YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Australian Childrens TV
Essays 1 - 30
dilemmas regarding sexuality and drugs, conflict with school and parents, and so on. Even though these are recognised as being aim...
reinforced over interactive learning, it can be stated. Shows such as Barney and Sesame Street encourage small spuds to become cou...
children. Such television programs are important in that they "talk to kids" instead of talking down to them. There are many tha...
It can seriously affect all aspects of their behavioral health. For example, "Exposure to and the influence of media violence dire...
200,000 violent acts on television alone" (Chatfield, 2002; p. 735). The study indicated that "Between the ages of two and 18, an ...
62 percent of the time" (Tepperman, 1997). Perhaps the worst message of all is that "violence is pleasurable. Clint Eastwood, in D...
screen media, but that this learning is dependent on three interrelated factors, which are the: "attributes of the child; characte...
many are scripted. There is a sameness in terms of quality in what the individual can expect. There is entertainment value in both...
on the development of children, yet we continue to watch (Miller, 1997). Recent research indicates that it is not just violence,...
of large differences in terms of culture. The view was one of superiority, with the predominantly white immigrants perceiving them...
concerned themselves primarily with the physical nature of light, emphasizing the way in which light altered colors as it rapidly ...
In five pages euthanasia is examined regarding its Australian legal status with a discussion of a nonprosecuted 'assisted death' c...
are not necessarily the same words (or meanings) and as a result, the photographer can argue that the purpose of the import was no...
many businesses have left city centers for outlying, privately owned complexes, where the young people also feel unwelcome (Urban ...
products regardless of what purpose they served" (Trotter, 1992, p. 27). Targeting children leaves the door wide open to pl...
games and the computer, it rises up between 35 and 55 hours a week (Gentile et al., 2004; 1235). Through this much media exposure ...
who appeared on TV screens years ago. This paper considers the parenting styles of todays characters as opposed to those found on ...
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...
then, after a time, actions follow (Waliszewksy and Smithouser, 2001). The human brain, they note, doesnt need that "garbage" (Wal...
a moment of quiet for themselves" (Winn 6). The answer seems obvious when its put like that, and Winn argues that it is the desire...
is no denying that their very presence has drastically altered humanitys existence since the mid to late 1940s. Through a number ...
1977, p. 4). For children in particular, there is no activity that permits as much intake "while demanding so little outflow" (Win...
choose your subjects and what safeguards will you take to protect them? This qualitative design, which will utilize inducti...
dealt with it. But were the gender roles closer to the mark than other shows at the time? Perhaps. Clair Huxtable exampled the Af...
Yosemite Sam getting his head blown off at least once a week and of course, the memorable Wyle E. Coyote who never, in all his fo...
the Science Guy. It took three years for the FCC to realize that the original Childrens Television Act did not possess the force ...
entitled "House of Cards," the detectives and attorneys who are featured in the show similarly face what seems like a case of cert...
In any case, when the supply runs low in a cabinet, there should be extra packages available in a supply closet and in each classr...
television," 2006). He had already been given a patent for "the transmission of photographs by wire as well as fiber optics and ra...