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Southern Regional Education Board (SREB), 2011
Instructional strategies make a difference in whether students are engaged in learning and are profiting from their time in class. High schools, technology centers and middle grades schools are encouraging teachers to adopt new teaching techniques and are providing opportunities for teachers to work together to improve their instructional skills…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, High Schools, Middle Schools, Teaching Methods
Giovannoni, David – 1995
Public radio can survive cutbacks in federal subsidies, but only if these funds are reduced no more rapidly than public radio can replace them with newly-generated audience-sensitive revenues (listener support and underwriting). A model developed in this analysis suggests a three-to-five year "glide path" to zero federal support. Public…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Budgeting, Change Agents, Federal Aid
Neff, Maryl L. – 1994
This paper argues that the Children's Television Act of 1990 (CTA) required television broadcasters to air educational and informational children's programming, but Federal Communications Commission (FCC) policy did little to clarify the definition of "educational and informational." The paper first examines the historical…
Descriptors: Childrens Television, Definitions, Federal Legislation, Federal Regulation
Kaiser Foundation, Oakland, CA. – 1996
In the midst of a growing national debate about the role of television as a de facto "sex educator" for young people today, this survey asked parents nationwide in the fall of 1996 about their views on kids and television. A random sample of 853 parents and children ages 6 to 15 were surveyed by telephone (the data reported here focus on…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Children, Parent Attitudes, Programming (Broadcast)
Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Washington, DC. – 1995
Public broadcasting increased the number of programs for older children during the 1994-95 television season. Data from the Yankelovich Youth Monitor, a survey of 1,211 subjects aged 6 to 17 years, provide some information about response to these programs and give some insight into serving the 9 to 11 age group in particular. Television continued…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Audience Response, Educational Television
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication. – 1994
The Miscellaneous Studies section of this collection of conference presentations contains the following 22 papers: "Men and Women Journalists in the Movies: Exploration of Some Sexism and Gender Issues in Their Portrayals in Eleven Films" (Albert D. Talbott); "Female Archetypes in Late '80s Films" (Fakhri Haghani); "Chain…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Mass Media, Media Research, Natural Disasters
Sauls, Samuel J. – 1997
While management styles and theories differ among administrators of college radio stations, the views concerning the operation of college radio tend to be consistent. Common elements present in varying degrees in every college radio stations include public broadcasting philosophy, community needs, management and staff, financing, school relations,…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Faculty Advisers, Financial Support, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Graham, Alan – Teaching Statistics, 1994
Presents ideas for purposeful statistical investigations based on data from "TV Guide" that involve simulations using a spreadsheet. (MKR)
Descriptors: Data Collection, Learning Activities, Mathematics Education, Mathematics Instruction
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Douglas, William; Olson, Beth M. – Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 1995
Examines family relationships in domestic comedy; participants evaluated samples of 13 programs from a selection of popular shows during the period from 1950 to 1990. Spousal and parent-child relations were evaluated. The study yielded no support for the claim that family relations have deteriorated in the television family. Three tables present…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Family Relationship, Parent Child Relationship, Popular Culture
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Gunter, Barrie – Journal of Black Studies, 1998
Examines the portrayal of majority and minority ethnic groups as aggressors or victims on British television, focusing on violence in drama and serials. Analysis of programs from 10 channels on 28 days reveals whites to be more heavily involved in television violence as perpetrators or victims in Britain than ethnic-minority characters. (SLD)
Descriptors: Blacks, Ethnicity, Foreign Countries, Mass Media Effects
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Simmons, Betty Jo; Stalsworth, Kelly; Wentzel, Heather – Early Childhood Education Journal, 1999
Examines research on television violence and links violence to specific programs commonly watched by young children. Maintains that television violence is related to aggressive behavior, lessened sensitivity to the results of violence, and increased fear. Examines public reactions to children's educational television programs. (Author/KB)
Descriptors: Aggression, Educational Television, Programming (Broadcast), Public Opinion
Roberts, Gary; Prowse, Jane – RaPAL Bulletin, 1999
A family literacy program used television soap operas as a starting point for investigating home and community literacy practices. Parents participated as co-researchers, comparing media portrayals of literacy events with their own everyday practices. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Community Education, Critical Thinking, Family Literacy
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Gibson, Stephanie – Interpersonal Computing and Technology, 1996
Describes the cultural history of linear narrative and the veering away from that tradition by film, television, and, most recently, by World Wide Web hypertext. The World Wide Web has new rhetorical and symbolic implications, because coherence in that environment is anchored in associative, linked structures rather than linear ones. Contains 33…
Descriptors: Coherence, Cultural Relevance, Design Preferences, Discourse Modes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Wilson, Barbara J.; Colvin, Carolyn M.; Smith, Stacy L. – Journal of Communication, 2002
Examines the perpetrators of violence on American television in terms of their chronological age. Compares the amount and nature of violence committed by child and teen characters to that committed by adult characters. Suggests that younger perpetrators are depicted in several ways that pose risks for the child viewer. (SG)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Elementary Secondary Education, Mass Media Role, Programming (Broadcast)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Bergen, Lori; Grimes, Tom; Potter, Deborah – Human Communication Research, 2005
Television producers, across all types of programming, assume young viewers can parallel process simultaneously presented messages. For instance, television news producers appear to believe that young viewers can attend to weather icons, lexical news crawls, and sports scores while they also attend to news anchors who present the news.…
Descriptors: Television Viewing, Attention Span, Cognitive Processes, Programming (Broadcast)
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