This study represents the first experimental investigation to simultaneously evaluate the impact of three key areas of a child’s television viewing experience—individual differences (story schema), the stimulus (narrative type), and the environment (perceived demand characteristics). Guided by the capacity model (Fisch, 2000, 2004), preschoolers’ comprehension of an educational television program was evaluated in a 2 (story schema: low, high) x 2 (perceived demand characteristics: fun (low), learning (high)) x 2 (narrative type: participatory cues absent, participatory cues present) between-subjects fully crossed factorial experiment. Comprehension was operationalized as both narrative (i.e. central, incidental, and inferential comprehensio...
Young children tend to have a very limited and highly fragmented understanding of thematically struc...
Evidence from multiple empirical studies suggests children’s Executive Functions are depleted immedi...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73762/1/j.1460-2466.1979.tb01734.x.pd
This study represents the first experimental investigation to simultaneously evaluate the impact of ...
The capacity model is designed to explain how children extract and comprehend educational content wi...
The capacity model is designed to predict young children's learning from educational television. It ...
This study explores the nature of cognitive responses to television content--the organization and re...
Many studies have shown that children of various ages learn from educational television, but the stu...
Educational TV has been consistently linked to children’s learning. In this research, educational TV...
Development of television viewing strategies was explored in a study of 5- and 9-year-olds\u27 atten...
Children from preschool, kindergarten, and Grades 3 and 4 viewed an edited prosocial cartoon in one ...
Research on educational television purports many benefits for young children. Individual factors, su...
This study investigated what and how preschool children view children's television programs, wi...
Thesis: What preschoolers bring to the show: The effects of viewer characteristic
Many studies have shown that children can learn from television, but few studies have explored how c...
Young children tend to have a very limited and highly fragmented understanding of thematically struc...
Evidence from multiple empirical studies suggests children’s Executive Functions are depleted immedi...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73762/1/j.1460-2466.1979.tb01734.x.pd
This study represents the first experimental investigation to simultaneously evaluate the impact of ...
The capacity model is designed to explain how children extract and comprehend educational content wi...
The capacity model is designed to predict young children's learning from educational television. It ...
This study explores the nature of cognitive responses to television content--the organization and re...
Many studies have shown that children of various ages learn from educational television, but the stu...
Educational TV has been consistently linked to children’s learning. In this research, educational TV...
Development of television viewing strategies was explored in a study of 5- and 9-year-olds\u27 atten...
Children from preschool, kindergarten, and Grades 3 and 4 viewed an edited prosocial cartoon in one ...
Research on educational television purports many benefits for young children. Individual factors, su...
This study investigated what and how preschool children view children's television programs, wi...
Thesis: What preschoolers bring to the show: The effects of viewer characteristic
Many studies have shown that children can learn from television, but few studies have explored how c...
Young children tend to have a very limited and highly fragmented understanding of thematically struc...
Evidence from multiple empirical studies suggests children’s Executive Functions are depleted immedi...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73762/1/j.1460-2466.1979.tb01734.x.pd