Television Goes to School
Submitted Thursday, May 14, 2009 - 13:55
Description:
Subtitle: The Impact of Video on Student Learning in Formal Education.
A resource provided by the Education Department of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting for the benefit of Public Broadcasters and Educators throughout the United States. Created by EDC’s Center for Children and Technology.
"Today’s children are growing up surrounded by television and video. Visual media is already an essential component of classroom instruction, with almost all teachers employing video in some form in their teaching. As the presence of broadband, digital media, and streaming video increases, the likelihood is that video will become an even more essential classroom resource. Classroom resources these days must be backed by research. The passage of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 requires that instructional resources must demonstrate evidence of effectiveness. As a result, scientifically-based research is more important in education than ever before.
This report focuses on key questions concerning the relationship of television to learning, and provides examples drawn from current television research to demonstrate television’s effect on student achievement. A set of practical recommendations are also provided so that broadcasters and educators can maximize the effectiveness of video in the classroom."
Year:
2004
Table of contents:
Executive Summary
Report Rationale
A Brief Overview Of The History Of Tv Research
Watching Television
Learning From Tv
Classroom Uses Of Video And Television
Using Classroom Television To Support Specific Academic Disiplines
Teaching With Television
Helping Teachers Teach With Television
Looking Ahead
Bibliography
Web Resources
System requirements:
PDF reader