Descriptor
| Community Problems | 4 |
| Community Surveys | 4 |
| Social Problems | 4 |
| Community Change | 2 |
| Public Opinion | 2 |
| Broadcast Industry | 1 |
| Certification | 1 |
| Community Needs | 1 |
| Community Organizations | 1 |
| Community Recreation Programs | 1 |
| Community Study | 1 |
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| Social Problems | 1 |
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| Reports - Descriptive | 1 |
| Reports - Research | 1 |
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Peer reviewedHubbard, Jeffrey C.; And Others – Social Problems, 1975
Explores possible relationships between the mass media of communication and social problems by three-way comparisons between the incidence of social problems suggested in media portrayals, conceptions of the incidence of these problems held by the public, and the relative frequency of such problems reflected in statistics accumulated by official…
Descriptors: Community Organizations, Community Problems, Community Surveys, Incidence
Schores, Daniel M. – 1966
Designed to discover the influence of rapidly increasing commercial recreation on social interaction, this study dealt with the nature and changing significance of community institutions. The study was conducted from 1963 to 1965 in the emerging community of Osage Beach, Missouri, as a basis for the author's doctoral dissertation. Data for the…
Descriptors: Community Change, Community Problems, Community Recreation Programs, Community Surveys
LeRoy, David J.; Ungurait, Donald F. – 1974
A total of 431 households in Tallahassee, Florida, were contacted to ascertain community perceptions of social policy issues, as required of television stations applying for license renewal. It was found that 10 percent of those contacted could think of no problems; 14 percent could not name a national problem, and 35 percent could not name a…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Certification, Community Problems, Community Surveys
New York State Education Dept., Albany. – 1987
This report describes a preliminary methodology by which distressed communities may be identified using school districts as the basic unit for the presentation of data. Distress consists of a concentration of the following types of need: (1) economic; (2) social; and (3) educational. Distress was measured by an index that determined a district's…
Descriptors: Community Change, Community Needs, Community Problems, Community Study


