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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 10 page paper. Concerns about the influence of television on children is not new; it has existed since television became prominent in homes. In fact, the first study investigating the effect on television violence on children and adolescents was conducted in 1952. This paper explores the research regarding the degree of influence violent television has on children and adolescents. Numerous studies are reported. Data are included. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
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10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGTVkdvl.rtf
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first investigated and it was in 1952 and 1953 that Congressional Hearings focused on violence on television. Estes Kefauver convened a panel to determine if there was a link between
violence on television and juvenile delinquency. Numerous hearing have been held on the topic since the 1950s but little was one until recently (Murray, 1995). The issue became more
prevalent in the 1960s and it was at the late 1960s that the Surgeon General was asked to study the effects of violence on television. This made violence on television
a matter of national health. The Surgeon General established a 12-person panel to study the issue. Funding was allotted and 60 different projects were begun across the country. The investigation
took three years, with the report being released in 1972. The panel concluded that television violence influences young viewers and increases the likelihood that these children will become more aggressive
in a variety of ways. The report pointed out that not all children and youth are affected in the same way but there was sufficient evidence to conclude that television
violence can be harmful to children (Murray, 1995). A follow-up report was sponsored by the National Institute of Mental Health in 1982. The conclusion of the research
that had been conducted in those ten years indicated that watching violence on television affects the aggressive behavior of children. Further, it affects the aggressive behavior of adults (Murray, 1995).
Ten years later, in 1992, the American Psychological Association Task Force on Television and Social Behavior released a report that concluded after 30 years of investigations,
television violence is definitely harmful to children (Huston et al, 1992). Numerous investigators have reported that viewers of violence on television are affected in three ways: 1. Direct Effects:
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