The sender is ALWAYS responsible for the communication. Furthermore the sender is responsible for getting feedback describing the communication, not just did the receiver hear it, to be sure the communication was received. Why is this? The receiver does not know what it is the sender is trying to communicate or if it was communicated accurately. Only the sender can possible know unless the receiver is a mind reader...
it is important because it interferes with the conversation between the sender and the receiver.
Receiver
With no RECEIVER address the postal systems won't know where to DELIVER the letter. With no SENDER address the postal systems won't know where to RETURN the letter if the intended receiver moved (and left no forwarding address).
speak on the level of the receiver
A sender is the individual or entity that initiates and transmits a message or communication. The receiver is the individual or entity that receives and interprets the message or communication sent by the sender. In communication, the sender encodes the message, and the receiver decodes it to understand the information being conveyed.
The sender is ALWAYS responsible for the communication. Furthermore the sender is responsible for getting feedback describing the communication, not just did the receiver hear it, to be sure the communication was received. Why is this? The receiver does not know what it is the sender is trying to communicate or if it was communicated accurately. Only the sender can possible know unless the receiver is a mind reader...
sender is to deliver or give message while the receiver is to receive a message from the giver or sender.
The idea that both the sender and receiver are responsible for listening is called
it is important because it interferes with the conversation between the sender and the receiver.
it is important because it interferes with the conversation between the sender and the receiver.
The two most important parts of the communication process are the sender and the receiver. The sender communicates by speaking, writing, signing, etc. and the receiver will try to interpret the information that is sent.
Two parts of the communication process are encoding (when a sender translates their thoughts or ideas into a message) and decoding (when a receiver interprets and understands the message sent by the sender).
sender is to deliver or give message while the receiver is to receive a message from the giver or sender.
Receiver
With no RECEIVER address the postal systems won't know where to DELIVER the letter. With no SENDER address the postal systems won't know where to RETURN the letter if the intended receiver moved (and left no forwarding address).
Communication requires a sender and a receiver. In public speaking, there is not a continual switching of the sender and the receiver. The speaker is the sender in a public speaking situation.