Data Usage Assignment Discussion
Data Usage Assignment Discussion
Write a 4+ page (double space, 12pt Times New Roman) report on your data findings as well as your impressions of the data: at least two pages should be about the child’s usage and activities, and at least two pages about your media usage and activities. You must apply concepts from the textbook, lectures, videos, and supplemental readings. Please cite all Pulley Fall 2020 references according to APA or MLA style. Please also include recommendation(s) to the parent regarding their child’s electronic media usage and back up with research. (They don’t actually need to read this).
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Before writing, ask yourself questions such as • Where does the child live and who do they live with? Where do you live and who do you live with? • How might the living situation impact your and the child’s access to the outdoors or time spent with electronic media? • Where does the child go to school? • What are you and the child spending most of your waking time doing? • How do their age and your age impact usage? • Are you surprised by any of the data? • Are you not surprised by any of the data? • Where do activities overlap? • If you had to give suggestions to the parent/child and yourself on activities to reduce or increase, what would they be? Why?
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BECA487AngelicasMedia.xlsx
Sheet 1
Angelica’s Media Usage/ Non Media Usage DAY 1 (no screen) Day 1 (with screen) DAY 2 (no screen) DAY 2 (with screen) DAY 3 (no screen) DAY 3 (with screen) TOTAL time TOTAL time Sleep 8 Hours 8 hours 8 hours 24 hours Commute Cooking/eating 2 hours 2 hours 2 hours 6 hours Texting/DM/etc 14 hours 14 hours 14 hours 42 hours Talking on phone Homework/work at home 1 hour 2 hours 2 hours 5 hours Watching TV/movies/streaming/etc 2 hours 30 mins 2 hours 30 mins Playing video games 2 hours- W/Family Working and/or in school 1 hours and 30 min 1 hour 30 mins 1 hour 30 mins 4 hours and 30 mins Shopping (online or RL) 1 hour- Christmas shopping 1 hour pin auction 2 hours Social media 10 hours 10 hours 10 hours 30 hours With friends With family 2 hours- Eating and playing games 2 hours- Eating dinner watching news 45 mins watching the news/ eating 4 Hours and 45 mins Creating art/being creative 1 hour- Songwritting 2 hours- Baking 3 Hours Listening to music 2 hours 1 Hour 2 hours 5 Hours Outdoors Sports or exercise 45 mins- Walking 45 mins- Walking 45 mins- Walking 2 hours and 15 mins Reading books/for leisure Alone time (no devices, no structured activities) Restorative time Misc. time spent online (please identify) 45 mins- filling out maternity leave 1 hour- Filing Disability forms 1 hour and 45 mins Misc. activities (please identify) 1 hour- Doctor appointment 2 Hour- Taking shower, Brushing teeth, Changing 2 Hour- Taking shower, Brushing teeth, Changing 7 hours 2 Hour- Taking shower, Brushing teeth, Changing &”Helvetica,Regular”&12&K000000&P
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Beca487Sheet-AndresMedia1.xlsx
Sheet 1
Andres Santos- Media Usage/ Non Media Usage DAY 1 (no screen) Day 1 (with screen) DAY 2 (no screen) DAY 2 (with screen) DAY 3 (no screen) DAY 3 (with screen) TOTAL time Sleep 8 hours 6 hours 8 hours 22 hours Commute Cooking/eating 50 minutes 50 minutes 50 minutes 2 Hours and 30 mins Texting/DM/etc 12 hours 10 hours 12 hours 34 Hours Talking on phone 3 hours Facetime 5 hours- Facetime 2 hours- Facetime 10 Hours Homework/work at home 3 Hours- HW 3 hours- HW 3 Hours- HW 9 Hours Watching TV/movies/streaming/etc 2 hours- twitch 3 hours- twitch 1 Hour- Twitch 6 hours Playing video games 9 hours 10 hours 7 hours 26 Hours Working and/or in school 4 hours 1 4 hours- Zoom 4 Hours 12 Hours Shopping (online or RL) Social media 4 hours 3 hours 4 hours 11 Hours With friends 1 hour 1 Hour With family 30 minutes 1 hour- Dinner 1 Hour- Dinner 2 hours and 30 mins Creating art/being creative Listening to music 1 hour- W/ exercise 1 hour- W/ Exercise 1 hour- W/ Exercise 3 Hours Outdoors Sports or exercise 1 hour- Cycling 1 hour- Cycling 1 hour Cycling Reading books/for leisure 3 Hours Alone time (no devices, no structured activities) Restorative time Misc. time spent online (please identify) 1 hour- Looking up codes for games Misc. activities (please identify) 40 mins- Shower, Brushing teeth 40 mins- Shower, Brushing teeth 40 mins shower, Brushing teeth 2 Hours &”Helvetica,Regular”&12&K000000&P
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BECA487_490MediaEffects.pdf
Media Effects Media effects are the the processes and products of media influence that work directly as well as indirectly. These effects can be intentional or unintentional on the part of both the message makers as well as the receivers. They can be manifested or hidden from observation. They are constant and ongoing, and they are shaped by both media and within a constellation of other factors that act in concert with the media influence. Data Usage Assignment Discussion
Media effects can happen at the individual level and at the macro level.
Media Effects Media Saturation
– Books, radio, television, newspapers, websites, video games, etc. – By 2011, the web had over 13.6 billion pages.
– It would take 42 years to get through just 10% of that content. – In 2010, the average American was spending 11 hours with the media
every day. – Media continues to be produced at an ever increasing rate. – No person or culture in the history of humanity has lived with this
much information and media saturation.
Media Effects Media Saturation
– Our brains cannot process all of the information that we encounter, so we unconsciously filter information out.
– To navigate through our information saturated culture, our brains automatically process stimuli.
– Psychologists refer to this automatic/unconscious processing of information as automaticity.
– Sometimes we process out useless information; sometimes we process out important information.
Media Effects Media Influence
– The media exert a continual influence on us without our realizing/consent. – If you think of our beliefs, ideologies, etc, as codes, than these codes are
programed by parents, experience, environment, society, culture, education, religion, politics, government, etc. And also by the media we consume, actively or passively.
– We follow habits, or preprogrammed codes, because it is easier and more efficient than rethinking and/or questioning every message we encounter. Data Usage Assignment Discussion
Media Effects Media Influence
– For example, advertising: – Americans spend more time shopping than any other country on earth. – There are more shopping centers in America than there are high schools. – Americans go to shopping centers more often than they they attend
centers of worship. – Advertising works by programming our code (automatic routines) so that
we shop even when it would be in our best interest to do something else.
Media Effects Media Influence
Group Question:
– What are some preprogrammed “codes” you follow? Can you identify when/where/by whom they may have been “programmed”?
Media Effects Media Exposure
– There are a range of exposure states that we use to experience media messages.
– There are three kinds of exposure: – Physical Exposure: requires some sort of proximity (time and space) to a
message (i.e. radio on in a room that you are occupying or moving through). – Perceptual Exposure: the person’s ability to receive sensory input through the
visual and auditory senses (i.e. sound frequency, fps, pixels, etc…). – Psychological Exposure: in order for this to occur, there must be some element
(image, sound, emotion, pattern) created in the mind.
Media Effects Media Exposure
– When all of these kinds of exposure are met, you have someone’s attention. (While all of these kinds of exposure must be met to have attention, they do not guarantee someone’s full attention).
– There are four different types of exposure states you can experience when encountering a message: attentional, automatic, transported, and self-reflexive.
– You will have a different experience with a message depending on which psychological state you are in when you receive the message. Data Usage Assignment Discussion
Media Effects Media Exposure
– Attentional State: When you are in this state of exposure, you are conscious of being exposed to a message(s), and you pay attention to the message; you have a conscious awareness of the messages (though maybe not a high level of concentration).
– Automatic State: In this state of exposure, you are not consciously aware of certain messages in your physical environment (i.e. pop up ads, music in the background, etc…). You may be concentrating on something else, but your brain is processing all the extra information. Certain sounds and images are being recorded in your unconscious mind. This happens until a message breaks through and captures your attention.
Media Effects Media Exposure
– Transported State: In this state, you are so consumed by the message that you lose track of time and place. Concentration level is so high that you lose touch with the real-world.
– Self-Reflexive State: In this state you are hyper-aware of the message and your own processing of the message. This represents the fullest degree of awareness. The viewer asks themselves questions such as: “Why am I watching this?” & “Why am I making these interpretations of meanings?” Not only is there analysis, but also meta-analysis. That is, not only are you analysing the messages, but also analyzing your analysis of the media message.
Media Effects What are Media Effects?
Eight major issues have been identified in Media Effects scholarship:
1. Timing – when do media effects appear? (i.e. immediately or years down the road and influences in the long term?)
2. Duration – some effects may last a short time and some may be permanent (i.e. you can remember the words to a song you listened to when you were six years old).
3. Valence – the balance of positive and negative effects (i.e. desensitization of graphic content vs. desensitization of phobias)
Media Effects What are Media Effect?
4. Change – noticeable change is not what’s always important; reinforcing existing habits so that there is no change may be the objective (no change in behavior does not always equal no media effect).
5. Intention – there are many media effects that occur even if the media producers (and consumers) didn’t intend for them to occur.
6. Level – are the effects occurring on individual levels? Institutional? Cultural? Studies that look at micro- and macro- level effects are approached differently.
Media Effects What are Media Effects?
7. Direct and Indirect – sometimes effects are direct, sometimes they are not
8. Manifestation – sometimes effects are easy to observe, sometimes they are not. But that does not mean that media are not exerting influence. Data Usage Assignment Discussion
Media Effects Types of effects:
● Cognitive: Media exposure influences an individual’s mental processes; typically involves the acquisition, processing, and storage of information.
● Belief effect: Media exposure influencing an individual’s judgement, faith, ideology, etc.
● Attitudinal effect: Media exposure exercising an influence on an individual’s evaluative judgements.
Media Effects Types of effects:
● Affective effect: Media exposure influencing an individual’s feelings, emotions and moods.
● Physiological effect: Media exposure exercising an influence on an individual’s automatic responses to stimuli.
● Behavioral effect: Media exposure exercising an influence on an individual’s doing or not doing something
EFFECT ACQUIRING TRIGGERING ALTERING REINFORCING
Cognitive Memorize info Recall info Change memory structure
Reinforce connections
Belief Accept/construct belief
Recall belief Change belief Strengthen belief
Attitude Accept/construct attitude
Recall attitude Change attitude Strengthen/reinforce attitude
Affects Learn emotional information
Recall emotion Change emotion Strengthen emotional connection
Physiology Mood change Reinforce mood Automatic response Reinforce reaction
Behavior Learn behavior Recall behavior Behavioral change/ performance of novel behavior
Reinforce habits
MEDIA INFLUENCE FUNCTIONS: INDIVIDUAL LEVEL EFFECTS
Media Effects Keep in mind that:
● Cognition can influence belief formation ● Beliefs can influence attitude ● Behaviors can influence attitudes ● Affect can influence attitudes
Media Effects Some Important Media Effects Theories:
● Agenda setting – How media shape the public’s belief about what is important.
● Feminism – Sexest ideology permiates the media ● Framing – The way a story is presented; it’s the process of applying frames
that impact people’s or groups of people’s context, perception, understanding, and conceptualization.
● Gatekeeping – A process by which information is filtered to the public by the media.
● Cultural Hegemony – the cultural domination of a society by a ruling class, ensuring acceptance of the status quo by other classes
Media Effects Some Important Theories:
● Agenda setting – How media shapes the public’s belief about what is important.
● Feminism – Sexest idelogy permiates the media ● Framing – The way a story is presented; it’s the process of applying frames
that impact people’s or groups of people’s context, perception, understanding, and conceptualization.
● Gatekeeping – A process by which information is filtered to the public by the media.
● Cultural Hegemony – the cultural domination of a society by a ruling class, ensuring acceptance of the status quo by other classes
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Children_and_Media_A_Global_Perspective_—-_Chapter_1_Media_and_Children_at_Home1.pdf
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MediaEffectschapters452.pdf
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Children_and_Media_A_Global_Perspective_—-_Pg_56–86.pdf
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BillGatesandSteveJobsraisedtheirkidswithlimitedtechanditshouldhavebeenaredflagaboutourownsmartphoneuse.pdf
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BECA487Lecture3ScreenTime-1.pdf
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BECA487NatureDeficit.pdf