QUOTE (Varizen @ May 28 2009, 12:44 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
There's a lot more to it than your basic public speaking class you had to take.
That would be fascinating except that I've never taken a public speaking course. English departments believe in trial by fire, it seems, whereby we're told to stand up and explain. Of course, I've also had to write up Presidential Daily Briefs and deliver them. Go search for what a colossal headache that is, because PDBs are written like fucking haiku. I consistently get high marks on oral presentations in spite of the fact that I'm a mediocre public speaker because I actually know how to make information compelling. I'd make a poor politician because large audiences don't respond to information, they respond to emotion, as I'm sure your classes have taught you.
That list of theories is interesting, but I'd like for you to sit down and think about how much of it is academic wank. Do you really need a fancy name and a background of academics to understand half of those theories? Does it actually require time and effort to figure out that the reason management and workers are not interacting well is because management doesn't listen and discourages employee suggestions on the assumption that the proles can't know how to run things? I'm sure there is some clever name for that sort of miscommunication, but does it actually require being taught? At least half the list you copied there sounds like a collection of buzzwords dressed up in academic language. I suppose that learning how to "pro-actively actualize thinking outside the box dynamically" is convenient if you intend to go into a field that would encourage that kind of verbal abortion, but you're not going to get any respect for it from people who actually treat language as something to convey truth rather than a vehicle for perpetual rhetoric.
Speaking of, however, do you want me to list off the literary theories and philosophers who have things to say about the function of language, the place of rhetoric, and their associated benefits and detractions? You would be shocked, since this doesn't seem to be sinking in, to know that they're the same kind of things you've been taught. I'm guessing that the majority of theorists you've been taught, however, have been 20th century thinkers, ignoring that much of their theory has a pedigree stretching back 2500 years or more. That's fine, though, there's really not very much value in knowing that at least some of our ideas about rhetoric and language and communication are directly descended from Plato and Aristotle.
You can protest that I misunderstand your degree field, but every time you post trying to claim otherwise, it becomes clearer that I really do understand it. The way that we're taught may be different, yours is more overt and obvious, but what we're taught is fundamentally the same. I may not be able to rattle off some phrase like "social exchange theory" when explaining why X works or doesn't work, but most people wouldn't understand me if I used that phrase, anyhow. If I talk about German romanticism or post-modernism, someone is probably going to understand me, but the majority will not. The specific academic names for certain things are good for communicating with the in-group, but both of us are going to have to either explicate the words or find natural-language analogues. We have different lexicons, but we know the same essential data. Seriously, go over to the English department and say, "What could I do with an English degree?" The list will be basically identical to the one you'll get from your comms advisor.
Also, 18-year-olds are not adults, at least not in the United States and western Europe. The law may consider them to be, but culture and psychology have rather different and far more compelling arguments to make. Since I'm guessing you're closer to being 18 than I presently am, though, you'll no doubt argue with me and I really don't care. Time eventually teaches better than I ever could. Moreover, the US public school system is an atrocity and most 18-year-olds do not have a general education. It's great that you actually had a good school. My parents had to pay to get me a proper education.
Either way, I really don't see why you protest this so loudly. You started this argument with the false premise that I think that English majors are gods among men. I've never even hinted at something so patently moronic. Most English majors, like most college students these days, are vapid idiots sucking up public funds and their parents' savings to get a degree they don't understand. For someone working towards a degree in human communication, it is distressing that you can't fucking read, especially given that there's no obscurity in my speech.
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