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Perceptual Development | 4 |
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Kipper, Philip S. – 1989
As the viewer watches the opening credits for the program "Entertainment Tonight," the screen comes to life with rotating shapes and spinning geometric patterns. One has the sense of travelling on an imaginary voyage through space. Many of the computer generated displays common now on television use such visual devices as linear perspective,…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Computer Graphics, Perceptual Development, Spatial Ability

Desmond, Roger Jon; And Others – Sex Roles, 1987
Reports study findings which indicate that certain styles of family communication and mediation methods facilitate comprehension of television more effectively for boys than for girls. Also discusses differential effects of two styles of discipline on each sex. (PS)
Descriptors: Discipline, Family Involvement, Parent Influence, Perceptual Development

Morison, Patricia; And Others – Journal of Broadcasting, 1981
An examination of 18 children's reality-fantasy judgments about television indicated that such judgments shift with age from a focus on physical features and a rigid assessment of actuality, to a sensitivity to the plausibility of characters and plotlines, and an appreciation of authorial intent. Sixteen references are cited. (Author/MER)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Broadcast Television, Childhood Attitudes, Childrens Television
Debes, John L., III – 1974
For the past 100 years we have been acting as if education in school was of words, by words, and for words, but in fact verbal literacy was preceded by visual literacy when humans communicated with body language before they had speech. American educators have been concentrating efforts on the left hemisphere of the brain in which the verbal…
Descriptors: Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Development, Intellectual Development, Intelligence Quotient