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Family views: the effect of training parents to mediate their children's television viewing on children's comprehension of commercials PDF

185 Pages·1994·6.2 MB·English
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FAMILY\^EWS: THE EFFECT OF TRAINING PARENTS TO MEDIATE THEIR CHILDREN'S TELEVISION VIEWING ON CHILDREN'S COMPREHENSION OF COMMERCIALS By DENISE MATTHEWS ADISSERTATION PRESENTED TO THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDAIN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY UNIVERSITYOF FLORIDA 1994 This manuscriptis dedicated to the memory ofmyfather, Phathon James Matthews, who taughtme to cherish my own creativity and originality. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS My utmost gratitude goes to RogerJon Desmondwho provided the major direction for this research and guidedme throughfrom its embryonic stages toits finalform. His insight and dedication were invaluable to the entire project. John W. Wright remained optimistic andflexible throughout this process while offeringexcellent advice as chair ofmy committee. Michael Weigoldbrought methodto this madness and devoted crucial thought and energy to this work farbeyond duty. Kim Walsh-Childers suppHed important groundingin media effects research with children as well as thoseintimations that the perils ofmy personalPhD path were not unique. PatriciaMillercrossed discipfines to provide me with the benefit ofher highly respected knowledge ofdevelopmental psychology'. She also nurtured my process with encouragement and much appreciated warmth. Both Barbara Taylor and Evelyn Rooks-Weirbirthed my earfiest interestin this subject. Their excellent community ties andreputation opened doors. Because oftheir quafity work in the community, I received exceptional cooperation from Bebe Fernside and the administration of Alachua County Head Start. My dearfriends Randi Cameon andBill Black came to my rescue in a very dark hour to save the experimental integrity oftheproject when my father died. My gi-aduate school soul mate, Lynn Dirk, provddedinvaluable help throughout this projectfrom earliestconception to serving as a research assistant on site. Helen Maltezos alwaysbelievedin this endeavor and supportedme from thefirst. I thank David Halpern, an excellent statistical consultant and a great friend. I also thank workshop leader Barbara Youngforher enthusiasm and extra help andthe many otherindividuals who actually toiledin thisproject-- the excellentinteiviewers, Martine Gauthier-Zotto, Ginny Reamy, andSam Venus; food organizers Lisa Herd, Maria Masque; andchild care expert Maria Azare. Also, I thank the dedicatedHead Startteachers who cooperatedin every waypossible to make this project go smoothly. Finally, I thank my mother whois a pohtical genius and a tirelesspublic servant, and who really knew how to mediate my TVviewing. TABLE OF CONTENTS pagre ACKNOWLEDGMENTS iii ABSTRACT vii CHAPTERS INTRODUCTION 1 1 ParentalMediation 1 Children's Television Viewing as a Public Issue 4 Research on Children andTelevision Advertising 5 The ChildMarket 7 Intervention to Increase ParentMediation ofChildren's Television Vie\\ang 8 2 THE LITERATURE 10 Historical Context: FamilyVariables in the Study ofMedia Effects and Children . '. 10 Parent-Child Interaction about Television 15 Theories that Help Explain How Parent-Child Interaction Helps Preschool Children UnderstandTelevision Commercials 39 Previous Interventions to Encourage ParentalMediation ofChildren's Television Viewing 53 Parent Intervention 55 Rationale for an Intervention 60 The Hypotheses 62 3 METHOD 67 Rationale for this Study 67 Subjects 68 Design 71 IndependentVariables 73 DependentVariables 85 Scoring 94 4 RESULTS 95 Descriptive Statistics 95 ScaleProperties 98 TestoftheHypotheses 103 5 ANALYSISAND CONCLUSION 112 Research Problem andFindingsReviewed 112 Limitations ofthis Investigation 128 Conclusions 130 PubUc Policy ImpHcations and a CallforMedia Literacy 131 SuggestionsforFurtherInvestigation 134 APPENDICES A VIDEO SCRIPT 135 B CONTROL CONDITION-BACKGROUND NOTES 140 C PARENT-CHILD QUESTIONNAIRE 146 D PARENTDISCIPLINE ORIENTATION 148 E CHILD MEASURE 149 F APPEARANCE-REALITYPRETESTONLYMEASURE: HOWITWAS ADMINISTERED 154 G VISUAL CHOICES 157 REFERENCES 161 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH 172 Abstract ofDissertation Presented to the Graduate School ofthe University ofFloridain Partial Fulfillment ofthe Requirements for the Degree ofDoctor ofPhilosophy FAMILYVIEWS: THE EFFECT OF TRAINING PARENTS TO MEDIATE THEIR CHILDREN'S TELEVISION VIEWING ON CHILDREN'S COMPREHENSION OF COMMERCIALS By DeniseMatthews December 1994 Chairman: John W. Wright MajorDepartment: Mass Communications The effect ofencouraging and traininglow-income parent/caretakers to mediate theirpreschool (age 5) child's television viewing on children's comprehension oftelevision commercials wasinvestigated. Children (n = 72) from eight Head Startclassrooms were pretestedfor threelevels of comprehension oftelevision advertising: ability to discriminate between programs andcommercials, understandingofthe intent ofcommercial messages, andunderstandingthe deceptive potential ofcommercials. Subsequentto childpretesting, self-selectedparent/caretaker and parent dyads (n = 45) attended a workshop about television viewing and were randomly assignedto a control or experimental workshop. Parents in the experimental treatment were encouraged and trainedin mediatingtheir child's understandingofcommercials. Parents in the control treatment receivedinformation aboutchildren'sviewing and discussed television violence. Two to three weeks subsequent to theirparents' participatingin one ofthese workshops, children were posttested. Children ofparents whoparticipatedin the experimental workshop demonstrated significantly greatertime 1 to time 2 increases fortwo open- endeditems that measuredchildren's understandingoftheintent of commercials than children ofcontrol workshop parents. Posttest responses indicated that children ofexperimental workshop parents accurately articulatedintent ofcommercials to induce buyingthe product significantly more often than children ofcontrol workshop parents. No significant main effects orinteraction effects for timeby treatment werefoundfor any ofthe other dependent measures. Children's pretest abilityvariedwidely amongthe three levels of commercial comprehension. Ability to discriminate commercialsfrom programmingwas relatively high andincreased only slightly on the posttest. Pretestlevels ofunderstandingcommercials' deceptive potential was low and remainedlow on theposttest. However, pretestmeasures ofunderstanding the intent ofcommercials were mixed, \Ndth high scores for recognition items andlow scores on free-responseitems. Significantposttestincreasesfor the experimental group in articulatingintent ofcommercials suggest that parents can be motivated to successfuDy apprentice theirchildren in understandingtelevision content and thatthey willbe most effective when tappingcomprehension within the child's zone ofproximal development. vui CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION The intermixing ofmass andinterpersonal communication that occurs when famihes watch television demands that we transcendthe narrow theoretical hmits ofour subdiscipHnes. This arena offers opportunities toformulate a more fundamental conception ofcommunication as the basic social process defining, shaping, andcoordinatinghuman interaction. (Alexander, 1990, p.223) Communication between children andparents about television's symbols acts as a powerful influence interveningbetween television content andits effect on children (Alexander,1990; Desmond, Singer & Singer, 1990; McLeod, Fitzpatrick, Glynn, «& Fallis, 1982; Reid, 1979). Parents/caretakers have the optimal opportunity to mediate the meanings theirchildren constructfrom television contentbecause they are the adults mostlikely to be presentbefore, during, and after children view television (Bryce & Leichter, 1983; Corder-Bolz, 1980; Timmer, Eccles, & O'Brien, 1985). ParentalMediation In this study parent/caretaker'-child mediation implies two types of parent/caretaker-childinteraction. One type involves the extent to which parents and otherhouseholdmembers spontaneously answer children's 'The use ofthe term parent throughoutthis reportis inclusive ofany adult or even an older sibhngwhois in the role ofcaretaking a youngchild. 1 2 questions about the world aroundthem and offer evaluations and explanations ofpeople, events, objects, ideas, and messages like televised content. Family mediation also refers tohow parents/caretakers create and enforce standards ofbehavior andhow children are disciplined. ParentalHmitation and restriction ofvie"wingselections implicitly communicates values tochildren, while parents'comments abouttelevision content explicitly shape children's perceptions ofreality (Lull, 1980). These comments can serve to influence values andviews ofthe world and society embodiedin television programming andcommercials (Buerkel-Rothfuss, Greenberg, Atkin, & Neuendorf, 1982; LuU, 1980; Reid, 1979). Parents, by modelinginterpretation ofthe meanings oftelevisedmessages andby talking to theirchildren abouthow theyinterprettelevision, may help their children to develop their own capacityforinterpretingtelevision fare (Corder-Bolz, 1980). Family rules about what andhow much viewingis allowed and a discussion-orientedfamily communication style arepositively associatedwith children'slower totalviewing (Desmond et al., 1990), awareness ofprosocial messages (Abelman, 1986; Buerkel-Rothfuss et al., 1982), understanding of television's conventions, recall ofnarratives, and ability to distinguish between reality andfantasy (Desmond, Singer, Singer, Calam, & Colimore, 1985; Singer, Singer, Desmond, Hirsch. & Nicol, 1988). Ward, Wackman, and Wartella (1977) heldthat "parent-childinteraction can effectively augment the development ofa 'cognitive filter' that even very youngchildren can use in comprehending and evaluating advertising" (p.183).

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