Your search returned 2 results.

1.
American communication research : the remembered history / edited by Everette E. Dennis, Ellen Wartella.

by Dennis, Everette E | Wartella, Ellen | Lang, Kurt. The European roots | Carey, James W. The Chicago School and mass communication research | McGuire, William J. The Yale communication and attitude-change program in the 1950s | Katz, Elihu. Diffusion research at Columbia | Himmelweit, Hilde. Children and television | Peterson, Theodore. The press as a social institution | Beville, Hugh Malcolm. Fashioning audience ratings - from radio to cable | Sills, David L. Stanton, Lazarsfeld, and Merton-Pioneers in communication research | Bartos, Rene. A conversation with Frank Stanton | Schramm, Wilbur. The master teachers | Bogart, Leo. Research as an instrument of power | Cater, Douglass. Addressing public policy | Robinson, Gertrude J. Constructing a historiography for North American communication studies | Wartella, Ellen. The history reconsidered.

Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction Publisher: Mahwah, N.J. : Erlbaum, 1996Availability: Items available for loan: Call number: 302.2072073 Am 1996 (1).

2.
Television as a social issue / Stuart Oskamp, editor.

by Oskamp, Stuart | Steinem, Gloria. Six great ideas that television is missing | Sawyer, Forrest. Realitites of television news programming | Glasser, Ira. Television and the construction of reality | Wear, Donald D. Constraints on the television industry | Wartella, Ellen. The public context of debates about television and children | Wirth, Timothy E. The television environment: cultivating the wasteland | Rogers, Thomas S. How can television serve the public interest? | Greenberg, Bradley S. Some uncommon television images and the Drench Hypothesis | Meehan, Diana M. The strong-soft woman: manifestations of the androgyne in popular media | CBS Television Network. Changes in women's roles on television | Berry, Gordon L. Multicultural role portrayals on television as a social psychological issue | Henderson, Alice M. How the networks monitor program content | Doktori, Helaine. How the networks monitor program content | CBS/Broadcast Group. Program standards for the CBS Television Network | Freedman, Jonathan L. Television violence and aggression: what the evidence shows | Milavsky, J. Ronald. Television and aggression once again | Singer, Jerome L. Some hazards of growing up in a television environment: children's aggression and restlessness | Singer, Dorothy G. Some hazards of growing up in a television environment: children's aggression and restlessness | Tavris, Carol. Beyond cartoon killings: comments on two overlooked effects of television | Feshbach, Seymour. Television research and social policy: some perspectives | Winick, Charles. The functions of television: life without the big box | Lee, Barbara. Prosocial content on prime-time television | Langer, Ellen J. Television from a mindful/mindless perspective | Piper, Alison. Television from a mindful/mindless perspective | Feshbach, Norma Deitch. Television and the development of empathy | Fairchild, Halford H. Creating positive television images | Dorr, Aimee. When social scientists cooperate with broadcasting | Harding, Philip A. Social science research and media policy issues: a question of fit | Katz, Elihu. The relationship between broadcasters and researchers | Abel, John. Making research useful to policymakers | Comstock, George. Today's audiences, tomorrow's media | Neuman, W. Russell. Programming diversity and the future of television: an empty cornucopia? | Blessington, John P. Future visions of television | Katz, Elihu. On conceptualizing media effects: another look | Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues.

Material type: Text Text; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction Publisher: Newbury Park, Calif. : Sage Publications, c1988Availability: Items available for loan: Call number: 302.23 Te4 1988 (1).

 

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