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Qianxia Jin – Discover Education, 2024
Television programs are a rich source of input for which we can utilize in vocabulary acquisition. With foreign language television programs becoming more accessible globally, there is the possibility to better use this input source for learning. Can we incorporate television viewing into classroom learning (intentional learning)? Or use it as a…
Descriptors: Television, Television Research, Television Viewing, Vocabulary Development
Warrier, Sheela; Ebbeck, Marjory – Early Child Development and Care, 2014
This article focuses on aspects of children's rights as portrayed in television. The results of a six-month research study show analyses of television content of Channel 5, which is the only free-to-air, 24-hour, English-language entertainment channel in Singapore. The results identify the role of television in assisting Singapore to meet its…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Television, Childrens Rights, Television Research
Dervin, Fred; Gao, Minghui – Language and Intercultural Communication, 2012
Research on intercultural couplehood often relies on cultures and "solid identities" to explain the couples' experiences. By looking at the media construction of an intercultural couple on Chinese television, we are interested in how they are presented and co-constructed through different perspectives, especially if and how (cultural)…
Descriptors: Television Research, Discourse Analysis, Fairy Tales, Television
Gocen, Gokcen; Okur, Alpaslan – Educational Research and Reviews, 2013
Generally, the speaking aspect is not properly debated when discussing the positive and negative effects of television (TV), especially on children. So, to highlight this point, this study was first initialized by asking the question: "What are the effects of TV on speech?" and secondly, to transform the effects that TV has on speech in…
Descriptors: Mass Media Effects, Television, Middle Schools, Middle School Students
Cantor, Paul A. – Academic Questions, 2010
With television having matured as a creative medium in the past few decades, it has taken its rightful place among the subjects scholars study seriously. Professors are now analyzing the meaning and significance of classic shows with the care and intellectual respect traditionally accorded to literary masterpieces. But some academics still resist…
Descriptors: Internet, Television, Student Attitudes, Television Viewing

Gantz, Walter – Journalism Quarterly, 1982
Concludes that next-day weather forecasts given by television stations are usually accurate and that stations seldom change their forecasts between the early evening and late evening newscasts. (FL)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, News Reporting, Television, Television Research

Greenberg, Bradley S.; Busselle, Rick W. – Journal of Communication, 1996
Finds that soap operas analyzed in 1994 contain more frequent sexual incidence on an hourly average, both within the same soaps analyzed a decade earlier and even more so on two additional very popular soaps. Shows that the more frequent sex centers on physical intercourse, primarily among partners not married to anyone; and sexual activity is…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Sexuality, Soap Operas, Television

Shanahan, James; McComas, Katherine – Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 1997
Finds that nature as a theme is completely absent in 80% and the outstanding theme in only 1.7% of television programming; not only less frequent, but separate from the dominant themes in prime-time; and treated as a sociopolitical "issue" (like "politics,""science,""religion," and "education").…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Environment, Programming (Broadcast), Television

Loshitzky, Yosefa – Journal of Communication, 1995
Examines images of World War II invoked in two live, international music concerts (one rock, one classical) celebrating the fall of the Berlin Wall. Argues that Western television's choice of imagery represented the Wall's demise as a marker of the end of the Cold War rather than a vanishing monument of Germany's conflicted struggle with Holocaust…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Imagery, Modern History, Television

Metallinos, Nikos – Canadian Journal of Educational Communication, 1991
Discusses changes that are needed in the perceptual, cognitive, and aesthetic principles governing the medium of television to compensate for the high-quality, filmlike picture produced by high definition television (HDTV), or improved definition television (IDTV). Topics discussed include changes in visual perception, cognitive processes and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Television, Television Research
Hoffer, Thomas W.; Nelson, Richard Alan – Southern Speech Communication Journal, 1980
Defines documentary-drama or docudrama, which combines elements of drama with the television documentary. Outlines the antecedents of docudrama, traces its revival in recent years, and provides a quantitative description of its evolution. (JMF)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Documentaries, Drama, Programing (Broadcast)

Litman, Barry R. – Journalism Quarterly, 1979
Regression analysis shows that ratings for television movies can be explained both in terms of variables that accounted for the films' success in the theatrical marketplace and in terms of the pattern of scheduling by the networks. (GT)
Descriptors: Films, Predictor Variables, Programing (Broadcast), Success

Austin, Bruce A. – Journalism Quarterly, 1979
An analysis of the prime time television offerings of the three commercial network-affiliated television stations in Rochester, New York, revealed that nonentertainment programing was minimal (5 percent) and that entertainment shows of all types predominated during prime time. (GT)
Descriptors: Commercial Television, Content Analysis, Programing (Broadcast), Television

Gomery, Douglas – Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 1997
Proposes a rethinking of historical analysis of U. S. television history, to begin at the local level. Offers a case study of the place of Washington, DC, as a site for network news. Notes that, as a community, Washington presents an important site where forces such as migration and suburbanization shaped the early history of television. (SR)
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Case Studies, Local History, Television

Butler, Jeremy G. – Journal of Film and Video, 1993
Examines approaches to discourse and television, working from the specific example of the television situation comedy "Designing Women" to the general functioning of discourse in television narrative. Positions "Designing Women" within the sitcom genre. Suggests that "Designing Women" activates television's…
Descriptors: Characterization, Discourse Analysis, Feminism, Higher Education