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Talking With TV: A Guide to Starting Dialogue With Youth
Channel 7: Educational
TV
Sometimes just watching TV can lead to passive viewing
and passive conversations. But with just a bit of imagination
you can make TV interactive and start critical thinking discussions.
You may want to talk to your children's teachers about what you're doing at home
to see if any of the current events or social studies classes can reinforce discussions
at home.
Try a couple of the activities below and watch your children learn to think about
watching TV!
Close-Up: We Interrupt This
Program…
Try a couple of the activities below and watch
your children learn to think about watching TV!
Score Card. Have everyone in the family list values that are important.
Look for those values in all kinds of shows. Keep a journal of which shows
have the
highest scores and those with the lowest. Ask young people to look for similarities
between the shows they ranked highly and lowly. Have young people brainstorm
storylines for their favorite shows and have them incorporate values from
their lists. Discuss which characters they
picked and how they selected their scenarios.
Take Two.
When a favorite show ends, ask young people to do a quick
rewrite of the program from a certain point. Talk about how and why they
would have changed
the show and focus on the main character's decisions. Discuss other choices
the characters could have made. Also discuss how they would have handled
a specific
situation.
That's My Line.
Ask young people to select a moment or a line from a show
that reminded them of a situation or feeling they had faced. Ask how their
reactions
compared to the character and how they handled the experience. Script out
a promo for a new show to capture the child's
experience.
Flashback.
Watch a current show and then watch a rerun of a show from
the 1960s or 1970s. Discuss the different roles that men and women have on
the two
shows. Compare the fashions, decor, types of families, and ways of living
on the shows. Explore the differences and notice
what has not changed. Share your experiences and let young people
know how you learned to make responsible decisions and avoid negative consequences.
A Word From the Sponsor.
Watch several commercials with a critical eye, then ask how
the advertisement sells the product. Look for ads that use sex to sell and
discuss
whether it is necessary or related to the product. Ask young people which
commercials they and their friends like and those ads that make them want
to buy a product.
Brainstorm new commercials for your favorite products - make those that are
sexy tame and those that are tame
sexy!
Source/Citation:
Advocates for Youth. Talking With TV: A Guide
to Starting Dialogue With Youth. Washington, DC: Advocates for Youth, 1996.
Click here to view the Publications Catalog and/or
to order this publication.
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