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Calli Roberts

Constructing Gender Stereotypes Through Social Roles in Prime-Time Television. - 0 views

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    This article does not address media coverage of politics but addresses media coverage of women and men in television shows. Women are often portrayed doing jobs such as childcare, nurse, household chores, and teachers while men are seen as doctors, lawyers, and the dominators of the family. Although this is changing, it still plays a significant role in most television shows. Women do not only struggle with gender roles on television but often male writers dominate female writers in the film industry. By using a different example of literacy in my paper, it will show how women are betrayed in the media besides political media. This is important to use as support for my main points in the paper. I can relate gender bias both in politics and in television to show people how this is just not happening in one area of the public media.
A Stanley

EBSCOhost: Offensive Language in Prime-Time Television: Four Years After Television Ag... - 0 views

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    This journal discusses the use of inappropriate terms and derogatory terms in popular television. It discusses whether or not the content ratings presented were or were not affective in decreasing the amount of offensive language used in prime time television. It presents a study of one week of television in three separate years in a seven year span. It also addresses the per hour percentage of offensive terms or actions from each station examined.
Abby Purdy

Media Bombardment Is Linked to Ill Effects During Childhood - 0 views

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    In a detailed look at nearly 30 years of research on how television, music, movies and other media affect the lives of children and adolescents, a new study released today found an array of negative health effects linked to greater use.
Abby Purdy

Should tots watch TV? - 0 views

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    Most kids under 2 are parked in front of the electronic babysitter every day. Author Lisa Guernsey explains how the tube impacts the smallest couch potatoes. A worthwhile article that explains some of the reasoning behind children's television. I can only assume that the book would be worth checking out too.
Calli Roberts

Children's and Adolescents' Developing Perceptions of Gender Inequality - 0 views

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    This article addresses children when growing up and how they for opinions about women and men and their bias. Young children often see their mothers doing house work and their father work, so they assume the men play the dominate role in society from a young age. They often believe "males dominate and females complicate". From a young age, this attitude is installed in children This research will benefit my paper because it correlates with how the media perceives women on television and provides an explanation for the stereotype of childcare worker, homemaker and teacher. It shows how women develop a role in society and the media from a very young age. The media continues to perceive them this way because the media was taught this is the role genders play.
A Stanley

EBSCOhost: Watch Your Mouth! An Analysis of Profanity Uttered by Children on Prime--T... - 0 views

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    This article discusses the origin and use of profanity during prime time television with respect to children and programs more commonly viewed by children. It also exposes the idea that violence and aggressive behavior can influence the actions and thinking of children in today's society. Lastly, it discusses an analysis of prime time viewing and the profanity and violence portrayed in commonly viewed shows.
K Burt

EBSCOhost: Returning to reading with Harry Potter - 0 views

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    This article talks about how Harry Potter has made an impact on students and their reading. The Harry Potter books have made young students want to return to reading again and truly enjoy it. Students are begining to choose reading over television thanks to the new Harry Potter books being released.
Abby Purdy

Is "Barney" destroying my kids' brains? - 0 views

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    A few weeks ago, a study connected TV watching to ADHD. But the findings have been blown way out of proportion.
Abby Purdy

Understanding Media Literacy - 0 views

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    A film available on OhioLINK. TV and radio commercials, Web sites and banner ads, magazine ads, pop songs, photos, and even news articles and textbooks: all of them are sending messages to influence the reader/viewer/listener. How do they grab the attention? What are they selling-a product or service? a lifestyle? an ideology?-and why? Would a different media consumer interpret the message differently? This program raises more questions than it answers, which is the whole point: to prompt students to question, question, question the messages they are bombarded with daily. Savvy media consumers aren't born; they're made, and this program is an excellent tool for shaping the classroom dialogue. (35 minutes)
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