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Raising Awareness, Changing Behavior:
The Television Project Workshops


Television Monster graphicHave you ever considered:

How TV affects behavior?
As a parent, how concerned you should be about television viewing?
How you can have down time without television?
That you don't have to entertain your children when the TV is off?
The impact of commercials on your family?
Some concrete ways that you can limit television at home?

These are typical of the range of questions and concerns voiced at the start of Television Project workshops. Some parents come to the workshop already concerned about television use in their homes. Other parents come with vague uneasiness about television use. All parents who attend are looking for answers that will help them do the right thing for their children.

In our workshops, participants are challenged to find their own answers to their questions. A balance is struck among workshop exercises, presentations, and discussion. Each workshop is tailored to the specific needs of the group sponsoring it.


Workshop Exercises

Activities can cover a wide range of topics. Here are some examples:

Self-assessment of TV viewing habits: This exercise yields data on the quantity and quality of viewing at home.

Activities in a home: This exercise shows participants the wide range of home activities that are often neglected or forgotten when television is the primary activity.

Naming positive parent figures on television: This exercise leads to a discussion of what children watch and how it influences their perceptions of the people in their lives.


Presentations

Interspersed with activities are presentations for the group as a whole. All workshops start with an overview of the statistics on television usage. For many, just seeing these statistics is revelatory. Other presentation topics might include:

How the brain develops
How television increases aggression in children -- mimicking violent shows is only part of the story
The role of television in creating stress
Nurturing the soul of children
A spirit of inquiry and exploration is maintained throughout the workshop


Alternative Activities/Strategies for Controlling TV

Every workshop includes a discussion that creates alternatives to television use and develops strategies for controlling TV use in the home. Discussion topics might include:

Physical location: Where the television is located and how this influences how it is used.
The Witching Hour: What to do, instead of TV, when it is time to cook dinner and the children are whining.
Getting Help: Encouraging children to participate in household tasks because they like it.
Building Community: Developing a social network in the neighborhood.


A Lasting Impact

Television Project workshops change participant perceptions of television and its effect on the family. They say:

Your presentation gave our professionals new insights and intervention strategies that they can use immediately with the families they serve.

The workshop will have a lasting impact on our members, including a reaffirmation of what we value as parents, a new awareness of the pervasiveness and persuasiveness of the medium, and a commitment to follow through with our individual goals to monitor the use of television in our homes more closely.

A typical workshop is two to three hours long and can include as few as 8 to as many as 50 people. If would like to arrange a workshop for your organization, school, work place, or church group, please contact us at The Television Project.

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