Tuesday, July 21

Unit 6 Speech: The Life of King Henry VIII

Thesis - King Henry VIII is one of the most misunderstood persons of all times. Many people think he had eight wives and he killed them all, in reality he only had six wives and he only had two of them killed.
i. Henry had one brother and two sisters. His brother, Arthur, was the eldest therefore; he would be king when their father died. Arthur married Catherine of Aragon, when they were both young, because his father wanted to ally England with Spain, and her dowry was large. They were only married a week when he died. Now Henry was to be King. Within three years, Henry’s father died and Henry became King Henry VIII.
ii. Henry decided to marry his brother’s widow, Catherine of Aragon. She told him that Arthur and she did not consummate their marriage before he died. Catherine only gave Henry one daughter, Mary. Henry desperately wanted a male, so when he died England would have a King. Once he found out that she could not have any more children, he decided to marry Anne Boleyn, because she was pregnant with his child and their was a good chance it would be a boy. First he had to divorce himself from Catherine. In order to do so, he had to break with the Roman Church, and create the Church of England, where he could grant himself a divorce, because the Pope refused to grant it to him. He broke with the Roman Church, and married Anne Boleyn.
iii. All of Catherine’s supporters called Anne a witch, and she would have mud thrown at her whenever she went into the public. She gave birth to a girl, Elizabeth, a year later she miscarried a son. Henry then was told that she cheated on him with several of people, including her brother. Henry put her on trial and it was decided that she would be beheaded. Within two weeks of her death Henry married Jane Seymour. Henry waited to give her a coronation until she gave him a son. Within a year she did indeed give him a son, Edward. However, due to exhaustion she died within two weeks of giving birth to him.
iv. Two years after Jane’s death, Henry decided to get another foreign bride, Anne of Cleaves. He consented to marry her and make her Queen, without even seeing her. She turned out to be very ugly, and they did not consummate their marriage. Henry was already fond of his next wife, Katherine Howard, and Anne gave consent to annul the marriage on the grounds of them never consummating it. Henry married Katherine Howard. Less than a year into their marriage, rumors of her infidelity began. Henry seeing that it would be possible for her to want someone more her age, which was 20 at the time. Her downfall was that she appointed one of her admirers as her personal secretary. This was enough evidence for Henry. She was sent to the Tower of London, and found guilty, she was executed and laid to rest were Anne Boleyn was, who happened to be her cousin.
v. At this time in his life, Henry was very sickly, he had an ulcerated leg, and he was very heavy. He married Katherine Parr, who was a widow at the time. Henry’s health began to fail, and his court conservatives were worried about Katherine’s interest in reformed faith. They set out to find evidence against her. Before this was brought to Henry, he died on January 1547. Only a few months after his death Katherine married Thomas Seymour, and later died after giving birth to a daughter.
vi. King Henry VIII successor was his 9 year old son, Edward, son of Jane Seymour. He was sickly like his father and died at age 15. Mary, Catherine of Aragon’s daughter, took the throne for several months, and then was sent to the Tower of London for treason. Finally Elizabeth, Anne Boleyn’s daughter took the throne. She reigned over England for 45 years.
vii. Henry VIII was not viscous as everyone thinks, he just wanted a son, and when a wife stopped having children he would find a way to get a new one. Anne Boleyn and Katherine Howard were the only two he actually had put to death, but there was evidence that proved that they cheated on him. He went through all these wives and his daughter Elizabeth is the one who is most widely known.

(I tried to post my video of my speech, but it would not load, sorry)

Friday, June 5

Interpersonal Communication vs. Intrapersonal Communication

Interpersonal communication is the communication between two people who have a relationship together. A study shows that a couple who communicate more are more likely to last longer than a couple who does not.

Intrapersonal communication is the communication has with them self, through self-talking or thinking to them self. People use this everyday, a lot of people plan their day in their head before they begin it.


This information came from the textbook:
Wood, Julia T., ed. Communication Mosaics: An Introduction to the Field of Communication, 5Th ed. Boston: Thomson Wadsworth, 2008.

Mass Communication

Mass Communication is a major source for people to receive information and entertainment. Mass Communication can be used by television, radio, Internet, and print sources (books, magazines and newspapers). These sources can present humans the views of other people, events and cultural life. We can use mass communication to present our own views to the world also, (like blogging).

There are four major advancements in mass communication:
1.) Tribal Epoch, talking, started since the beginning of time, communicate mainly face to face.
2.) Literate Epoch, alphabet, started around 2000 BC, communication does not have to be face to face.
3.) Print Epoch, books, started around 1450 AD, communicate to hundreds at once.
4.) Electronic Epoch, telegraph, started around 1850 AD, communicate to someone specific miles away.

This information came from the textbook:
Wood, Julia T., ed. Communication Mosaics: An Introduction to the Field of Communication, 5th ed. Boston: Thomson Wadsworth, 2008.

Wednesday, June 3

Link for 2 Communication Models

For more information on the transmission model and the transactional model and other models visit this website:

http://www.shkaminski.com/Classes/Handouts/Communication%20Models.htm

Although adapted and updated, much of the information in this lecture is derived from C. David Mortensen, Communication: The Study of Human Communication (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1972), Chapter 2, “Communication Models.”

2 Communication Models

The Transmission Model


This model was created by Claude Shannon. He was able to predict the decay of a message over a long distance by working out a mathematical formula. Warren Weaver saw that Shannon's model had broader implications. This model is very easy to understand. It puts the communication process in a straight line. The sender encodes a message, which is sent through the channel, interfered by noise. David Berlo recognized that the Shannon-Weaver model describes more than a telephone transmission. One can use this model for nearly all verbal interaction. Basic components of this model include: Sources and receivers (speaker and listener), Encoding and decoding (people encode messages by putting converting thoughts into their message, and they decode when they convert messages back into thought), Messages (names the substance of communication, what is being said, it can be verbal or non-verbal), Channel (the medium which the message circulates, the air which the message passes or electronic signals which converts the message), Noise (static in the phone line, or anything that hinders the communication process).

The Transactional Model

This model transfers the basics of the Shannon-Weaver model and focuses more on the heart of the communication process. It focuses more on the theory that we are always sending messages even if they are non-verbal, unintentional or quite explicit. The Shannon-Weaver model's heart is the transmission of the communication process, but the transactional model's heart is shared meaning.

ALL INFORMATION INCLUDING PICTURES CAME FROM THIS WEBSITE:

https://ecore.view.usg.edu/webct/urw/lc18395011.tp0/cobaltMainFrame.dowebct