Many educators, educational policymakers, and individuals with
public influence have suggested that television watching has indeed
lowered the academic performance of school children, both in reading
and writing, and in mathematics. Support for such assertions frequently
appears on television screens. Although children may learn the
meaning of some words from watching television, television viewing
presumably lessens the time they spend on homework, reading books,
listening to adult conversation, and other activities with greater
potential (than watching television) for the development of vocabulary,
a major component of an individual's literacy proficiency. The
increase in television watching by adults may also have adversely
affected their development and retention of vocabulary by decreasing
such activities as reading and conversing.