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Cubitt, Sean – 1986
This paper argues that the proliferation of videocassette recorders in the United Kingdom, especially England, has altered the terms of all electronic--and possibly cinematic--viewing in that country, with the exception of areas where communal viewing is the dominant practice, where broadcast is the dominant distribution mode, and where cinema is…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Foreign Countries, Media Research, Television Research
Eke, Richard – 1986
This discussion of issues that merit investigation in British primary schools focuses on those issues that concern the links between pedagogic positions, the practices these involve, the media education issues that are thus addressed, the consequences for the activities of the learner, and the critical understandings these practices facilitate. It…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Curriculum Development, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hart, Andrew – Journal of Educational Television, 1992
Examines research methods and data related to television audiences in the United Kingdom. Topics addressed include defining the concept of an audience, time spent watching television and on other media activities, programs watched, audience composition and program scheduling, ways programing addresses audiences, audience research, audience…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Audience Response, Foreign Countries, Futures (of Society)
Close, Robin – National Literacy Trust, 2004
In 2003, the National Literacy Trust commissioned Dr. Robin Close to conduct a literature review of published research in order to understand more fully the relationship between television viewing in the early years and language and literacy development. A priority of the National Literacy Trust is to understand the relationship between language…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Language Acquisition, Preschool Children, Relationship
McGuigan, Jim – 1986
This paper discusses the cognitive effect of a highly successful 1985 British television program, "Edge of Darkness," which was viewed by millions and received critical plaudits and the accolade of the industry itself. The program is shown to represent a significant television event for formal and cognitive reasons that can usefully be…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Capitalism, Cognitive Processes, Content Analysis
Manuel, Preethi – 1986
Since television both reflects and affects society, how blacks are portrayed in television drama is significant for program producers, the audience, and for consideration in debates on multicultural content, minority access, and integrated casting. Previous work in the field of blacks and television has been based on observational sociology,…
Descriptors: Audiences, Blacks, Broadcast Industry, Content Analysis
Kumar, Keval Joe – 1986
This paper provides both a preliminary analysis of a survey on media education in India, and reviews of the research on media education in the western world, the limited media education research already done in India, and the more extensive research that has been done on the sociology of Indian youth and the media. The purpose of the survey was to…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attitudes, Computer Science Education, Cultural Influences
Choat, Ernest – 1986
Very little research has been carried out on the extent to which educational television is recognized as part of the curriculum in nursery and infant schools and how it facilitates learning in young children. The aim of the curriculum at this level should be to offer experiences to children that, through conceptualization, will develop in them the…
Descriptors: British Infant Schools, Child Development, Childrens Television, Cognitive Development