GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES CHALLENGE: IMPROVING COMMUNICATION

Part 1: Communication
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Slide 1: Slide
EngelsMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 2,3

This lesson contains 122 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 12 videos.

time-iconLesson duration is: 210 min

Introduction

Uitleg bij §1 van het Thema media. Methode: Thema's Maatschappijleer

Items in this lesson

Part 1: Communication

Slide 1 - Slide

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Learning goals
You know the communication model and know how to apply it 
You can explain what reliable information is
You can give an example of one-sided communication
You know the difference between verbal and non-verbal communication 
You know what mass communication is 

Slide 2 - Slide

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What comes to mind when you think of the word 'communication'?

Slide 3 - Mind map

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A teacher listens intentionally to a pupil telling him about his home situation.
Is this communication?
A
Yes
B
No

Slide 4 - Quiz

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A teacher provides feedback to a pupil, who slouches in her chair and has an angry look on her face.
Is this communication?
A
Yes
B
No

Slide 5 - Quiz

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Two pupils mimicking things to each other/ making gestures to let each other know how a test went, when not all pupils have finished yet.
Is this communication?
A
Yes
B
No

Slide 6 - Quiz

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A teacher mails a pupil, informing him/her that they scored an insufficient for her assignment.
Is this communication?
A
Yes
B
No

Slide 7 - Quiz

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"Je kunt niet niet communiceren"

Slide 8 - Slide

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What is communication?
A
Using language
B
Interpreting a message
C
Transferring information from one person to another
D
Understanding a message

Slide 9 - Quiz

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communication
ewelkW
sender
receiver
het doorgeven en ontvangen van informatie
content
medium

Slide 10 - Slide

Alle gesprekken die je voert, via welk middel dan ook, is een vorm van communicatie. Wij communiceren tegenwoordig heel vaak via een medium.
communication
Communication happens all the time. 
Four types of communication are: 
  1. direct or indirect
  2. one-sided or two-sided 
  3. non-verbal or verbal
  4. personal or mass communication

Slide 11 - Slide

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Direct and indirecte communication


  • direct communicationface-to-face contact (language and gestures). In the same space

  • indirect communication: telephone, computer, newspaper, TV. Not in the same space.

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one-sided or two-sided
One-sided = you only receive information, you can't react. Often indirect information

Two-sided = you are both sender and receiver. There's often interaction between sender and receiver

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Interaction
an occasion when two or more people or things communicate with or react to each other.

Messages go to and fro.

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What is this?
A
One-sided communication
B
Two-sided communication

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A
One-sided communication
B
Two-sided communication

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Reading an information brochure
TTO-intake interview
A chat in a group app
One-sided communication 
Two-sided communication
Multi- communication

Slide 17 - Drag question

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non-verbal or verbal
Body language is non-verbal communication: your body 'talks': feelings, thoughts, and posture often show 'on the outside. This can be conscious (e.g. waving) or subconscious (blushing, sweating)
Speaking or writing  are called verbal communication: words are used to convey a message.

Slide 18 - Slide

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List as many ways of how to communicate non-verbally

Slide 19 - Mind map

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A
Verbal communication
B
Non-verbal communication

Slide 20 - Quiz

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A
Verbal communication
B
Non-verbal communication

Slide 21 - Quiz

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The King of Non-verbal Communication

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Slide 23 - Video

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What's the difference between verbal and non-verbal communication?

Slide 24 - Open question

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List 3 examples of non-verbal communication
A
Laughing, talking and nodding
B
Laughing, pulling an angry face and your text book
C
Laughing, pulling an angry face and eye contact

Slide 25 - Quiz

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Verbal communication is communication without words
A
True
B
False

Slide 26 - Quiz

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List 3 examples of verbal communication
A
Talking, whispering and yelling
B
Talking, waving and e-mail
C
Pulling an angry face, talking and waving

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Slide 28 - Video

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personal or mass communication
1 zender, veel ontvangers
Wanneer een medium (tv, krant, boeken, radio, billboards, enz.) een groot publiek bereikt, is het een massamedium
mass communication

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Drawing exercise

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Do you think what I think?
Step 1: work with your neighbour
Step 2: sit back-to-back
Step 3: one person draws an object on their paper 
Step 4: the one with the drawing explains how the other should draw it. 
Step 5: Are the instructions good enough and can the other see what the object is supposed to be?
Question: is my way of communicating clear enough to get the message across to the receiver who has no former knowledge? 

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mediawijsheid 
Part 2:
(Social) Media

Slide 32 - Slide

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What are media?

  • Media is the plural of medium
  • Media are means of communication to send messages 
  • If the audience is big, we talk about mass media
  • Media that use one-sided communication are e.g newspapers, TV, radio and film 
  • Social media are media that make use of multi-communication

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What are the purposes of media?

Slide 34 - Slide

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What are social media?

Social media (vert.: sociale media) is the English term for any website, app and/or platform where the users (and not some group of editors ) make their own content. 

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Characteristics of social media
  • online platforms and mass communication
  • usually work via an app
  • users make the content; often there's little to no control by the platform 
  • a lot of interaction among their users 
  • usually millions of users 

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What are social media used for?
knowledge and news
entertainment
contact
identity

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2

Slide 38 - Video

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What do YOU use social media for?

Slide 39 - Open question

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00:10
What social media do you use?

Slide 40 - Mind map

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00:59
Which function of media use is best visible here?
A
knowledge and news
B
entertainment
C
social contact
D
identity

Slide 41 - Quiz

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What does the term trending topic' mean?

Slide 42 - Open question

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What does 'vlogging' mean?

Slide 43 - Open question

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What does 'a tag' mean?

Slide 44 - Open question

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List advantages of social media

Slide 45 - Mind map

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Advantages of social media

  • Usually fun, simple and free 
  • One can get to know people easily and you may even become famous! 
  • The world gets 'smaller': we learn a lot about other parts of the world 
  • News can be spread in a quick and easy way
  • It offers freedom of speech and press freedom if not allowed


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List disadvantages of social media

Slide 47 - Mind map

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Disadvantages of social media

  • Threatening, blackmail and cyberbullying 
  • It may be TOO anonymous 
  • Difference between real news and fake news sometimes unclear 
  • privacy may be at risk
  • platforms may disappear within a few years 
  • It may be addictive (fear of missing out)


Slide 48 - Slide

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Video
Clipphanger: Wat is socialbesitas?

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Slide 50 - Video

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How many hours a day do you spend on social media?

Slide 51 - Open question

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Why do we think
'likes' are so important?

Slide 52 - Open question

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Likes...
A
Cause affirmation (bevestiging) and praise!
B
Take fears away!
C
Give us the sense of being in love!
D
Are a cure for insecurity!

Slide 53 - Quiz

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Social Media
makes us less social
A
Waar
B
Niet waar

Slide 54 - Quiz

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Not only is the importance of social signals a very old feature, it is also deeply rooted in our brain.

Slide 55 - Slide

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How do you feel if you get a negative comment on social media?

Slide 56 - Open question

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Would you ever post a like to someone who never does the same to you?

Slide 57 - Open question

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Do you ever feel bad about
social media or because of
something that goes on online?
A
YES!
B
Sometimes!
C
Never!
D
I barely use social media....

Slide 58 - Quiz

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Part 4: 
Media literacy

Slide 59 - Slide

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Goal
At the end of this part, you know what media literacy is and how to deal with social media in a safe way. We will also have established a set of 'rules' on how to behave on social media.

Slide 60 - Slide

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What do you already know about
media literacy?

Slide 61 - Mind map

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Media literacy
Media literacy is anything that has to do with new media, social media, internet, smartphones, tablets and how to deal with these in a sensible way. 

Media literacy is a set of skills you need to participate in the digital world in an active and conscious way. 

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Question
How can one tell if the information you hear, read or see is reliable? 

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Reliable information
  • Sources: where does a text come from?
  • Have Facts (objective) and opinions (subjective) been separated?
  • Adversarial procedure: have different people, with different perspectives, been consulted?

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Wat betekent 'fake news'?

Slide 68 - Open question

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Is 'media literacy' a children's right? ?

Slide 69 - Open question

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The right to media literacy
In 1989,  governments across the world promised all children the same rights by adopting the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. This treaty grants all children a comprehensive set of rights. 
However, much has changed over the past decades. Our current media society offers children opportunities, but also raises questions about the rights, duties and possibilities of children, their parents/guardians and the media. 

The manifest Right to Media Literacy lists 10 basic media rights  - established by children and experts:

Slide 70 - Slide

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The right to  media literacy - Children have the right to:
  1. internet access 
  2. safe media
  3. education in medialiteracy 
  4. media literate education 
  5. 'be forgotten'
  6. freedom of speech in the media 
  7. online privacy
  8. protection against harmful images and texts 
  9. play online 
  10. media boundaries

Slide 71 - Slide

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What does 'trolling' mean?

Slide 72 - Open question

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Cyberbullying

Slide 73 - Slide

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Slide 74 - Video

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Slide 75 - Video

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Statement 1:
Making jokes on social media or internet is less bad than IRL.

A
Agree
B
Disagree

Slide 76 - Quiz

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Statement 2:
Without a profile on Facebook, Instagram etc. you can't be a victim of cyber bullying.
A
Agree
B
Disagree

Slide 77 - Quiz

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Statement 3:
Posting pictures of someone else in swimming trunks or a bikini is a way of cyber bullying

A
Agree
B
Disagree

Slide 78 - Quiz

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Statement 4:
The quality of my friendships improves because of social media.
A
Agree
B
Disagree

Slide 79 - Quiz

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Statement 5:
Sociale Media are a distraction when you do homework or other important things.
A
Agree
B
Disagree

Slide 80 - Quiz

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Statement 6:
Young people lose contact with the real world because they are constantly on their phones.
A
Agree
B
Disagree

Slide 81 - Quiz

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Have you ever experienced something 'bad' on social media?
A
No, never
B
Yes, once
C
Yes, more than once
D
IDK

Slide 82 - Quiz

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What is Socialbesitas?
A
disliking social media
B
Being addicted to chatting
C
binge-watching
D
Being addicted to using social media

Slide 83 - Quiz

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I count to 10 before posting a comment on social media.
A
Yes
B
No

Slide 84 - Quiz

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Anyone is allowed to post photos and videos of me on Insta without asking.
A
Yes
B
No

Slide 85 - Quiz

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If I think a post is 'fake news', I make sure I check it before sharing it or responding to it.
A
Yes
B
No

Slide 86 - Quiz

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If I repost/forward a hurtful video, I am also responsible/accountable for the consequences.
A
Yes
B
No

Slide 87 - Quiz

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Improving communication

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Slide 90 - Video

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observing and listening

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factors that affect observation:
1. The observee: appearance (clothes, hairdo, age, sex, skin colour); emotions: surprise, fear, anger, sadness, happiness
2. The observer: mood (are you tired, excited, sleepy), personal motivation, prejudices, age, sex, upbringing, education and experience 

Slide 92 - Slide

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Wat is interpreteren?

Slide 93 - Open question

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Interpretation
Interpretation is assigning meaning to someone's feelings or thoughts, based on someone's action. 

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Observation
Exercises

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0

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Listening

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Slide 101 - Video

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Levels of listening
  • passive listening is not listening
  • selective listening is listening intently. You only pay attention to the information you need
  • superficial listening is a minimal reaction
  • active listening is really listening 

Slide 102 - Slide

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Listening...
  • Is quite a challenge
  • Eye contact
  • Voice
  • Dynamics
  • Posture
  • Nodding, and uh-huh-ing

Slide 103 - Slide

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Welk misverstand is er hier?

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Wat is feedback?

Slide 105 - Open question

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Feedback
Feedback is het terugkoppelen van informatie van de ene persoon naar de andere, waarbij duidelijk gemaakt wordt hoe de boodschap (of het gedrag) van de een op de ander overkomt. 

Mondelinge communicatie zonder feedback stopt vrijwel meteen. Als zender heb je namelijk behoefte aan feedback, al zijn het maar kleine geluidjes zoals 'hmm' of knikjes van het hoofd.

Slide 106 - Slide

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Soorten vragen
Wat voor soorten vragen ken je?

Slide 107 - Open question

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Had je dat niet wat subtieler aan kunnen pakken? is een
A
Suggestieve vraag
B
tegenvraag
C
Verduidelijkingsvraag
D
Confronterende vraag

Slide 108 - Quiz

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Waarom vraag je dat? is een
A
Tegenvraag
B
Verduidelijkingsvraag

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In de communicatie wordt vaak gesproken over OMA thuislaten. Waar staat deze afkorting voor?
A
oorzaken, manieren en adviezen
B
opnames, moetjes en aanvullingen
C
oplossingen, maatregelen en aanwijzingen
D
oordelen, meningen en aannames of ongevraagde adviezen

Slide 117 - Quiz

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Een regel in de communicatie is dat je ANNA meeneemt in een goed gesprek. Waar staat de afkorting ANNA voor?
A
Altijd Noemen, Nooit Aanwijzen
B
Altijd Navragen, Niet zomaar Aannemen
C
Altijd Nemen, Niet Afgeven
D
Altijd Nagaan, Niet Afgaan

Slide 118 - Quiz

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Wat betekent LSD?
A
Luisteren, spreken, doorzetten
B
Luisteren, selecteren, domineren
C
Luisteren, samenvatten, doorvragen
D
Een snoepje

Slide 119 - Quiz

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Oefening 

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Slide 121 - Video

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Now that you know more about communication and social media...
Let's create our own set of social media rules: at school and school-related!

In little groups, make up a set of a minimum of 10 rules concerning social media and school.
Share the rules in class. Your teacher will upload them in a document.

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