SCHOOL OF
COMMUNICATION
CMNS 247-3
| Paul Reynolds |
Fall
2002
|
| HC Office: TBA; 291-3687 |
Harbour
Centre Day
|
| email: preynola@sfu.ca |
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION
Prerequisites:
45 or more credit hours including at least two lower division courses in Communication.
Recommended: LING260 and/or SA101.
Effective communication between individuals, nations, cultures, etc. depends
upon shared understanding and expectations regarding signs and sign-systems
through which information is structured and exchanged. Increasingly, North
Americans engaged in international activity today find themselves needing
to communicate with non-Western counterparts whose expectations regarding
interaction and communication differ significantly from their own.
In this seminar we will survey and interpret universals and variations in
signification and sign interpretation in international communication. We will
consider perspectives from which to identify and articulate differences as
well as universal patterns in sign interpretation and communication in international
relations, and particularly in development co-operation, economic and trade
relations. Throughout the seminar, comparative and contrastive examples will
be drawn from sign systems and communication practices current in the Asia-Pacific
region.
Required Texts:
(available from the downtown Bookstore)
McLaren, Margaret, Interpreting Cultural Differences: The Challenge of Intercultural
Communication. Norfolk, UK: Peter Francis Publishers, 1998.
Samovar, Larry A. and Richard E. Porter, Intercultural Communication: A Reader
(9th edition). Toronto: Wadsworth, 1999.
Requirements:
(subject to confirmation in first week of class)
1. Mid-term and final exams. Essay questions.
Mid-term covers lectures and readings for first half of course; final covers
second half. Mid-term 20% + Final 20% 40%
2. One term paper (10-12 pages double-spaced typewritten) on an aspect of
International Communication to be determined in discussion with the instructor.
40%
3. Presentation 10%
4. Tutorial participation 10%
The School expects that the grades awarded in this course will
bear some reasonable relation to established university-wide practices with
respect to both levels and distribution of grades. In addition, the School
will follow Policy T10.02 with respect to Intellectual Honesty
and Academic Discipline (see the current Calendar, General Regulations
section).