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  2. Transactionalism: An Historical and Interpretive Study

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transactionalism:_An...

    Citing the Ames studies of perception, Dewey argued that any purposive activity cannot be understood outside its connective context. To think is to be an aspect of a transaction in a specific and particular context. Human nature must be understand first and foremost where man is understood as an organism-environment together and at-once.

  3. Transactionalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transactionalism

    Transactions can involve any exchange between people or objects, including borrowing, lending, buying, selling, reading, writing, or relationships like parent-child and partnerships. [10] A transaction is thus a collaborative act in which all participants—whether human or part of the environment—are influenced and changed through their ...

  4. Transition (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transition_(linguistics)

    A transition or linking word is a word or phrase that shows the relationship between paragraphs or sections of a text or speech. [1] Transitions provide greater cohesion by making it more explicit or signaling how ideas relate to one another. [1] Transitions are, in fact, "bridges" that "carry a reader from section to section". [1]

  5. Louise Rosenblatt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louise_Rosenblatt

    Such an ongoing conversation between reader(s) and text(s) was her way of emphasizing the importance of literature for human development in democratic settings. [4] As part of her "transactional" theory, Rosenblatt distinguished between two kinds of reading, or "stances," which she viewed on a continuum between "efferent" and "aesthetic."

  6. Communication theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communication_theory

    Communication theories vary substantially in their epistemology, and articulating this philosophical commitment is part of the theorizing process. [1] Although the various epistemic positions used in communication theories can vary, one categorization scheme distinguishes among interpretive empirical, metric empirical or post-positivist, rhetorical, and critical epistemologies. [13]

  7. Barnlund's model of communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnlund's_model_of...

    Barnlund's model of interpersonal communication involves two people who decode some of the cues available to them (orange arrows) and respond by encoding verbal and non-verbal behavioral responses (yellow arrows). Interpersonal communication is the paradigmatic form of communication. It happens when two or more people interact with each other.

  8. Models of communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Models_of_communication

    Transaction models see sending and responding as simultaneous activities. They hold that meaning is created in this process and does not exist prior to it. Constitutive and constructionist models stress that communication is a basic phenomenon responsible for how people understand and experience reality .

  9. Transactional analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transactional_analysis

    Transactional analysis is a psychoanalytic theory and method of therapy wherein social interactions (or "transactions") are analyzed to determine the ego state of the communicator (whether parent-like, childlike, or adult-like) as a basis for understanding behavior. [1]