The Development and Testing of a Relational Model of Competence in the Context of Nature-Based Tourism

Communication competence is a framework that has been used in many disciplines to understand communication events and their success or failure in achieving objectives. The model most often used to describe competence is the relational model proposed by Spitzberg & Cupach (1984) which includes th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Oschell, Christine Marie
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: University of Montana 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/975
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/etd/article/1994/viewcontent/Oschell_umt_0136D_10053.pdf
Description
Summary:Communication competence is a framework that has been used in many disciplines to understand communication events and their success or failure in achieving objectives. The model most often used to describe competence is the relational model proposed by Spitzberg & Cupach (1984) which includes three elements: knowledge, knowing what behavior is best suited for a given situation; skill, having the ability to apply that behavior in the given context; and motivation having the desire to communicate in a competent manner. This study used the model of relational competence to understand the communication process between guide and client in a nature-based tourism context where communication is critical for the achievement of objectives, such as, education and safety. The model of relational competence has never been applied to this context. This research uses standard psychometric procedure to create scales to measure the components of the relational model of competence in a guided nature-based tourism context. A two-page onsite questionnaire was used to measure white water rafting customers' perceptions of the levels of motivation, knowledge, and communicative skills exhibited by their guide as well as their overall communication competence. Two hundred and fifty two completed questionnaires were received from the 343 customers surveyed, for a response rate of 73 percent. A process of refining and purifying the scales with correlation analysis, Cronbach's alpha reliability analysis, and exploratory factor analysis led to valid and reliable measures of perceived knowledge, skills, and overall competence. The scale measuring communicative motivation was found to lack content validity. Perceived motivation, knowledge, and skills were all found to significantly predict a unidimensionsal construct of perceptions of competence in a regression model that explained 74 percent of variation in the data. This model is an appropriate framework to understand the communication process between guide and customer. The instrument ...