Saturday, October 26, 2019
Impact Of Television Violence In Relation To Juvenile Delinquency :: TV Violence Television Cause Essays
  When children are taught how to tie their shoes, it is because of how  their parents showed them. When children are taught how to do math problems it  is because how their teachers show them. With all of the role models how does  television affect our children?    Many adults feel that because they watched television when they were  young and they have not been negatively affected then their children should not  be affected as well. What we must first realize is that television today is  different than television of the past, violence is more prevalent in todays  programming unlike the true family programming of the past.    EFFECTS OF TELEVISION - THE BEGINNING    Questions about the effects of television violence have been around  since the beginning of television. The first mention of a concern about  television's effects upon our children can be found in many Congressional  hearings as early as the 1950s. For example, the United States Senate Committee  on Juvenile Delinquency held a series of hearings during 1954-55 on the impact  of television programs on juvenile crime. These hearings were only the beginning  of continuing congressional investigations by this committee and others from the  1950s to the present.    In addition to the congressional hearings begun in the 1950s, there are  many reports that have been written which include: National Commission on the  Causes and Prevention of Violence (Baker & Ball, 1969); Surgeon General's  Scientific Advisory Committee on Television and Social Behavior (1972); the  report on children and television drama by the Group for the Advancement of  Psychiatry (1982); National Institute of Mental Health, Television and Behavior  Report (NIMH, 1982; Pearl, Bouthilet, & Lazar, 1982); National Research Council  (1993), violence report; and reports from the American Psychological  Association's "Task Force on Television and Society" (Huston, et al., 1992) and  "Commission on Violence and Youth" (American Psychological Association, 1992;  Donnerstein, Slaby, & Eron, 1992). All of these reports agree with each other  about the harmful effects of television violence in relation to the behavior of  children, youth, and adults who view violent programming.    The only thing that we know about the effects of exposure to violence  and the relationship towards juvenile delinquency we gather from correlational,  experimental and field studies that demonstrate the effects of this viewing on  the attitudes and behavior of children and adults.    Children begin watching television at a very early age, sometimes as  early as six months, and are intense viewers by the time that they are two or  three years old. In most cases the amount of televised viewing becomes greater  with age and then tapers off during adolescence. ). The violence that is viewed    					    
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