TEXT 4 CHILDREN AND TELEVISION
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TEXT 4

CHILDREN AND TELEVISION

 

Read the following interview:                          

TV's "disastrous" impact on children

 

Interview with Neil POSTMAN,

Professor of Communication,

Arts and Sciences, New YorkUniversity.

 

Watching television over a long span seriously damages children's ability to think clearly, says a media expert. He maintains, too, that exposure to TV sensationalism robs youngsters of childhood.

 

Q. Professor Postman, is television a good or bad influence on the way children learn?

A. It's turning out to be a disastrous influence, at least as far as we can determine at present. Television appears to be shortening the attention span of the young as well as eroding, to a considerable extent, their linguistic powers and their ability to handle mathematical symbolism. Even more serious, in my view, is that television is opening up all of society's secrets and taboos, thus erasing the dividing line between childhood and adulthood.

 

Q. Is television more pervasive in a child's world than school?

A. Absolutely. I call television the "first curriculum" because of the amount of attention our children give to it. By now, the basic facts are known by almost everyone: between the ages of 6 and 18, the average child spends roughly 15,000 to 16,000 hours in front of a television set, whereas school probably consumes no more than 13,000 hours.

Moreover, it is becoming obvious that there really is no such thing as "children's" programming. Between midnight and 2 in the morning there are something like 750,000 children throughout America watching television every day. There's a fantasy people have that after 10 p.m. children aren't watching television; that's nonsense.

Many parents, as well as educators, also have the mistaken belief that television is an "entertainment medium" in which little of enduring value is either taught by or learned from it. Television has a transforming power at least equal to that of the printing press and possibly as great as that of the alphabet itself.

 

Q. How does TV hurt a child's linguistic ability?

A. Television is essentially a visual medium. It shows pictures moving very rapidly and in a very dynamic order. Although human speech is heard on television, it is the picture that always contains the most important meanings.

Television can never teach what a medium like a book can teach, and yet educators are always trying, to pretend that they can use television to promote the cognitive habits and the intellectual discipline that print promotes. In this respect they will always be doomed to failure. Television is not a suitable medium for conveying ideas, because an idea is essentially language — words and sentences.

The code through which television communicates — the visual image — is accessible to everyone. Understanding printed words must be learned; watching pictures does not require any learning.

As a result, TV is a medium that becomes intelligible to children beginning at about the age of 36 months. From this very early age on, television continuously exerts influence.

For the reason, I think it's fair to say that TV, as a curriculum, moulds the intelligence and character of youth far more than formal schooling. Beyond that, evidence is accumulating that TV watching, hurts academic performance. A recent California Department of Education survey indicated that the more children sit in front of the television, the worse they do on achievement-test scores.

 

Q. Are you saying that television doesn't allow a person to accumulate knowledge based on past experiences?

A. That's right. Language tends to be more abstract; it encourages the use of imagination.

It is not true, as many insist, that watching TV is a passive experience. Anyone who has observed children watching television will know how foolish that statement is. In watching TV, children have their emotions fully engaged. It is their capacity for abstraction that is quiescent.

I'm not criticizing television for that. I'm saying that's what television does; that is the nature of the medium. Television, after all, does have a valuable capacity to involve people emotionally in its pictures.

 

Q. How does television affect interaction in the classroom?

A. Schools assume that there are some things you must know before you can learn other things. They assume that not all things are as immediately accessible as they are on television and that it takes hard work and lengthy periods of study to attain many desirable things that are not immediately visible, such as knowledge. The temptation is very great for teachers to substitute for real learning something that's fairly jazzy and that will immediately capture the attention of kids.

I'm not saying that's always bad, but it would be a mistake to allow that strategy to dominate one's thinking about teaching. There are times when you are going to have to say to kids, "You must understand such and such before we can get on to this next point." And if the kid says, "But this is boring," or "How can I use it?" sometimes you have to say, "I know, but that's the way some things are." Television works against this notion.

 

Q. Should teachers employ audio-visual aids that have a relationship to television to enhance their instruction?

A. No. I'm against that for a couple of reasons. The most important is that a high degree of visual stimulation, such as you get with these audio-visual media, tends to distract attention away from language. I recently reviewed some studies on the effects of illustrations in learning-to-read books, and the evidence is that the more illustrations in readers, the less well the students learn the words.

I think this "hidden curriculum" runs through all the new media — television, movies, video-tape and computerized video games. We become more sensitive to visual representations and less to language. In an environment in which nonlinguistic information is moved at the speed of light, in nonlogical patterns, in vast and probably unassimilable quantities, the word and all it stands for loses prestige, power and relevance.

 

COMPREHENSION

I. Say whether the following statements are true or false. Develop the ideas you agree with.

1. Professor Postman assesses that the influence of television on children as disastrous.

2. Television is responsible for the disappearing of the dividing line between childhood and adulthood.

3. Television is more important than school.

4. Children watch mostly morning programmes.

5. Television is primarily an entertainment medium.

6. On television the picture is far more important than the word.

7. Television can hardly teach a child to think and convey ideas the way print does.

8. Television is intelligible to many more people than the book.

9. The more children sit in front of the television, the more they know.

10. Watching TV is a passive experience.

11. Television's valuable capacity is to involve people emotionally in its pictures.

12. Television stimulates learning by making it a pleasure.

13. The word and all it stands for loses prestige, power and relevance in the audio-visual world.

 

II. Do you agree with everything Professor Postman maintains in his interview? Is television's impact only disastrous? What advantages of television do you see in educating children? Draw up a list of positive influences of television on children. Here is something for a start:

1. TV programmes done with good taste and imagination can actually stimulate a child's creativity.

2. Television facilitates the child's entrance into the world of the adult.

3. Seeing is the primary source of information and experience for a young child ...