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Hornig, Susanna – Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1990
Argues that the Public Broadcasting Service's science series "NOVA" dramatizes science for an elite audience. Notes that a variety of devices are used to maintain dramatic tension and to define the scientist as a special type of person. Argues that the failure of "NOVA" to demystify science has ideological significance. (RS)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Mass Media Role, Popular Culture, Public Television
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Abu-Absi, Samir – Language Problems and Language Planning, 1990
Discussion of the Arabic version of "Sesame Street" addresses the choice of a simplified modern standard usage as the series' language, definition of this language variety in terms of its distinguishing linguistic characteristics, and the implications of this choice for the future of Arabic and Arabic language instruction. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Arabic, Childrens Television, Educational Television, Language Planning
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Moyers, Bill – Public Libraries, 1988
Compares the experience of watching television with the experience of reading books, and cites examples of television programs that have introduced viewers to the world of ideas and led them to look for more information in books. Librarians are advised to include a printed bibliography of related books when they check out a video masterpiece. (MES)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Broadcast Television, Information Seeking, Library Role
Celano, Donna; Neuman, Susan B. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1995
An ethnographic study of an urban comprehensive high school shows that teachers rarely used Channel One as a focus of instruction in their classrooms. Students watched Channel One primarily during an 18-minute homeroom period--a concession to parents, teachers, and administrators reluctant to sacrifice instructional time to show the program. Two…
Descriptors: Commercial Television, Current Events, Educational Media, Educational Television
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Potter, W. James; And Others – Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 1995
Assesses aggressive behavior on television in terms of its realism. Replicated and contextualized reality were assessed for 100.5 hours of programming. Replicated reality compared television portrayals to real world characteristics, and was similar in seriousness to aggression and gender patterns of perpetrators and victims. Contextual reality…
Descriptors: Aggression, Behavior, Comparative Analysis, Content Analysis
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Cebrian de la Serna, Manuel – Educational Media International, 1995
Examines television as a means for providing multicultural education. Discusses the influence of television on children, the stereotypical message of television, how ethnic groups are portrayed, and objectives for a curriculum on television. (AEF)
Descriptors: Children, Curriculum Development, Educational Objectives, Educational Technology
Nelson, Milo – Computers in Libraries, 1992
Discusses federal regulation of cable television. Topics addressed include Congressional legislation; Federal Communications Commission (FCC) guidelines; pricing; conflicts between broadcasters and the cable industry; the telephone industry's entrance into the cable market; and possible effects of regulatory changes on educational television. (LRW)
Descriptors: Cable Franchising, Cable Television, Educational Television, Federal Legislation
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Hunter, Peggie – Roeper Review, 1992
Two groups of gifted students in grades 5-8 were taught critical television viewing skills and video production, and a no-treatment group received only video production instruction. Students without critical viewing instruction performed just as well on a posttest of program content analysis but not as well on television form. (Author/JDD)
Descriptors: Critical Viewing, Elementary Secondary Education, Enrichment Activities, Gifted
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Collins, Jude – Educational Media International, 1992
Discussion of teenage television viewing focuses on a study of secondary school students in Belfast (Northern Ireland) that examined viewing habits. Highlights include the amount of television watched; effects on reading; the influence of violence; parents' responsibility and control over viewing; models for behavior; and negative views of…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Aggression, Characterization, Foreign Countries
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Pena, Sally; And Others – Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 1990
Analyzed the differences between heroes, other characters, and themes from the Roy Rogers television show of the 1950s, and the Brave Starr show of the 1980s. Found the modern hero more prosocial, cooperative, fearful, and self-critical. The modern villain was more hostile, negative, and successful against the hero. Discusses implications for…
Descriptors: Aggression, Anxiety, Children, Childrens Television
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Huskey, Lee; And Others – Social Education, 1991
Examines the importance of economic knowledge in understanding television network news and the concepts that television journalists use most frequently. Analyzes news content of 60 programs throughout 1987. Finds that over 12 percent of total news time was devoted to economic topics. Suggests that school curricula should emphasize economic…
Descriptors: Broadcast Journalism, Content Analysis, Economics, Economics Education
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Fisch, Shalom M.; Yotive, William; Brown, Susan K. McCann; Garner, M. Scott; Chen, Lisa – Journal of Educational Media, 1997
This study compares two animated programs set in prehistoric times, "Cro" (an educational program about technology) and "The Flintstones" (a noneducational program). Results indicated that Cro's technology content was salient to children but children did not distinguish between the programs on the basis of their educational…
Descriptors: Ancient History, Animation, Cartoons, Childhood Attitudes
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Stuart, Carol – Journal of Cooperative Education, 1999
Interactive instructional television was used to deliver employability skills to remote cooperative education students, solving problems with earlier delivery methods. Distance students had relatively the same grades as on-campus students and they noted few disadvantages, related primarily to disconnection/isolation. (SK)
Descriptors: Cooperative Education, Distance Education, Educational Television, Employment Potential
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Henning, Bernd; Vorderer, Peter – Journal of Communication, 2001
Investigates differences observed among German students regarding amount of television viewing. Finds a significant negative effect of need for cognition on viewing amount. Interprets this as a manifestation of individual-psychological escapism in which the lower viewers' need for cognition is, the less pleasant they feel when they have nothing to…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Mass Media Role, Mass Media Use
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Gunter, Barrie; And Others – Journal of Educational Television, 1995
An observational study of families watching television was conducted in six households, using a video camera. Results show that family members were absent for substantial proportions of the time the television set was in operation, and when present, for most of the time did not pay full attention. Thirteen tables depict information. (AEF)
Descriptors: Attention, Behavior, Data Collection, Family Life
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