Television Observation Research, assignment help

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On average, children watch three hours of television per day, every day of the week. Hundreds of empirical studies have shown that extensive exposure to television violence can contribute to the learning of aggressive attitudes and behaviors in children. Furthermore, there is growing evidence that the inclusion of physically violent content may interfere with children’s learning of social-emotional or cognitive-intellectual lessons

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DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY RESEARCH PROJECT Observation: Television Aggression* On average, children watch three hours of television per day, every day of the week. Hundreds of empirical studies have shown that extensive exposure to television violence can contribute to the learning of aggressive attitudes and behaviors in children. Furthermore, there is growing evidence that the inclusion of physically violent content may interfere with children’s learning of social-emotional or cognitive-intellectual lessons. Using the definition of violence offered by George Gerbner, "The overt expression of physical force against others or self, or the compelling of action against one's will on pain of being hurt or killed", select a minimum of three half-hour television programs normally watched by children and count the number of violent or aggressive episodes in each. Extend Gerbner's definition somewhat, however, to count social aggression as well as physical aggression. Social aggression refers to behavior designed to harm another person’s self-esteem or social status. Several recent studies have documented that children can learn social aggression from viewing programs that depict and explicitly model such behavior. Although some may argue that verbal/social aggression is necessary to teach social-emotional lessons about appropriate interpersonal behavior, all too often such behavior is used gratuitously as a comedic device rather than as a storytelling device. For example, name-calling and teasing are used to get a laugh, not to teach that they are inappropriate behaviors. You may select any three programs distributed in the following way: 1. At least one educational television program, such as Sesame Street, Blues Clues, Little Einsteins, Dora the Explorer, Between the Lions, Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood, etc. 2. At least one Saturday morning cartoon (a cartoon that is geared towards entertainment: Scooby Doo, Sponge Bob, Power Rangers, Looney Tunes, etc.). Select at random. 3. At least one early evening adult program that is watched by young children (either purposely or the child is simply in the room when other family members are watching): a family show (Cosby, etc.), a pre-teen show (Hanna Montana, Jonas, etc.), situation comedy, action, drama, a crime film, etc. For each program you watch, you must have a separate pae of notes. Please record the number of aggressive episodes, separating the instances of physical, verbal and relational aggression. Papers will not be accepted without accompanying notes. For each program you watch, also record the number and type of pro-social or positive interactions. This is a restricted, non-reactive observation, without intervention. Type a three to four page summary and analysis. Also include a cover page with the name of your project (Television Aggression), a creative title, your name, student id number, name of the class, days and time class meets, and the date the paper is due (or when you are handing it in) PLEASE MAKE SURE TO ATTACH YOUR NOTES ON THE PROGRAMS TO THE BACK OF YOUR PAPER. Papers will not be accepted without accompanying notes with an actual account of each type of aggression. Include in your paper: 1. An introduction. 2. A brief description of what you observed for each program, and when. To receive credit for this question, for each program you must include the actual number of aggressive acts you observed for each type of aggression. Your numbers reported in your paper should also be reflected in your notes. 3. What kind of variation in the number of aggressive episodes is there among the types of program that you watched? 4. Are some more verbally/socially aggressive and some more physically aggressive? 5. What about the consequences of aggression in the television programs? Are those who act aggressively rewarded or punished? How often do reward and punishment occur? 6. What behaviors (positive and negative) other than aggression might a child have learned from watching the programs you viewed? This question is particularly relevant for Sesame Street or Mr. Rogers, etc., but applies to more traditional entertainment programs as well. 7. Were positive behaviors and lessons positively reinforced/rewarded? Positive reinforcement would include positive comments such as cheering the character on, rewarding the character for the positive/pro-social behavior, positive outcome, etc. 8. Was there educational content in the programs? Briefly explain.   Social-emotional programs aim to teach the viewer life lessons about personal feelings and interpersonal relationships Cognitive-intellectual programs offer more traditionally academic lessons and information on facts, ideas and concepts related to existing knowledge or ways of thinking. If so, were the primary lessons presented clearly, explicitly and directly so that even a young child would notice and understand? 9. Rate each show using the findings from your observations to support your ratings from 1 (terrible) to 6 (excellent). Explain your rating. What was your reaction to each program, both before and after the observation? 10. In view of material in the textbook, and your own observations for this project, what guidance, rules or limits (if any) would you place on TV viewing for your own children? Why? 11. Conclusion *Adapted from Russell, K. (2007) and Bee, H. (1981). The Developing Child. New York: Harper & Row. pp.361. Appendix: Signorelli's report on TV Violence By far the largest body of research on TV effects has focused on the potential impact of TV on children's aggressiveness, not only because TV programs in the United States are clearly high in aggression, but also because any causal relationship between TV violence and children's aggression would be cause for grave concern. There is no dispute about the high level of violence on TV, nor about the fact that this level has not declined in the past decades despite many public outcries. Nancy Signorelli (1986) estimates that in 1985, situation comedies averaged about two incidents of physical violence per hour, and action/adventure programs averaged eight. The rate is still higher in children's cartoons and would be far higher for all types of programs if verbal aggression were also counted. It is also important to point out that the "good guys" are just as likely to be violent as the "bad guys", and that violence on most TV programs is rewarded. People who are violent get what they want. In fact, violence is usually portrayed as a successful way of solving problems. Furthermore, the consequences of violence - pain, blood, damage - are seldom shown, so the child is protected from seeing the painful and negative consequences of aggression, and thus receives an unrealistic portrayal of those consequences. **From Bee, H. The Developing Child. New York: Harper & Row. Scoring Rubric for Television Aggression Observation Attach this page to the end of your paper and assign points to your effort for each of the four criteria I describe below. In other words, I want you to evaluate your own work. Use the first column for your evaluation. The second column is for mine. Your scoring My scoring 1. Analytic effort (maximum 40 points) 2. Organization and writing style (maximum 5 points) 3. Creativity (maximum 10 points) 4. Professional presentation (maximum 5 points) Total Points Earned (maximum 60 points) I will assess your movie review on the following criteria (use this as a check list): 1. Degree and quality of analytic effort (MOST IMPORTANT) (maximum 40 points)  did you respond to all the questions  how insightful is your analysis, i.e., does it go beyond a superficial treatment of the subject and get at underlying themes and patterns  do you present your ideas in a logical fashion  does your analysis integrate key concepts in meaningful ways  have you used concepts and theoretical perspectives accurately? 2. Organizational structure and writing style (maximum 5 points)  is your paper easy to read, are your sentences clear  is your paper well organized with topic sentences and logical transitions between paragraphs  is there a sense of continuity from the beginning to the end  have you included a strong opening and conclusion? 3. Creativity of thought and presentation (maximum 10 points)  do you keep my interest and motivate me to read the next sentence, paragraph, and page  do you include thought provoking passages or questions that demonstrate original thinking? 4. Quality of professional presentation (maximum 5 points)  have you double and triple checked your paper to eliminate typos and misspellings  is your paper printed with neat and clear ink (no faded type please)  have you followed my directions for preparing your paper (cover sheet, font, margins, notes from Observations, Scoring Rubric, etc.)
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Running head: TELEVISION AGRESSION

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Television Aggression
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TELEVISION AGRESSION

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Television aggression
Introduction

Aggressive episodes from television programs have a huge impact to the psychological
development of children. Children tend to copy these characters hence those who are frequent at
watching movies and other television programs that contain aggressive episodes are likely to be
more aggressive than those who don’t watch. This increased aggression among teenagers is
caused by lack of proper parenting that do not regulate the amount of time in which kids are
allowed to watch TV programs (Linebarger et al 20014). Those addictive parents of TV programs
fail to have enough time with their children hence chances of neglected discipline occur. This
article is discussing three TV programs that contain aggressive episodes and their impact to
children.
Between the lions
This is a television series programs that are designed for educational purposes of
children. These series were created by the collaboration of Boston’s WGBH and New York
City’s Sirius Thinking Limited. The target audience for this educational program is children
between the ages of 5-8 years (Linebarger et al 20014).
Plot
This series program is intended to promote reading skills among children. This series
focuses on a family lions that operate and operate in a huge library with unusual range of actors
such as Click. In this series programs, some episodes have featured well known folktales and
other ancient myths. The lions seem to benefit from stories taught in this story. Another section

TELEVISION AGRESSION

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of this se...


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