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Hardcover Mind and Media: The Effects of Television, Video Games, and Computers Book

ISBN: 0674576209

ISBN13: 9780674576209

Mind and Media: The Effects of Television, Video Games, and Computers

(Part of the Psychology Press & Routledge Classic Editions Series)

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Video games, television, and computers are facts of life for today's children. Anxious parents and teachers, concerned with maintaining the intellectual and social richness of childhood, need to understand their effects. Are we producing a generation of passive children who can't read, who require constant visual and aural stimulation, and who prefer the company of technical instruments to friends and family? Greenfield believes that to answer this...

Customer Reviews

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Insightful works on the effect of the media onto our minds

I like this book very much, and believe that it should deserve much more attention. This book eloquently discusses the effect of television, video game and radio onto our minds. Even today, many people still naively assert that viewing television is bad while reading books is good. This book attempts to go deeper into the matter. It reports such interesting research as comparing the effect of television and radio, with two groups of children each hear or view a story from the radio or television. When the children were required to retell the story, it was found that those viewing the story tend to use more pronounce, such as "he" and "she", with a lot of gestures than those hearing the story. It is believed that these pronounce actually refer to the visual images in the minds of those children watching the story. This can clearly be related to today problem of our children, who grew up with the television, of the difficulty in expressing themselves. Another interesting report investigates imagination as affected by different media. Again two groups of children each hear or view a story from the radio or television. The playing of the story was stopped in the middle before its end. The children were required to continue and finish the story. Children hearing the story are found to be more imaginative and creative in terms of the novel elements in their ways of completing the story. The result clearly indicates that the radio often leaves more space for the hearers to fill in. As a whole, this book gives much insight into the matter, particularly on the implications to educating our children in how to view these different media. If the above sounds interesting to you, I will strongly recommend this book to you.
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