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Showing 46 to 60 of 181 results Save | Export
Kunkel, Dale; Cope, Kirstie M.; Farinola, Wendy Jo Maynard; Biely, Erica; Rollin, Emma; Donnerstein, Edward – 1999
Television includes a substantial amount of sexual content, and TV's sexual messages are clearly an important part of adolescent sexual socialization. At a time when the nation is facing a sexual health crisis among young people, special attention needs to be paid to those media depictions that could influence how young people develop their…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Content Analysis, Programming (Broadcast), Sexuality
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Nixon, Helen – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 1999
Describes the satirical cartoon television series called "South Park." Discusses who watches this program, noting its immense popularity and the way it has entered the everyday lives of school children the world over. Looks at its cult appeal, and speculates as to reasons why some children might enjoy watching the program. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Elementary Secondary Education, Mass Media Role
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Smith, Stacy L.; Boyson, Aaron R. – Journal of Communication, 2002
Examines violence in music video programming. Reveals that 15% of music videos feature violence, and most of that aggression is sanitized, not chastised, and presented in realistic contexts. Discusses the findings in terms of the risk that exposure to violence in each channel and genre may be posing to viewers' learning of aggression, fear, and…
Descriptors: Aggression, Audience Response, Programming (Broadcast), Secondary Education
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Smith, Stacy L.; Nathanson, Amy I.; Wilson, Barbara J. – Journal of Communication, 2002
Assesses the prevalence and context of violence in prime-time television programming using a random, representative sample. Shows that, regardless of the time of day, viewers are likely to encounter violence in roughly 2 out of 3 programs. Identifies specific channel types and genres that feature potentially harmful depictions of violence during…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Mass Media Role, Programming (Broadcast), Television Research
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McKenna, Maria W.; Ossoff, Elizabeth P. – Child Study Journal, 1998
Assessed children of three age groups (4-5, 6-7, and 8-10) on reality/fantasy distinction and story-schema development after viewing episode of "Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers." Found that only oldest children could make clear distinction between reality and fantasy, and that older children showed mastery of other study variables: memory…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Childrens Television, Comprehension
Leland, John – Newsweek, 1997
Notes the correlation between television-viewing habits and children's level of creativity, aggressiveness, and social skills. Highlights better quality programming, noting that most of it is on cable rather than network television. Cautions against the less controllable factors such as commercials and "teasers" for other programs and movies. (HTH)
Descriptors: Infants, Mass Media Effects, Programming (Broadcast), Television Commercials
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Hawkins, Robert P.; Pingree, Suzanne; Hitchon, Jacqueline; Radler, Barry; Gorham, Bradley W.; Kahlor, Leeann; Gilligan, Eileen; Serlin, Ronald C.; Schmidt, Toni; Kannaovakun, Prathana; Kolbeins, Gudbjorg Hildur – Human Communication Research, 2005
Individual looks at television vary enormously in length, and this has previously indicated differences in ongoing cognitive processes. Furthermore, the relative frequency of looks of different lengths may indicate styles of attention to television. This article compares visual attention of 152 subjects across a variety of genres and examines…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Attention Span, Television Viewing, Individual Differences
Kunkel, Dale; Cope, Kirstie M.; Farinola, Wendy Jo Maynard; Biely, Erica; Rollin, Emma; Donnerstein, Edward – 1999
Media portrayals involving sexuality can contribute to the sexual socialization of young people. If television is an important source of information and potential influence about sex for young people, then obviously it is important to understand the nature and extent of sexual information that is being conveyed by television. This report contains…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Children, Content Analysis, Programming (Broadcast)
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Holderman, Lisa B. – New Jersey Journal of Communication, 2003
Examines the popular portrayal of intellectual expertise through a content analysis of 200 of the 10 top-rated popular US television talk shows. Shows that experts in this sample were typically brought on late in the program, allotted little speaking time, placed among non-experts, frequently interrupted, and sometimes challenged. Indicates that…
Descriptors: Anti Intellectualism, Content Analysis, Higher Education, Mass Media Role
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Wilson, Barbara J.; Smith, Stacy L.; Potter, W. James; Kunkel, Dale; Linz, Daniel; Colvin, Carolyn M.; Donnerstein, Edward – Journal of Communication, 2002
Investigates the nature and extent of violence contained in television programming that targets children aged 12 and younger. Notes that the violence itself is just as likely to be glamorized in children's as in nonchildren's shows, but it is even more sanitized and more likely to be trivialized. Documents five subgenres of children's programming…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Childrens Television, Elementary Education, Programming (Broadcast)
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Schilperoord, Joost; de Groot, Vanja; van Son, Nic – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2005
In the Netherlands, as in most other European countries, closed captions for the deaf summarize texts rather than render them verbatim. Caption editors argue that in this way television viewers have enough time to both read the text and watch the program. They also claim that the meaning of the original message is properly conveyed. However, many…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Programming (Broadcast), Deafness, Nonverbal Communication
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Carroll, Noel – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2001
In this essay, the author intends to review some of the leading proposals concerning the putative ontological differences between TV and film. The author attempts to undermine these alleged distinctions, generally arguing that they are based on too narrow a conception of TV (and sometimes of film). Specifically, the recurring problem is that these…
Descriptors: Nonprint Media, Television, Films, Philosophy
Hlynka, Anthony; Knupfer, Nancy Nelson – 1997
This paper addresses the television program "Cheers" and demonstrates one way of interpreting the complexity of messages within the program. The interplay of visual messages within the "Cheers" programming is referred to as intertextuality, or the relation of one text to another to express an idea. Two basic types of…
Descriptors: Comedy, Literacy, Popular Culture, Programming (Broadcast)
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Ash, Gwynne Ellen – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2000
Responds to an article in a prior issue of this journal. Argues that "South Park" is a deconstruction of the reality of American constructions of media, fame, and pop culture, and that more adolescents than adults understand that "South Park" is about the adult world of media. Includes a response by the author of the earlier article. (SR)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Audience Response, Children, Elementary Secondary Education
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Samaniego, Concepcion Medrano; Pascual, Alejandra Cortes – International Review of Education, 2007
This study is based on the hypothesis that television contents themselves constitute a source of learning through television narratives. In specific terms, we defend the idea that it is possible to teach and learn values through said narratives. Some of the research dealing with the relationship between television and values is categorized from a…
Descriptors: Television, Relationship, Values, Television Viewing
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