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Understanding Human Communication 14th Edition: Premium Edition with Ancillary Resource Center eBook Access Code

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Understanding Human Communication, Seventh Edition, by Ronald B. Adler and George Rodman presents a comprehensive, useful introduction to the academic study of communication that strikes a balance between the needs of instructors and students. The book's enduring features include a clear and reader-friendly writing style; an inviting visual design with marginal quotations, cartoons, photographs, newspaper clippings, and supplemental readings on almost every page; and everyday applications based on solid research and theory. New features include an increased emphasis on technology, streamlined organization based on user suggestions, and revised and updated material on gender, cultural diversity, and theory. These combined features plus an extensive ancillary package make Understanding Human Communication, Seventh Edition, one of the leading texts in the field of interpersonal communication.
Features
- Photographs, short readings, cartoons, epigrams, and news items enliven each section with high interest ideas and personalities.
- A comprehensive glossary and the following chapter-length appendices are included at the back of the book:
Appendix A: Interviewing
Appendix B: Mediated Communication (new!)
- Each chapter ends with the following categories of supplemental material:
Summary: recaps the content of the chapter
Resources: provides updated lists and brief descriptions of print resources that discuss the topics in the chapter and popular films with plots and characters that demonstrate concepts covered in the chapter
Activities: includes four kinds of activities--"Ethical Challenges," "Critical Thinking Probes," "Skill Builders," and "Invitations to Insight"--that invite students to analyze and change their own communication behavior
- The following sidebars and marginal notes contain material that supports the main content of the book:
Understanding Diversity boxes show how factors such as ethnicity, different physical abilities, regional origins, and nationalities shape perceptions of and reactions to communication
Understanding Communication Technology boxes highlight the ways in which technology is changing the nature of human communication, giving readers tools for using technology in communicating (new!)
Communication Boxes present thought-provoking topics through interesting and humorous articles and vignettes
Marginal Definitions of colloquial terms help readers unfamiliar with idiomatic English understand the subtleties of phrases and words used in the text, such as "get it off my chest" or "hashed out"

Ring-bound

First published January 1, 1982

23 people are currently reading
367 people want to read

About the author

Ronald B. Adler

63 books21 followers
Ronald Brian Adler

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5 stars
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76 (30%)
3 stars
65 (26%)
2 stars
27 (10%)
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12 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for Jessica Gleason.
Author 37 books76 followers
April 2, 2020
Interesting updates. The new chapters are useful. Lacks real world readings/articles which could help students apply concepts. I wish it also had better activities.
2 reviews
February 12, 2021
This book was extremely frustrating to read. Almost all of its content everyone knows by the age of 14, but because the book spends chapters and chapters putting in into words to whose benefit I do not know (aliens?), it tricks the reader into thinking they're learning new concepts or skills. While in addition, just constantly throughout the book, every other paragraph, the extremely annoying author HAS to throw in another political jab. And the thing is: college students eat this stuff up. It's literally a tool for brainwashing.
Profile Image for Karla.
1,668 reviews15 followers
August 4, 2018
My son’s speech class text
Comprehensive and well written I liked the connection to Chapman, as I was previously familiar with his work
Activities are connected to the material well and further exploration is available at the website
The format design was colorful, text format changing appropriately as well
Summaries are brief, key terms pretty direct
Profile Image for Alexann.
274 reviews
June 15, 2021
Interesting, but incredibly redundant in my opinion. I ended up not reading the last chapters, opting for my teacher’s powerpoint explanations instead which were more organized and went straight to the point.
Profile Image for Shaydy.
118 reviews39 followers
August 10, 2025
At times this is a self-help book with valuable mementos; at others, it puts names to phenomenon most people have experienced since youth and don’t necessarily benefit from hearing explained in textbook (albeit accessible textbook) format.
Profile Image for Rain.
4 reviews
September 9, 2020
Dry boring... but required reading for college speech class.
Profile Image for Acenith Claassen.
250 reviews2 followers
November 20, 2020
Tends to contradict its own text quite a bit with regard to sex and gender. Quizzes in each chapter put people into categories that simply cannot be accurate based on 4 or 5 questions.
Profile Image for Amelia.
29 reviews24 followers
March 12, 2021
So many typos, but I learned a lot from the actual content.
Profile Image for Haytham Badawey.
115 reviews32 followers
July 22, 2013
The best book on human communication, it has the cutting edge for the art and science of human communication. The terminology, the concepts, processes, skills and abilities; everything is explained in fine details and very well presented and summarized in this book.

Other books in the field are just a trial for imitating and copying this book, I read the 3th edition, and I use it as a reference!

I completely recommend it!
Profile Image for Magali Williams.
44 reviews
August 6, 2021
Not a fun read--it was a textbook for a class lol, but for the most part very educational. There were several things about the LGBTQ+ that were either blatantly wrong or just mostly wrong. It was nice to see the effort but it's really frustrating when it might be some people's only knowledge on certain aspects of the community. Most of the issues I found were with the gender side of things or just using sexuality, sex, and gender interchangeably at times.
Profile Image for Stephen.
805 reviews33 followers
October 14, 2010
2004 wrote: Required Read for Fundamentals of Speech and Communication. I resolve I will never understand human communication, nor will anyone, for as soon as it is studied, it will evolve into something else. If too many know it's secrets, the tricks are gone. The gig is up.
Profile Image for Kristen.
408 reviews1 follower
August 14, 2011
I had to read this book for a 1st year University class. I remember using it again in other years as it was very informative to my studies as a Communications student
Profile Image for Miriam Dyck.
83 reviews22 followers
May 7, 2016
It did its job. It got me through my course and it was very well organized. For all intense and purposes it was fine but nothing to read for fun
Profile Image for Melonie.
1 review1 follower
May 3, 2008
This book must be good, since I was on the re-editing team ;-)
Profile Image for Issa.
7 reviews
March 1, 2013
It definitely exceeded my expectations!
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

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