Assignments You will be assigned two papers and several smaller written works during the semester that are to be typed reflections/applications/analysis that relate course material to your own experiences. You will be expected to react to class activities, videos, stories, simulations, lectures and readings by integrating your knowledge of the concepts learned with your interpersonal relationships. These writing assignments will be reviewed only by your instructor and will be held in strict confidence. The writing will be graded on completeness, clarity, introspection and conceptual foundations. Writing assignments will be provided in class on the dates noted on your course schedule. Group Seminar In order to give you practical experience in developing your interpersonal communication competencies, you will design and manage a group seminar on specific concepts related to a topic assigned by the instructor. Grading criteria include: research (scholarship, outside sources, citing of sources, recent sources within last 5 years, use of academic sources), application/integration (demonstration of concepts, focus on interpersonal channel, skills and usefulness), innovation (originality, multimedia usage, minimum textbook reliance, use of creativity, taking risks) presentation (delivery, organization, clarity, balance, formal introductions and conclusions, timeliness, good transitions, on-time presentation, sense of purpose and sticking to it, question and answer period with class), written work (annotated bibliography, quality of handouts, agenda, synopsis, use of APA style, preliminary outlines). Quizzes Quizzes covering the readings will be administered throughout the semester. The number and frequency of the quizzes will be determined by the instructor. Your instructor may choose to give quizzes without prior announcement. Each quiz will consist of several multiple-choice questions addressing the reading for the assigned chapter(s). Quiz questions are designed to measure both your familiarity with key concepts and theories and your ability to apply this knowledge in specific situations. Exams Four exams will cover all of the course readings, class exercises and class discussions. They will consist of multiple choice questions. Determination of Final Grade The final grade will be determined by adding the total points earned for each of the graded assignments and referring to the grading scale. The final grade is based on number of points accumulatedNOT PERCENTAGES. Point Distribution 500 pt-spread EXAMS/QUIZZES 250 Four exams at 50 pts each (Final exam is 10% of total grade) Five quizzes at 10 pts each ORAL PRESENTATION 100 Presentation at 50 pts Outline at 25 pts Peer reviews 5 at 5 pts WRITTEN WORK 150 Term Paper at 50 pts Self Paper 20 pts Reference Library 20 pts Works Cited Page 20 pts Listen (in class) 20 pts My Day 20 pts TOTAL POINTS POSSIBLE 500 pts Grading Scale 500 pt-spread A = 450--500 B = 400-449 C = 350-399 D = 300-349 E = 0 299 Fall 2007 MWF Daily Schedule* DATE TOPIC READINGS *WRITTEN WORK W Aug 22 Orientation F Aug 24 Comm Process Chapter 1 M Aug 27 Axioms Quiz 1 Culture Chapter 2 W Aug 29 Video Valuing Diversity F Aug 31 Perception Chapter 4 M Sep 3 Labor Day No Class W Sep 5 Self Chapter 3 Self Papers Quiz 2 F Sep 7 Self Papers M Sep 10 Listening Chapter 7 Video W Sep 12 Seminars Review for Test 1 Assigned Ch 1, 2, 3, 4 Handouts F Sep 14 Test One Ch 1, 2, 3, 4 M Sep 17 Research Meet in Reference Library (Group 1)/OR In class TBA W Sep 19 Research Meet in Reference Library (Group 2)/OR In class TBA F Sep 21 KCA Convention No Class M Sep 24 Listening (In class) Works Cited W Sep 26 Verbals Chapter 5 Handout Quiz 3 F Sep 28 Video Chapter 5 Carlin M Oct 1 Nonverbals Chapter 6 Social Norms W Oct 3 Nonverbals Chapter 6 F Oct 5 Review for Test 2 Ch 5, 6, 7 Handout M Oct 8 Test 2 W Oct 10 Mid Term Grade Reports Attraction Theory Chapter 9 F Oct 12 Attraction Theory Chapter 9 Last Day to Drop Class M Oct 15 Relational Stages Chapter 9 W Oct 17 Relational Stages Chapter 9 F Oct 19 Assertiveness Chapter 11 (Last Day to Drop A Class) M Oct 22 Interpersonal Chapter 12 Quiz 4 Power Handouts W Oct 24 Conflict Chapter 12 Types/Strategies F Oct 26 Review for Test 3 Ch 9. 11, 12 M Oct 29 Test 3 W Oct 31 Symposium In Class Last Meetings F Nov 2 Symposiums All Outlines M Nov 5 Symposiums W Nov 7 Symposiums F Nov 9 Symposiums M Nov 12 Symposiums W Nov 14 NCA Convention/No class F Nov 16 NCA Convention/No class M Nov 19 Finish Chapters W Nov 21 Thanksgiving Break/No class F Nov 23 Thanksgiving Break/No class M Nov 26 Make Up Day W Nov 28 Discussion Gender Issues F Nov 30 Discussion Family Issues M Dec 3 Discussion Work Issues W Dec 5 Discussion Friend Issues Quiz 5 F Dec 7 Review for Final Examination All Chapters Final Exam Section 005 Monday December 10 at 10:30 a.m. *All dates are subject to change. 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