During the Facebook session of the Penn State Teaching and Learning Symposium, the fascination with Facebook and the desire to communicate intrigued me. I began to think about how we have previously defined community, and I think that the definition needs to include communication. In a community, you are constantly communicating both verbally and nonverbally. You are confirming and rejecting ideas, thoughts, perceptions, and actions. Communication is essential in a community (I think). From there, my thoughts wandered into whether communication was innate. After all groups of animals, be it herds of cattle, flocks of geese, schools of fish, and even communities of people, all have to communicate in order to function and survive. The rise in popularity of the social networking sites (Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, etc.) confirmed my thoughts about our natural desires to communicate with others and create community.
Communication and Community
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Communication is key within a community. One interesting idea from your posting is that communication occurs "both verbally and nonverbally." I am wondering what is the nonverbal communication in our online communities? Can time (how fast it takes you to respond) can be considered a nonverbal form of communication?
Communication is key. I think communication is innate - look at babies crying for attention.
If teachers can't communicate with students, success is unlikely. This gets into Lessig's comments about the need to avoid a dichotomy of language.
I agree that time can be a nonverbal form of communication, but there is uncertainty. You aren't sure yo are being ignored or put on the backburner unless you have confirmation your email, poke, message, tweet, photo, video, etc was received and read/viewed.
Great question...You are really making me think... Besides wait time for responding, would the pictures we post or our icons be included as nonverbal communication?