YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Televisions Influence on Children
Essays 31 - 60
the media" (Fowles, 2001). Why is TV a stand-in for the other problems, and what are those problems? The reason TV makes such a g...
Whether typical in nature or fraught with learning difficulties, Sameroff (1975a) contends the extent to which parental involvemen...
it. This demonstrated that it was possible, however it was determined that there was a large potential. The games that were devel...
products regardless of what purpose they served" (Trotter, 1992, p. 27). Targeting children leaves the door wide open to pl...
love one another. They give each other things, and try to understand one another as best they can. The audience feels that they do...
Institute of Mental Health in 1982 (Murray, 1995). The conclusion of the research that had been conducted in those ten years indic...
the words not to popular adventure theme songs but instead to mantras of Nazi and skinhead groups and become synonymous with horro...
to be presented in a negative light, statistics have shown that watching television has consistently proven to have a positive eff...
a fairly even level of knowledge. Some entered the early grades with a rudimentary foundation of writing or phonics learned in th...
This paper consists of five pages and examines what hazards watching television represent for children. Two sources are cited in ...
This paper examines the affects of television violence on American children. The author provides statistical data to support his ...
but there is little creativity involved in following sample patterns and specific information. Creativity is, rather, the use of o...
do. "With Ozzie and Harriet, everyone felt guilty," said Barbara Cadow, a psychologist at U.S.C. School of Medicine. "With these...
In seven pages this essay condemns the increasing violence being shown on television and provides research study evidence regardin...
life experiences. Sitting in front of a TV does nothing for the physical self of the child -- there is no developing of coordinat...
children. Such television programs are important in that they "talk to kids" instead of talking down to them. There are many tha...
In five pages this research proposal analyzes the perception that children are adversely affected by what they see on television. ...
In six pages an article addressing the problems of children who spend too much time engaging in sedentary activities such as watch...
the Science Guy. It took three years for the FCC to realize that the original Childrens Television Act did not possess the force ...
analyse what they see in the media, and consider whether it offers a valid option or not, children do not have the same level of d...
Health in 1982. The conclusion of the research that had been conducted in those ten years indicated that watching violence on tele...
million and that the number of violent crimes committed by juveniles will more than double by 2010 (Briscoe, 1997). Unless action...
reinforced over interactive learning, it can be stated. Shows such as Barney and Sesame Street encourage small spuds to become cou...
dealt with it. But were the gender roles closer to the mark than other shows at the time? Perhaps. Clair Huxtable exampled the Af...
choose your subjects and what safeguards will you take to protect them? This qualitative design, which will utilize inducti...
will not clean his room, no matter how much he is told to do so. The room gets so out of hand that the two goldfish he owns begin ...
in obscure settings where television was nonexistent. Then, another group with television was compared and contrasted to the origi...
at this point, E.D.s Aunt Lucille intervenes and persuades Jakes social worker that he can be successfully home schooled with the ...
to play unsupervised or accompany them to a park. Immense social and economic changes have dictated shifts in how families ...
the Royal Institution in London, England. Images appeared on his television set which were complete with tonal gradations of light...