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Media Literacy Part 8: The Internet 249 Views


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Transcript

00:01

We speak student!

00:05

Media Literacy

00:07

The Internet

00:09

a la Shmoop

00:12

Okay, moving to the next lesson. Medium/well-done.

00:15

The topic is the Internet.

00:17

So, Deb, the Internet's all about communication.

00:19

Talk to us about the different types of communication

00:21

that it engenders.

00:24

Okay, cool, we're gonna get a lot of five-dollar words up here.

00:26

So, yeah, the Internet is 100% about communication.

00:30

Think about everything you do on the Internet.

00:31

All you're doing, really, is communicating.

00:34

So first we can talk about

00:37

timeliness of communication.

00:39

And the two big words here are "synchronous" and "asynchronous" communication.

00:43

Synchronous communication means it's happening at the same time; it's in sync.

00:48

Asynchronous communication is when it's not happening at the same time.

00:52

So what we're doing right now is synchronous communication.

00:55

We're talking to each other.

00:57

I'm saying something; you're responding. And vice-versa.

00:59

That is the same for usually Google chats.

01:03

- You say something; someone usually responds right back. - Sure. Skype.

01:06

Skype. Anything where you're saying something

01:08

and the person is responding in the exact same time.

01:12

That's synchronous.

01:13

[ uh-oh ]

01:14

Asynchronous is stuff like e-mail.

01:17

I send an e-mail. I wait anywhere between

01:19

four seconds if it's you

01:20

or hours or days for most people.

01:24

And that means I'm sending something,

01:27

then there's a time that passes,

01:28

and then something else happens.

01:30

So snail mail -

01:32

that's asynchronous.

01:33

E-mail.

01:35

Text messages are often asynchronous.

01:38

Depends on who you're texting with.

01:40

And this changes how you're going to react.

01:44

This is why people always say,

01:46

"Oh, it's easier to e-mail someone

01:48

than talk to them in person."

01:49

Because that's why you would text someone

01:50

to ask them out on a date instead of

01:52

saying it in person. Because if you're in person,

01:54

they're right there.

01:55

- They're gonna respond yes or no. Exactly. - Rejection's all the more painful.

01:59

Okay so we have next five-dollar words.

02:02

What are unilateral and bilateral communication?

02:06

So unilateral

02:09

means that it is going in one direction, the communication.

02:13

Bilateral means it's going in two directions.

02:15

So what we're doing now, bilateral communication.

02:17

I'm communicating with you; you're communicating back.

02:20

Same with text messages,

02:22

e-mails, et cetera.

02:23

If I were to e-mail someone and they never wrote me back,

02:26

then we have unilateral.

02:27

The famous unilateral communications are

02:30

- TV, radio, movies, yeah. - Yeah, radio stations, television, newspapers.

02:33

Yeah. As much as I can scream at the judges

02:36

on So You Think You Can Dance,

02:38

- they're not talking back to me. - Right.

02:40

So that is unilateral communication.

02:43

And then it comes in various forms:

02:46

one-to-one, one-to-many, many-to-many.

02:48

We have one-to-one communication.

02:49

That's what we're doing.

02:50

I'm talking to one person; one person is responding.

02:53

We have one-to-many.

02:55

That would be if I

02:57

wrote a blog post and many people read it.

02:59

I'm one person writing it, but lots of people are consuming it.

03:02

And then many-to-many would be

03:04

Google Hangouts or any sort of chat room

03:08

or anything where there's a lot of people

03:09

- talking to each other all at once. - The Facebook's kind of that.

03:11

- LinkedIn. Yeah. Okay, fair enough. - Yeah.

03:14

[ whoop ]

03:16

What are the different types of communication we can do

03:19

over the Internet?

03:21

What are unilateral and bilateral communication?

03:26

What are the three different types of communication?

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