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Showing all 8 results
Abelman, Robert – Roeper Review, 2006
This investigation explores the level, type, and extent of household mediation of television, the Internet, and videogames employed by parents of achieving and underachieving, intellectually gifted children in light of the recently declared "war on indecency." It examines various child-rearing practices and perceptions as well as salient…
Descriptors: Gifted, Internet, Mass Media Effects, Academic Ability
Peer reviewedAbelman, Robert – Roeper Review, 2003
This investigation reinforces the conceptualization of television viewing as a learned activity by highlighting the interrelatedness of children's linguistic, cognitive, and perceptual skills for accurate comprehension of television's most basic narrative device--temporal sequencing. It also explores the impact of highly divergent skills and…
Descriptors: Visual Literacy, Television, Literacy, Information Processing
Peer reviewedAbelman, Robert; Gubbins, E. Jean – Roeper Review, 1999
A study examined use of MPAA television advisory ratings in the decision-making of parents of 129 gifted children. In comparison to parents of 459 typical children, the parents of gifted children were more likely to utilize TV ratings information in the mediation of their children's television viewing and were more concerned with the effects of…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Critical Viewing, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted
Peer reviewedAbelman, Robert – Roeper Review, 1984
disparity in television consumption among gifted and nongifted children occurs from ages 6 to 11 when the amount of TV viewing drops substantially among gifted children. During adolescence there is little disparity, and in some cases, consumption is highest among gifted adolescents. Implications for parents and teachers are discussed.(Author/CL)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Gifted, Parent Influence
Peer reviewedAbelman, Robert – Roeper Review, 1987
When selecting instructional materials and curricula for developing critical television viewing skills with gifted students, teachers should consider: the track record of the materials; media experience of the students; and other visual stimuli in the classroom. The teacher's and parents' roles identified in the materials should also be…
Descriptors: Curriculum Evaluation, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted, Guidelines
Peer reviewedAbelman, Robert – Roeper Review, 1987
Investigation of the role of intellectual giftedness in influencing parents' perceptions and mediation of gifted (N=364) and non-gifted (N=386) fourth-graders' television viewing revealed that all parents exercised modest levels of intervention. However, students' intellectual giftedness did influence parents' perceptions of the possible impact of…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Gifted, Intelligence Differences, Intermediate Grades
Peer reviewedAbelman, Robert – Roeper Review, 1991
This study of 969 gifted, learning-disabled, emotionally disturbed, or nonlabeled fourth grade students found that having parents with inductive (more use of reason) rather than sensitizing (more authoritarian) communication styles had a definite impact on what the children observed when watching television, with gifted children being particularly…
Descriptors: Child Rearing, Communication Skills, Critical Viewing, Emotional Disturbances
Peer reviewedAbelman, Robert – Roeper Review, 1992
This review of communication research on television viewing by intellectually gifted children examines the number of hours such children spend watching television, types of programing they watch, their capacity to process and comprehend program content, appropriate child role models in television programing, and mediation of television viewing by…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Children, Communication Research, Comprehension

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