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Talking With TV: A Guide to Starting Dialogue With Youth
Channel
5: Viewers' Choice
Television is here to stay. Adults and young
people already dedicate the majority of their free
time to watching it. Instead of trying to avoid TV
and its messages, use TV to improve communication with
your children.
The first step is to watch more television—and to watch it
with your children.
Everyone needs time for themselves, especially at the end of the day. When
kids are being entertained by TV, you can take a look at the newspaper, catch
up with friends on the phone or cross another item off the seemingly endless
list of household chores. But when the shows children watch distort or make
light of sexuality or violence, or fail to reflect your personal and family
values, it is important to find opportunities to temper these messages and
broaden young people's understanding and critical thinking skills.
Many experts agree that people of all ages absorb values from their cultural
environment, often unconsciously. Television teaches values constantly. From
the commercials, children learn that having a particular toy will make one
popular and happy; older people fixate on health ads to feel younger again,
adults pick the brand of beer that will make them the life of the party.
Watching fictional programming, kids may misunderstand sarcasm or view humor
as truth, find violence on every street corner or expect quick encounters leading
to romantic happiness.
On the news, we and our children hear that corruption, scams and incompetence
pervade every level of our society, that athletes are rewarded for playing
when injured, that winning is everything and that violence is an acceptable
way to express frustration.
Parents may want to clarify these messages and teach their children alternatives
values and approaches. But to do that, parents have to open lines of communication
on sensitive subjects. And TV is an excellent tool to do just that.
When you watch "their" shows with young teens, you will find new
ways to start conversations on a host of sensitive issues. Watching their programs
helps you participate in your kids' lives—to
learn what amuses them, what distresses them—to listen to what they
are hearing from television. In the end, watching together becomes more important
than
what you watch!
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Opening
Lines
Starting a conversation
with young people is easier than
you think. Discussing every message
in TV would require extraordinary
vigilance. But parents can translate
selected messages into teachable
moments—suitable
to each child's developmental level.
Focus on the underlying message of the TV program—then
focus on your children. Are they responding to the characters?
Have they discovered any themes for the shows?
Begin with open-ended questions, such as "What did you think
about that?" Avoid questions that kids can answer with just
a yes or no.
Genuine conversations show respect for everyone's opinion. Even
the youngest family members need a chance to express their thoughts
and test the waters. Too may parental opinions, expressed to forcefully,
too quickly or too freely, will inhibit young peoples' expression.
Focus on what is being said and not said on TV. Use that
to encourage kids to express their opinions and beliefs. Clarify
yours, try not to defy theirs. Express your thoughts—but avoid
criticizing - their opinions, friends, dress code or favorite shows.
Keep these first few moments short and try not to interrupt the
program. Start a conversation later, if need be, when the family
can focus and say "I've been thinking about your comments
on last night's TV show. That never occurred to me before. Could
you tell me a little more about…."
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Close-Up: What's On?
Beyond comedies and dramas, a variety of
new show formats are grabbing teens' attention.
Talk Shows. Donahue was just the beginning.
With Ricki, Oprah, Montel, Richard, Leeza, Geraldo,
Jerry, Sally, Maury, Gordon, Jenny, Danny, and Tempestt
all on the air and many others in the wings, and
the variety of social, health, relationship and entertainment
topics on each day, kids are getting an ear and an
eyeful!
News and Entertainment Shows. Starting
early in the morning and running late into the night,
graphic discussions and provocative stories fill
the screen. Political and religious shows and call-in
shows are always blunt and to the point. How are
young people sorting out all of these differing opinions?
Music Videos. MTV has been on the air since
1980 and has now been joined with VH1. Although most
videos last only a few minutes, the combination of
the music and visuals can be quite powerful and provocative.
Video shows are also part of many other broadcasters'
schedules and continue to be popular with children,
teens, and adults.
Educational Programming. New cable channels
and expanded public programming are offering new
approaches to learning. Viewers can watch everything
from surgery to civil rights demonstrations. Wired
into schools as well, these programs increase access
to the sciences, humanities and arts. Sharing time
with these shows broadens everyone's horizons.
Feature films. Feature films have been
a cornerstone of network programming and main fair
for many pay television networks. Whether adopted
for TV or run uncut on cable channels, teens are
as excited as adults for television premiers.
The bottom line is that TV gets attention. Seize the opportunity
to talk with your children. With the right opening, you can provide
facts and communicate without embarrassment about conflict resolution,
responsible and loving relationships and prevention topics.
Wide-Angle: Be a Pro-Active Viewer
What do you think about what young people
are watching? Are some of your values portrayed on
TV, are there characters you respect, storylines
that help you grow? Think about what your ideal shows would be like. Then
decide which shows come close and which ones don't.
Brainstorm what messages are missing
and which have double messages.
You have to decide which issues and messages to talk about and which ones
to let go. Be clear and direct about what you want to talk about. Jump right
in,
don't avoid the topics yourself by discussing the character's house, job,
dog. Focus the conversation on the character's actions, emotions, behaviors.
Discuss
her/his options in the storyline and the possible consequences of these decisions.
Talk about what is real on TV, what is not and whose reality it is. Do you
and your children's perceptions disagree or are they just different perspectives?
Transform a show's negative messages into a positive discussion by asking
for their views.
If you disagree with or are concerned about your child's views, how can you
temper her/his view points? Ask leading and open-ended questions and give
them the intellectual room and emotional space to answer. If they know you
are going
to dismiss their views or disagree with them angrily, they won't open up
in the first place.
Remember, one night of family viewing won't be the answer. TV is just a
tool to talk with young people—spending time listening and talking
with them will make the biggest impression of all.
Source/Citation:
Advocates for Youth. Talking With TV: A Guide
to Starting Dialogue With Youth. Washington, DC: Advocates for Youth, 1996.
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