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Mays, Luberta – 1979
Knowledge of how children "read" television pictures can provide understanding of how powerful a tool television is for teaching and learning. It affects the images viewers have of themselves and of the world. Turning off television is not only turning off experiences but also turning off opportunities for learning as well as preventing youngsters…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Elementary Education, Pictorial Stimuli
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White, Mary Alice – PTA Today, 1982
Children starting school today have already been trained to learn by television, and the skills they have developed may not be suitable for the print-oriented learning required in school. Differences in learning from electronic sources and from books are discussed, as are strategies teachers can use to help children adjust. (PP)
Descriptors: Computers, Conventional Instruction, Early Experience, Educational Media
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Calvert, Sandra L.; And Others – 1984
Preplays (critical material presented before a televised program) were inserted before three sections of a televised story to determine if they would improve children's attention and comprehension by providing overall plot structure for selecting and integrating important story events. The preplays varied on two orthogonal dimensions: presence or…
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Age Differences, Attention, Comprehension
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Suhor, Charles; Little, Deborah – Reading Psychology, 1988
Discusses links between visual literacy and print literacy in the following areas: graphic organizers; propaganda; video technologies; computer use; and children's drawing and writing. Describes a semiotic-theory model, depicting relationships among not only linguistic signs and visual signs, but other signs (musical, gestural, etc.) in…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Educational Theories, Elementary Education, Graphic Organizers
Rolandelli, David R.; And Others – 1988
Visual processing of televised information was compared among 85 Japanese and 111 American boys and girls at the kindergarten and 4th-grade levels. The literatures on cognition and learning indicate that language and child rearing factors are more conducive to the development of iconic processing skills in Japanese children than in American…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis