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Sherrise Linton

Social media research raises privacy and ethics issues - 1 views

  • Social media research raises privacy and ethics issues
  • Social media research raises privacy and ethics issues
  • ocial media research raises privacy and ethics issues
  • ...19 more annotations...
    • amanda mast
       
      this article relates to Currency of the CRAAP test. the article was posted just one month ago on March 12,2014. this shows how big of an issue it is today with social media privacy.
    • amanda mast
       
      Relevance: this information relates to most everyone on this planet who uses the internet. The article says everytime you search something or share news on your facebook page, you have no idea who is actually reading it. This article is good for a lot of people to read to get information and gain knowledge. I would be comfortable siting this website because it is USA Today.
  • Sharon Jayson, USA TODAY
    • amanda mast
       
      Authority: Author of article is Sharon Jayson of USA Today, if you click on her name it shows you all the articles she has posted and that she is a credible source. the url is .com
  • "Facebook is transformed from a public space to a behavioral laboratory," says the study, which cites a Harvard-based research project of 1,700 college-based Facebook users in which it became possible to "deanonymize parts of the data set," or cross-reference anonymous data to make student identification possible.
  • Facebook data scientist Adam Kramer, of the Menlo Park, Calif.-based company, outlined what the company is learning as part of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology meeting in Austin. Its president, social psychologist James Pennebaker, of the University of Texas-Austin, says privacy is a big issue for the research world.
  • "Facebook especially, and Microsoft, is scared to death about privacy issues," he says. "A bunch of researchers have access to everybody's posts and Facebook is built on what's yours is private. They are struggling with the problem the same way as the scientific community."
  • Attorney and privacy expert Parry Aftab, of New York City — a member of Facebook's Safety Advisory Board — suggests that users shouldn't worry because the very large companies such as Twitter, Google, Microsoft and Facebook have privacy policies for users."The sites will never provide personally identifiable information unless they have the consent of the users. And there is legal recourse if they're using it in any other way," she says.
    • amanda mast
       
      Accuracy: These 5 paragraphs beginning with "facebook is transformed..." shows the author got her information from credible sources such as a Harvard based research project, a Facebook data scientist Adam Kramer, an attorney and privacy expert, and many more. The article is free of spelling and grammer mistakes.
  • "Be aware it is a space that is watched,"
    • amanda mast
       
      Purpose: the purpose of the article is to warn people of the privacy dangers social media occurs. they want people to take every precaution possible when dealing with online profiles and posting things that could be inappropriate.
  • March 12, 2014
  • Every time you search online for the best restaurant deal, share good news or bad with your Facebook friends, or tweet to your followers, your "audience" is bigger than you know.
  • Sharon Jayson, USA TODAY
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Authority: the author here could be credible based on the study of politics and ethical research experience is mentions when you click on the name in the article. Also you uses other soures to back up the arguments she holds about how you leaving your "cyber" trail when on certain sites.
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Authority: the author here could be credible based on the study of politics and ethical research experience is mentions when you click on the name in the article. Also you uses other soures to back up the arguments she holds about how you leaving your "cyber" trail when on certain sites.
  • every online move leaves cyber footprints that are rapidly becoming fodder for research without you ever realizing it
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Relevance: The intended audience here would be those that are unaware of what can and cannot hurt them when it comes to just posting anything, a trail is being form. This information is crucial to my topic because it proves the important nature of becoming more aware, it cannot be stressed enough of the audience such as jobs, peers and co-workers see you posting.
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Relevance: The intended audience here would be those that are unaware of what can and cannot hurt them when it comes to just posting anything, a trail is being form. This information is crucial to my topic because it proves the important nature of becoming more aware, it cannot be stressed enough of the audience such as jobs, peers and co-workers see you posting.
  • Using social media for academic research is accelerating and raising ethical concerns along the way, as vast amounts of information collected by private companies — including Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Twitter — are giving new insight into all aspects of everyday life.
  • says social psychologist Ilka Gleibs, an assistant professor at the London School of Economics in London, whose study about social networking sites for research field studies has been drawing attention since it went online in January in the journal Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy.
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Accuracy: Not only does this fall under Authority due to the reference entered into the article but it show the research and evidenced gather by Sharon Johnson. She picked a highly expert pyschologist to warn the audience to take this matter more serious than what the intended audience may be viewing Facebook. With the professor being from a school in London, it shows that this source is unbiased to the American views of Facebook.
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Accuracy: Not only does this fall under Authority due to the reference entered into the article but it show the research and evidenced gather by Sharon Johnson. She picked a highly expert pyschologist to warn the audience to take this matter more serious than what the intended audience may be viewing Facebook. With the professor being from a school in London, it shows that this source is unbiased to the American views of Facebook.
  • Researchers who use these large sets of data "need to be especially cautious about the quality of the data and the error it can produce."
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Purpose: The main purpose through this article is to inform, thoughout the article it has given insiders on not just Social Networkers but to be aware on using the web and certain data.
  • March 12, 2014
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Currency: This was the was posted March 12, 2014, this article was very much timely and the topic I have needs the more recent views because my topics touches on the effectiveness of how to maintain your privacy while on socail medias/networks.
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Currency: This was the was posted March 12, 2014, this article was very much timely and the topic I have needs the more recent views because my topics touches on the effectiveness of how to maintain your privacy while on socail medias/networks.
  •  
    This article is about the trails you leave on socail media such as Facebook and Twitter
  •  
    This article is about the trails you leave on socail media such as Facebook and Twitter
  •  
    Really nice insight into the content. A good critical interpretation of the meaning of the owrk!
Kyle Palandech

Impact of media use on children and youth - 6 views

  • Impact of media use on children and youth
  • The influence of the media on the psychosocial development of children is profound.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      There is a large number of findings that show that media does influence youth
  • Still, physicians need to advocate continued research into the negative and positive effects of media on children and adolescents.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Research is constantly contiuned
  • ...30 more annotations...
  • Television viewing frequently limits children’s time for vital activities such as playing, reading, learning to talk, spending time with peers and family, storytelling, participating in regular exercise, and developing other necessary physical, mental and social skills
    • Kyle Palandech
       
      Accuracy because this is clearly a true statement. If children are wrapped up in media, they will not go out and explore. 
  • Television can be a powerful teacher
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Can be both negative and positive
  • In some disadvantaged settings, healthy television habits may actually be a beneficial teaching tool (
  • The average child sees 12,000 violent acts on television annually, including many depictions of murder and rape.
  • Television viewing makes a substantial contribution to obesity because prime time commercials promote unhealthy dietary practices
  • Commercials for healthy food make up only 4% of the food advertisements shown during children’s viewing time
  • Television can also contribute to eating disorders in teenage girls, who may emulate the thin role models seen on television (8). Eating meals while watching television should be discouraged because it may lead to less meaningful communication and, arguably, poorer eating habits
    • Kyle Palandech
       
      Currency because this information is updated and new. This type of information will lately change in the future in some way, but this article has updated it recently.
  • Television exposes children to adult sexual behaviours in ways that portray these actions as normal and risk-free, sending the message that because these behaviours are frequent, ‘everybody does it’. Sex between unmarried partners is shown 24 times more often than sex between spouses (32–35), while sexually transmitted infections and unwanted pregnancy are rarely mentioned.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Many youths are not properly educated on what the outcomes are from committing unsafe sex
  • On an annual basis, teenagers see between 1000 and 2000 beer commercials carrying the message that ‘real’ men drink beer.
  • One-half of the G-rated animated feature films available on videocassette, as well as many music videos, show alcohol and tobacco use as normative behaviour without conveying the long term consequences of this use
  • tend to believe what they are told and may even assume that they are deprived if they do not have advertised products.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      This causes parents to spend more money on what children want because they believe that if their friends have it, they have to get it as well.
  • A number of studies have documented that children under the age of eight years are developmentally unable to understand the difference between advertising and regular programming
  • The average child sees more than 20,000 commercials each year (12). More than 60% of commercials promote sugared cereals, candy, fatty foods and toys
    • Kyle Palandech
       
      Accuracy because the information is giving reasonable data that has been researched and studied upon. 
  • If children are allowed to be exposed to these media without adult supervision, they may have the same deleterious effects as television.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      parents must realize that they do play a huge role in what their child watches!
  • Studies show that parents play an important role in their children’s social learning (44), but if a parent’s views are not discussed explicitly with children, the medium may teach and influence by default.
    • Kyle Palandech
       
      authority because this explains where the author has done the research and received this data. 
  • Music videos may reinforce false stereotypes.
  • Parents may feel outsmarted or overwhelmed by their children’s computer and Internet abilities, or they may not appreciate that the ‘new medium’ is an essential component of the new literacy, something in which their children need to be fluent.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      technology is constantly improving and parents should want to learn how to use the new technology so that they can keep up with their children and know what their children are doing
  • Music lyrics have become increasingly explicit, particularly with references to sex, drugs and violence.
  • Some video games may help the development of fine motor skills and coordination, but many of the concerns about the negative effects of television (eg, inactivity, asocial behaviour and violence) also apply to excessive exposure to video games.
  • The effect of violent video games on children has been a public health concern for many years.
  • Up to 75% of videos contain sexually explicit material (45), and more than half contain violence that is often committed against women. Women are portrayed frequently in a condescending manner that affects children’s attitudes about sex roles.
  • The Internet has a significant potential for providing children and youth with access to educational information, and can be compared with a huge home library. However, the lack of editorial standards limits the Internet’s credibility as a source of information.
  • The amount of time spent watching television and sitting in front of computers can affect a child’s postural development
  • Parents can use technology that blocks access to pornography and sex talk on the Internet, but must be aware that this technology does not replace their supervision or guidance.
  • 2003 May-Jun
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Currency - 2003
  • Correspondence: Canadian Paediatric Society
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Authority - publisher/author
  • it is important for physicians to discuss with parents their child’s exposure to media and to provide guidance on age-appropriate use of all media, including television, radio, music, video games and the Internet.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Purpose - the reason for the information, which is to inform.
  • REFERENCES
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Accuracy - Where the information comes from; article gives various references
  • The objectives of this statement are to explore the beneficial and harmful effects of media on children’s mental and physical health, and to identify how physicians can counsel patients and their families and promote the healthy use of the media in their communities.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Relevance - shows what information is included in the article and answers the topic question that I chosen
    • Kyle Palandech
       
      This falls under the purpose of CRAAP. This explains and previews what the webpage is about to cover. It gives the reader a purpose to read the information being provided.
  • Author information ▼
  •  
    Media use constantly effects the current and future youth. Television, video games, music videos, and the internet promote both positive and negative factors, however majority is negative. Parents are a huge factor in watching what their children are doing. With the technology increasing, both parents and children should be educated on how to use.
  •  
    Media use constantly effects the current and future youth. Television, video games, music videos, and the internet promote both positive and negative factors, however majority is negative. Parents are a huge factor in watching what their children are doing. With the technology increasing, both parents and children should be educated on how to use.
Joseph Goetz

Mass Media, Social Norms, and Health Promotion Efforts - 1 views

  •  
    This research article links the effects of media to binge drinking in youth. Mass media has contributed to the social acceptability of binge drinking. The research suggests, however, that direct evidence of this contributing to increased binge drinking amongst youth is not supported.
Adrianna Czerlonko

Children, Media and Sex: A Big Book of Blank Pages - 0 views

  • JANE E. BRODY
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Authority - author of this article
  • January 31, 2006
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Currency - 2006
  • The report, based on a thorough review of scientific literature, was requested by Congress and supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Accuracy - where the information in the article is coming from
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • "Although a great deal is known about the effects of mass media on other adolescent behaviors, such as eating, smoking and drinking, we know basically nothing about the effects of mass media on adolescent sexual behaviors,"
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Purpose - this sentence gives the purpose of this article and intentions are made clear
  • S. Liliana Escobar-Chaves of the university's Center for Health Promotion and Prevention Research,
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Accuracy - author cites her own sources in article
  • But to hazard a guess based on clear evidence that media representations influence teenage eating, smoking and drinking habits, adolescents are almost certainly affected — negatively — by sexual references and images from television, in movies and video games, in music, in magazines and on Web sites.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Relevance - the information is related to my topic because it answers how media affects the youth which is negatively. parents are the intended audience for this article
  • There is growing concern that youth are accessing media in environments isolated from the supervision or guidance of parents or other adults,"
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      parents have no idea what their children are doing when they aren't around them
  • Despite the advent of V-chips, movie ratings and televised warnings of appropriateness for young people, American teenagers have no trouble getting access to graphic sexual presentations.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      kids can get access to things that parents might not want them seeing, whether it be asking an older sibling or asking a friend
  • "Approximately 47 percent of high school students have had sexual intercourse. Of these, 7.4 percent report having sex before the age of 13, and 14 percent have had four or more sexual partners."
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      having sex at a young age only seems to be more common now then it was before which is something that parents should be aware of
  • The effect of abstinence-only education pales by comparison with the many graphic messages that portray sexual activity — especially unprotected sex outside of marriage — to be a part of our culture as normal and acceptable as eating a Big Mac or drinking a Coke.
  • Each year, nearly 900,000 teenage girls in the United States become pregnant (340,000 are 17 or younger). The rates of sexually transmitted diseases are higher among teenagers than among adults, and 35 percent of girls have been pregnant at least once by age 20.
  • Data suggest that sexually active adolescents are at high risk for depression and suicide,"
  • "Early sexual experience among adolescents has also been associated with other potentially health-endangering behaviors, such as alcohol, marijuana, and other drug use."
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      doing one bad thing seems to lead to doing other bad things
  • The research indicated that adolescents who watched shows with sexual content tended to overestimate the frequency of certain sexual behaviors and to have more permissive attitudes toward premarital sex.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      sometimes what is portrayed on tv about sex and other topic is not as realistic as one may think
  • "On average," it continued, "each hour of programming popular with teens had 6.7 scenes that included sexual topics."
  • The sexual content of TV is pervasive and increasing.
  • As for the Internet, one national survey of 10- to-17-year-olds found that one in five had "inadvertently encountered explicit sexual content, and one in five had been exposed to an unwanted sexual solicitation while online."
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      the internet sometimes tends to leads the youth to websites that are not meant to be seen by them 
  • The report called for better studies to assess the effects of sexuality in the mass media on adolescent beliefs and behavior
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      research is constantly going on about these various topics that may help us better understand since it still isn't perfect
  • The New York Times Company
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Accuracy - the article is published in a major newspaper, therefore the author herself sites the different information in her article to support her information
  •  
    This article summarizes how media negatively affects children. It specifically talked about how mass media influence sexual behavior among the youth. sexual behavior beginning at a young age has led youth to doing other bad things that go along with it whether it be smoking or drinking, etc.
Adrianna Czerlonko

Effects of Media on Teens - 2 views

  • Alison Burkhardt and Daniel White Hodge
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Authority - gives the names of two authors for this article
  • May 1, 2012
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Currency - 2012
  • American media and culture significantly impacts media and culture around the globe,
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Relevance - gives another view on the topic that was chosen to research; the intended audience is young adult since the authors want to provide information that isn't necessarily found online but not in a database either
  • ...12 more annotations...
  • we wanted to give you some information that might help you and your team better understand how the media your teenagers are engaging with affects their abilities to learn, grow, and relate in today’s society.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Purpose - gives the exact reasoning for why the article was written. it was to inform the audience as well as teach them
  • Works Cited
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      Accuracy - has a works cited so that the reader knows where the information in the article was found
  • asked black children to choose which baby doll they prefer (black or white), 47% of the children stated the white baby doll was the prettiest, reinforcing that ideals on beauty are shaped at an early age.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      media affects children at a young age already whether we know it or not
  • Mass media gives indicators to young people about what is considered “normal” and “not-normal,”
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      media gives the youth a distorted image of what they should look like which makes them want to be something that they are not
  • When [journalists] report what is normal, they also make an implicit statement about what is abnormal.
  • Low income families spend more money on television programming than on hobbies, and young people in these homes watch far more hours of television than those of higher income homes where more money is spent on hobbies.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      that's actually an interesting fact because i had no idea about this
  • The more exposure to unrealistic violence in media (e.g. games, television, movies), the higher the likelihood for aggression or violence in young people.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      more youth that sees violence tends to portray this violence in real life whether it be starting fights or getting involved in gangs
  • for every four violence acts on prime time television, 32 violent acts occur on children’s programs every hour."
  • As many aggressive teens are perhaps labeled as anti-social or defiant, these music/music video choices can help them identify with a social group.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      music gives youth something to start up a conversation and find friends since they have a common interest
  • intensive or excessive [media] viewing can affect a child’s brain and the development of creativity and intelligence by: a) reducing stimulation of parts of the brain that are critical for the development of language, reading and analytic thinking, b) diminishing mental ability and attention, and c) discouraging the development of executive systems needed for regulating attention organization and motivation.
    • Adrianna Czerlonko
       
      i think that kids who don't do anything besides watching tv or sitting inside have the childhood that once used to be when there was no tv. they lack social skills and fitness
  • All research has room for error, and should be read knowing that there are always exceptions.
  • Social media and online gaming groups do not necessarily produce a false sense of friendship. 
amanda mast

Privacy issues of Social Networks - Social Networks Privacy - 0 views

  • 1. Privacy and Human Rights, An International Survey of Privacy Laws and Practice. Global Internet Liberty Campaign. Available at: http://www.gilc.nl/privacy/survey/intro.html 2. Pring, C. (2012) The Social Skinny.100 More Social Media Statistics For 2012. Available at: http://thesocialskinny.com/100-more-social-media-statistics-for-2012/ 3. Madden, M. (2012) Pew Internet. Privacy Management on Social Media Sites. Published on February 24. Available at: http://pewinternet.org/Reports/2012/Privacy-management-on-social-media/Main-findings.aspx 4. Identity Fraud. BBC One Watchdog. Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006mg74/features/consumer-advice-identity-fraud 5. Lewis, K. (2011) How Social Media Networks Facilitate Identity Theft and Fraud. Entrepreneurs Organization. Available at: http://www.eonetwork.org/knowledgebase/specialfeatures/pages/social-
  • Forbes, http://www.forbes.com/sites/chunkamui/2011/08/08/facebooks-privacy-issues-are-even-deeper-than-we-knew/ 21. Rosa Golijan (2012), Consumer Reports: Facebook privacy problems are on the rise, NBC News, http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/consumer-reports-facebook-privacy-problems-are-rise-749990 22. Wolny, P. (2012) Foursquare and other location based services. Checking in, staying safe and being savvy. Rosen Publishing Group, New York 23. Microsoft (2012) Location based social networks. Retrieved from http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/projects/lbsn/ 24. Hickman, L. (2010) How I became a Foursquare cyberstalker. The Guardian. Retrieved from http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2010/jul/23/foursquare 25. Thompson, C. (2012) Girls Around Me highlights Foursquare’s biggest privacy flaw. Retrieved from http://aboutfoursquare.com/girls-around-me-highlights-foursquares-biggest-privacy-flaw/
  • 26. Cipriani, J. (2012) How to prevent Facebook Messenger from sharing your location. Retrieved fro
  • ...1 more annotation...
    • amanda mast
       
      accuracy: the author is not stated for this article but the sources he used to write this article are. This shows where he found his information from and is helpful for researchers that need to site their findings.
  •  
    This article talks about the types of social network sites, locations, privacy concerns regarding these sites, using your location with your social media, and much more.
  •  
    I like your highlight of the references, really lets me know up front what I am working with!
Rebecca Gonner

Mass Media and Its influence on society - Think Research Expose | Think Research Expose - 0 views

  • Posted about 127 days ago
    • Rebecca Gonner
       
      Currency: about Dec. 10, 2013
  • Mass Media and Its influence on society
    • Rebecca Gonner
       
      Relevance: on topic
  • the influence of mass media on our kids, teenagers and society is so big that we should know how it really works
    • Rebecca Gonner
       
      relevance
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • M. A Mughal.
    • Rebecca Gonner
       
      authority: author
  • thedailyjournalist The Daily Journalist is an independent publication destined to help raise public awareness about topics with relevance without bias, based on research.
    • Rebecca Gonner
       
      Accuracy
  • Before discussing the influence of mass media on society it is imperative to explain the three basic  functions of mass media; they are providing news/information, entertainment and education
    • Rebecca Gonner
       
      Purpose: informative and impartial
  •  
    Mass media in our lives. Positive and negative influence.
Kyle Palandech

Media Shapes Society - Journalism 3.0 | Sveriges Radio - 0 views

  • The little Vietnamese girl Kim Phuc ran away from her napalm-bombed village of Trang Bang, past the lens of cameraman Alan Downes, and into the whole world’s awareness of USA’s war in Southeast Asia. The Vietnam War became impossible to wage in the age of television.
    • Kyle Palandech
       
      Authority and Accuracy: This was a live event caught on camera in Vietnam. It showed how real war is and the media exposed the world to what was going on at the time. 
  • FORM AND CONTENT. There’s a common logic in media: That which suits television is aired on television; if something makes a good headline, it’s placed on the front page of the newspaper.   In this way, media shapes society. Media technology determines the content. And the content in media determines images of society. But perhaps it’s not that simple. The interaction between technological, political and commercial forces can be significantly more complex
    • Kyle Palandech
       
      Purpose: This is giving the reader a preview of what the webpage is about. Gives the reader the reason the content is important
  • The development of newspapers is closely tied to the emerging formation of political parties in Europe and North America. Henry Jarvis Raymond, a journalist and politician, founded the New York Times in 1851. He was a Whig, that is, he belonged to the political party that was the forerunner of today’s Republican Party, and the establishment of the newspaper was, in part, a political project.
    • Kyle Palandech
       
      Currency because this information explains how media started off. The daily paper changed the way people discovered information.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • A more reflective consideration of the relationship between media and society might find this simple marketing analysis lacking in substance. The Swedish media researcher Göran Bolin  writes, in a paper on libraries, that it isn’t “a question of society being ‘mediafied’ through the transformation of information but, rather, that society itself is enclosed in human communication, in the way we all communicate with each other.”
    • Kyle Palandech
       
      Relevance: This explains how media and society intertwine with each other and how media researchers today still are looking at how it affects the world. 
  • Those of us active in media will look for the influence of new technology on media and media structure, not least because the effects in this area of society have been so tangible. The new technology affects media and media structure directly. In the next steps toward the further development of Internet society, changes in the entire production order could be the most important. The effects on media and media structure might then be more indirect—but not necessarily of lesser impact.
    • Kyle Palandech
       
      Relevance and Currency: This shows how the topic directly effects the individual. This information is fresh and new to our generation.  
  • As a counterforce, every soldier and citizen in a war zone has become a potential journalist able to report with both text and film. A cell phone is enough. And the reports can be distributed without being screened—or checked or authenticated—by a professional media company. The mobile [cell phone] changes journalism more than
    • Kyle Palandech
       
      Accuracy because this is an obvious statement by the writer. We understand that media is all around us and that we can all take part in it easily, by using many different devices. 
  •  
    FORM AND CONTENT. There's a common logic in media: That which suits television is aired on television; if something makes a good headline. Journalism has used media to inform people and share what is going on visually around the world
Sarah Donnelly

Media and Children's Aggression, Fear, and Altruism Purpose - 0 views

  • In this article I review the research evidence regarding how electronic media influence children's emotional and social well-being. I begin by exploring the role the media can play in children's affective or emotional development.
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Purpose: The author's purpose is to present research on the effect of mass media on children's morality. The author makes this clear and supports it with credible resources.
  •  
    Interesting way to handle a multi-page article with multiple bookmarking...had not thought of that...
Joseph Goetz

Effects of a Mass Media Campaign to Increase Physical Activity Among Children: Year-1 R... - 1 views

  • August 1, 2005
  • Accepted May 9, 2005.
    • Joseph Goetz
       
      Currency = May 9, 2005
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • effects of a mass media campaign on the levels of physical activity
    • Joseph Goetz
       
      Relevance: This article seeks to determine if mass media can lead to more awareness among children of physical activity. This parallels with our topic "mass media effects on youth."
  • *National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Division of Adolescent and School Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia
  • Author Affiliations
  • nationally representative telephone survey of children 9 to 13 years of age
    • Joseph Goetz
       
      Accuracy: The information contained in the study comes from a telephone survey of children.
  • A significant positive relationship was detected between the level of awareness of VERB and weekly median sessions of free-time physical activity among the total population of 9- to 13-year-old youths
    • Joseph Goetz
       
      Purpose: The purpose of the article is to determine if the VERB mass media campaign can effectively increase awareness of physical activity. As awareness increased via the media campaign, physical activity also increased.
  •  
    This research article seeks to determine if a mass media campaign can effectively increase physical activity among children. The VERB campaign and child-focused advertising promoting physical activity achieved high levels of awareness amongst youth.
Anthony Ginn

The effect of mass media on teenagers - Research Papers - Wingson5757 - 3 views

    • Anthony Ginn
       
      Despite social media has its drawbacks, there are benefits to social media on the youth. Mass media could be used to voice people's opinion, and shares knowledge with others.
    • Anthony Ginn
       
      Mass media keeps people informed of events that recently occurred, and mass media is a good way to keep politicians in check.
  • radio, to TV
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • mobile phone. M
  • rom telegraph
  • computer,
  • Mass media brings out some of the positive and negative effect on teenagers:
  • oice their
  •  
    As noted earlier, the media can have a negative effect on the youth;however, there are some good things the media can do. According to this web site, the media can be a good thing: "Media makes the lives of the people at ease, along with Information and Communication Technologies; they produce to increase the standard of living for the people to spend time..." Media is a way for young people to voice their opinion via Facebook, email, or Twitter (along with many more web sites). Media is also a way for people to stay informed on particular topics. Media is a way to get information to people, which is a positive effect on younger people.
  •  
    XLNT Anthony! There is so much discussion about what we can do to empower and protect our girls (which is great but), not so much with guys and having a graduating boy, I know they need support too. Save our boys!
sean cordes

Attention, decision making, and visual cues - 8 views

    • sean cordes
       
      Currency 2009
    • sean cordes
       
      Relevance-Discusses theories of attention
    • sean cordes
       
      Authority-published scholarly research
  • ...2 more annotations...
    • sean cordes
       
      Accuracy-detailed methods, and good data analysis
    • sean cordes
       
      Purpose-Shows how visual perception impacts attention
  •  
    Journal article on attention and visual cues in decision making.
Sherrise Linton

Users quitting Facebook cite privacy concerns - The Daily Beast - 0 views

  • 09.19.13
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Currency: This article is not too old or out-dated that it can be used as an useful source. It is 2014, so some researcher might bash it but I do feel the information is reliable and gives numerical statistic on what users were affected by Privacy dilemmas on Facebook.
  • Holly Ellyatt
  • "Although the Facebook quitters of the present sample represented only a very small amount of all Facebook users, many of them seemed to be concerned about privacy to such an extent that it outweighed perceived advantages of Facebook and eventually led them to quit their virtual Facebook identity," Stieger and his co-authors said in an article entitled "Who Commits Virtual Identity Suicide?"published on Wednesday.
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Relevance: This information is appropiate enough to the topic because it points on the emotions tha these users have for Facebook. It appeals pathos and it shows the disadvantages that Facebook users have while trusting this site with so much valueable information. 
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • A survey of around 300 Facebook users and 300 quitters of the social networking site by Austrian psychologists at the University of Vienna assessing what motivated them to use or abandon Facebook revealed an emerging counter-movement against social networking.
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Accuracy: The information is coming from this author and it throws numerical information and that was found by an Austrian psychologist at a University which makes the argument a lot stronger because he specializes int he thought process and emotion of those 300 Fcebook users that felt as though they had to quit Facebook due to it harming their social identity.
  • Holly Ellyatt
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Authority: The url that took me to more information about this author has that she is a producer of CNBC which is a good quality and she can hold a view on Privacy issues on television but I am skeptical of saying is she is credible to believe on Facebook users.
  • Among those saying they were quitting Facebook, almost half were leaving because of privacy concerns.
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Purpose: The main argument here is the privacy issue on Facebook is what is forcing users to leave not what Facebook content provides. Its the lack of safety of one's profile, number, age, and location that Facebook has out there to the web. Then when it comes to cleaning up your page to get  job it never goes away.
  •  
    This Article focuses on Facebook users and quitters due to the fact of feeling as though it is "virtual identity suicide". This article goes on to prove the that fact that Facebook and other socail medias can be a danger to your future career goals. Users are left with a lot of vent-like post that are taken out of content and held against them in the end.
  •  
    This is current enough and very relevant. It would be nice to look at this idea over a couple of years and see if people are still fearful!
Kenny Christine

Lesson 1: The Media and Democracy: Theory and History - 0 views

  • This introductory lesson has two components: a brief discussion of the critical role the media play in a democracy such as that we have in the United States and a history of the development of the news media in the United States, including a discussion of why the government has regulated the print media differently from the broadcast media.
  • The news media play a critical role in the American democracy. The press has always been present, and it has a privilege no other industry enjoys: a specific protection in the Constitution
  • The press is simultaneously blamed and praised for many aspects of American political life. On the one hand, it is accused of a wide array of offenses: endangering national security, oversimplifying important issues of public policy, focusing too much on the negatives and not enough on the achievements of government, and demonstrating some sort of political bias.
  • ...15 more annotations...
  • Television is the most influential medium in American society and has been for many years.
  • Americans perceive television primarily as an entertainment medium, but many Americans also depend on it as a source of information about many issues, including politics.
  • In 2004, the American National Election Study found that 86 percent of people said they followed the 2004 presidential campaign on television.
  • Television is perceived as more credible than print, according to studies by Journalism.org, the Pew Research Center, and others, and this is probably due to the visual nature of the medium. However, the same reports show that trust in both local television and national networks has steadily declined (as has trust in all media sources).
  • Reporters seem to be automatically suspicious of the motives of elected officials and politicians running for office.
  • Politicians believe that the time, money, and energy they devote to press relations will pay off in the form of reelection or support for their policy proposals.
  • While the public relies on the news media as a source of information about politics, politicians also depend on the press, both in elections and in governing.
  • Since the 1970s, Americans have become much more likely to identify themselves as independents rather than as Democrats or Republicans. The weakening of the political parties has made it possible for more individuals to run for office without spending years paying their dues in the parties. But it has also affected the ability of the parties to speak effectively to voters and mobilize them at election time.
  • As a result of the weakening of the political parties, candidates have to cultivate their own relationships with voters, and the way they do that is through the mass media.
  • In the early days of the nation, the press was blatantly partisan, as it still is in many other democratic countries.
  • Theodore Roosevelt, our first truly media-savvy president, tried to use the reporters who covered the White House for his own benefit. He gave them access that they hadn't previously enjoyed, but he also threatened to take away that access if their reporting displeased him.
  • Elected officials and candidates for office need to get their views out to the voting public, and the members of the press see their job as screening those views for truth. The result is that the press and politicians have very different imperatives that clash with each other dramaticall
  • The Kennedy-Nixon presidential debates of 1960 were another important series of events in the emergence of television as a political medium.
  • Today, thanks to the development of cable and satellite technology, television provides a twenty-four-hour forum of political news and information.
  • The equal time rule originated in the Radio Act of 1927, and it can also be found in Section 315 of the Communications Act of 1934. It requires that stations provide all political candidates the opportunity to appear. If a station sells or gives advertising time to one candidate, it must offer the same opportunity to the other candidates in that race.
  •  
    Political Science course at Missou.
  •  
    Good site choice, pull stuff from course sites all the time, should be authoritative right!
evonchevelle730

5 Ways New Media Are Changing Politics - US News - 0 views

  • The result is a new paradigm in political communications, and both parties are using it. Very little of it has to do with expensive political advertising on mass media. Look at your desktop, and you'll see the ways the new media are changing the political scene from the bottom up:
    • evonchevelle730
       
      Relevance- 5 ways that media effects politics
  • Feb. 4, 2010
    • evonchevelle730
       
      Currency- 2010
  • By Mary Kate Cary
    • evonchevelle730
       
      Authority- works for U.S. News
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • But really, does anyone think that in 2020—or maybe even 2015—we'll still have big-money television ad buys, regardless of who's paying for them?
    • evonchevelle730
       
      Purpose- this situation happened and made people interested
  •  
    The outrage was immediate: The Supreme Court decision that struck down restrictions on the use of corporate funds in political advertising, Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, is "devastating to the public interest" (President Obama) and a "disastrous rollback" of campaign finance laws (MoveOn.Org) and promises a "windfall" (New York Times) of big-money television ad buys by groups like the U.S.
  •  
    I like your research here 1
Sarah Donnelly

Effects of Media on Body Image - Allie Kovar - 1 views

  • Works Cited
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Accuracy: Sources were cited
  • April 30, 2009
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Currency- April 30, 2009
  • Allie Kovar
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Authority- Written by Allie Kovar for Vanderbilt University
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Experimental Studies of Media and its Effects on Body Image
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Relevance: Provides research results of the effect mass media has on teens' body image.
  • Since we live in a world of constant stimulation and immediate access to all sorts of media, could the constant reminder of the “thin ideal” cause body dissatisfaction, a negative body image, and low self-esteem?
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Purpose: To inform the reader of how media's portrayal of the ideal body is harming today's youth.
  •  
    Mass media's portrayal of the "thin ideal" is being exposed to children early in life. This causes body dissatisfaction, low self-esteem,negative body image, and can lead to eating disorders.
Sherrise Linton

Privacy issues in social-networking sites - 2 views

  • By M. E. Kabay, Network World
    • amanda mast
       
      authority: the author is M. E. Kabay and i believe this person is somewhat credible. You do not get a whole lot of information about him in this article but it has good facts in it. No contact information, no mistakes.
  • September 27, 2010 12:09 AM ET
  • ...23 more annotations...
    • amanda mast
       
      Currency: this article was posted on September 27, 2010 and has not been updated (or you cannot tell). This site is good for older facts to also help to see how far a social media site has come over just a couple of years.
  • In December of 2009 Facebook made one of the most controversial changes to their privacy policy. No longer could you have a nearly invisible account allowing only those you wanted in by default. A user's profile was now publicly searchable with most of the information opened up for all to see by default. Facebook users were not pleased. Now, this isn't to say that Facebook pages couldn't be public before (they could), it was more about the loss of the choice. And that was the truly scary part.
    • amanda mast
       
      Accuracy: facts like this contribue to accuracy because he did his research to find this information. This paragraph also has another link put into it that leads to another article where information was pulled from.
  • Realistically, today's article is more of a wakeup call to be cautious how you use the social-networking sites and other parts of the Web that ask for personal information. It's not so anonymous: it's more public than you may think at the time you sign up for that nifty site. Remember that the Internet never forgets: not only are there public archives, but once your information has been copied by other people and saved on their hard drives, you really have lost control over it.
    • amanda mast
       
      Purpose: the purpose of this article is to warn people about what they put on social media, there are many ways information can be saved that you posted and come back to haunt you.
  • Let's say that you are on top of your security settings and have your Facebook page well locked down. Your boss isn't your Friend and you haven't added or been tagged in any racy or embarrassing photos. Are you safe now? Not necessarily. Glitches in Facebook's own services may still share data, especially with Instant Personalization. Instant Personalization is intended to share some of your
  • sites to, you guessed it, personalize the experienc
    • amanda mast
       
      Relevance: the inteneded audience is anyone who uses social media and does not believe they are doing damage to their future or current jobs. You may think your page is private and noone can see what you are posting but there is always a way around things.
  • first started in 2004 the site was limited to just Harvard students
  • But what if those Friends were your employers, how about the Friends of Friends, or even worse, Everyone?
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Relevance: This information is very useful to my topic because it goes unto open the view to those who do not realize that your peers are not the only individuals that can view your post/status friends of friends are there to capture your every move as well.
  • Facebook is easily the king of social networking.
  • make money
  • to advertisers, or worse yet, dishonest strangers, the data you willingly input are a gold mine
  • Facebook itself is a business venture
  • provide a service
  • But being on Facebook doesn't mean you're not concerned with privacy. Rather, the issue is what information you provide and allow them to show.
  • sites cater particularly to the college-age crowd
  • social networking sites like Facebook or MySpace
  • Pictures from last week's party may become evidence against you in your job hunt.
  • September 27, 2010
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Currency: This article does not pass the test of being timely, my topic is requires the most recent information so that individuals can know the up-to-date form of privacy laws and issue website now uphold. This article is listed for September 10, 2010 which is not recent at all, for the intended audience to reference to.
  • Kyle Covino is one of the bright young people that I very much appreciate at my local Staples store in Berlin Corners, Vt. He and his colleagues in the technology department have never failed to greet me warmly and offer immediate help in finding the right equipment for my needs – and I have watched them serve other customers with the same enthusiasm and competence.
  • 500+ million users
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Purpose: Using this number here helps the argument of the intended auidence, the purpose here is to attract these 500+ million users to become more aware and trustworthy of the author here into believe that there are more than just peers at view of your profile and to remain professional at all times.
  • you'll want to look at the Account, Privacy, and Application Settings links, which provide the tools necessary to lock down your information and limit what others can see. Two good recent articles that provide details on how to use these settings properly are by Nilay Patel and by Whitson Gordon. Facebook may change your settings without warning you, so you should check them periodically
    • Sherrise Linton
       
      Authority: The two authors listed behind this warned Application Setting view and how to manage you Facebook account privacy settings; you click on the url and the authors are very much credible, they have written articles on both the privacy issues and Facebook which cover the relevancy of my topic.
  •  
    This article discusses facebook and how it began and how it became a public social networking site.
  •  
    This Article opens up the views of the target audience which are college students and this helps them to become more aware of the status and post updated. This article is relevant to this targeted audience because it mentions job offers and "Facebook Firing" and this type of awaeness get the attention of those that are recently applying for jobs.
  •  
    Absolutely credibe! If in doubt about the author, Google the person! In about 3 sec I found out who he was, and he is a guru of security from Dartmouth...http://www.ists.dartmouth.edu/events/ecampus/bios/kabay.html
Sarah Donnelly

Media and Children's Aggression, Fear, and Altruism Citations - 0 views

  • Endnotes
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Accuracy: Cites peer reviewed research journals
Trenton Taber

Positive Effects of the Media - 0 views

  • Research has revealed that media is responsible for influencing a major part of our daily life. Media contribute to a transformation in the cultural and social values of the masses. Media can bring about a change in the attitudes and beliefs of the common man. The persuasive nature of the content presented over media influences the thoughts and behavior of the general public. Media has a direct impact over the lifestyle of society.
  • Newspapers, apart from updating us with the latest news and new information, also contribute to the enhancement of our vocabulary. Newspapers are the best beginners in developing reading habits in children.
  • By Manali OakLast Updated: September 26, 2011
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Media has served as a boon to mankind. It has provided us with an exposure to the world outside our cozy homes.
  • It is true to a certain extent that media has affected the society in a negative manner. But, undoubtedly, media has proved being a bliss.
  •  
    This article overviews the positive effects of the media. The article starts off by explaining how media serves as a way for us to exchange information by not leaving our homes. It offers great insight on the different ways information is communicated to us.
Sarah Donnelly

Effects of Mass Media | - 1 views

  • This entry was posted on Monday, March 24th, 2014 at 12:55 am
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Currency: Posted March 24th, 2014
  • Overtime, many experimental researches have been conducted and results demonstrate that television violence increases violent behavior (Schneider, Gruman, & Coutts, 2012).
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Relevance: This article looks at a study on how violence on television is effecting the behavior of children and adolescents in language that is easy to understand while not oversimplifying the information.
  • PSYCH 424 blog
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Authority: This article is written by a PSYCH 424 class at Penn State for Applied Social Psychology.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • References:
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Accuracy: Article cites credible journals, publications, and news articles.
  • Predicted violent behavior and sexual behavior can be related to what adolescents view through media.
    • Sarah Donnelly
       
      Purpose: The purpose of this article is to inform readers of the correlation between increased adolescent violence and the violent and sexual behavior depicted in media.
  •  
    Media is constantly becoming more prominent in everyday life, especially among adolescents. The easy access media gives youth to portrayals of violent and sexual behavior brings up the question of how it is affecting our youth. This article examines the current debate over what kind and how much of an effect media is having on adolescents.
  •  
    Nice background piece!
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