Definition
The four core components that must be present for communication to occur: a source (the sender, speaker, or writer), a symbol (the words, gestures, or signals used to convey the message), a receiver (the listener, reader, or student), and the meaning shared between them. Effective communication depends on all four working together so the message sent is the message understood.
Plain English
The basic parts that make communication work: someone who has something to say, the words or signals they use to say it, someone who receives the message, and a shared understanding of what it means.
Context Anchor
Seen in the Aviation Instructor’s Handbook when explaining how instructors pass ideas, procedures, and corrections to learners.
Derivation
From Latin 'communicare', meaning 'to share' or 'to make common'. Communication is literally the act of making something common between people — a shared understanding. The word 'elements' comes from Latin 'elementum', meaning a basic building block. Together: the basic building blocks needed to share understanding.
Why Pilots Care
Clear use of these elements prevents training misunderstandings that could affect safety or slow progress.
Grounding Statement
In a cockpit lesson, communication succeeds only when the learner understands the instructor’s message as intended.
Intuition Check
Do not assume communication happened just because words were spoken. In this context, communication is successful only when the receiver gets the intended meaning.
Example Sentence 1
When the instructor reviewed the basic elements of communication, she realized her student wasn't grasping the maneuver because she was using cockpit jargon the student hadn't learned yet — the symbols didn't match the receiver.
Example Sentence 2
When the student showed confusion, the instructor checked each of the basic elements of communication to find the gap.