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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. Children are curious, impressionable creatures who learn by watching and imitating. The extent to which children are products of their environment is both grand and far-reaching; that certain exposure creates negative behavior patterns just as much as others support positive ones speaks to the detrimental impact some television programs have upon children's behavior. Whether the lure of consumerism or cultivation of violent, antisocial tendencies, children are highly vulnerable targets of what they see on the television screen, a psychological reality known as stimulus-response that subconsciously encourages them to react to what they see. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCTVChildren.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
negative behavior patterns just as much as others support positive ones speaks to the detrimental impact some television programs have upon childrens behavior. Whether the lure of consumerism or
cultivation of violent, antisocial tendencies, children are highly vulnerable targets of what they see on the television screen, a psychological reality known as stimulus-response that subconsciously encourages them to react
to what they see. "...In many families, media have replaced teachers and parents as educators, role models and the primary sources of information about the world...Children between 2 and
18 years of age spend six-and-a-half to eight hours a day with media, including television, videotapes, movies and video games -- more time than on any other activity except sleeping...By
age 18, the average young person has seen 200,000 acts of violence on television alone" (Lavers, 2002, p. 28). One obvious influence television has upon children is the early
age at which they grasp the unnatural appetite of consumerism. The vicious cycle that exists within the framework of consumerism - the "artificial appetite" (Lapham, 1993, p. 10) for
wanting more and more materialistic tangibles until there is nothing left to appreciate - resides within each and every person; however, it is a social ill that grows worse with
each passing generation as children are exposed to cleverly marketed television commercials focused directly upon young viewers. In analyzing the kinds of ideas,
values and ethics contemporary television advertising attempts to promote toward children, one only has to realize how strong the hold capitalism has upon people. It should come as no
surprise that many children are persuaded to ask for items they either do not need or have little interest in, all because they were swayed by slick marketing campaigns targeted
...