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6. For parents
Round table on children and the mass media
I. OBJECTIVE:
To promote greater
awareness of the importance of the mass media in the lives and education of
their children.
II. FIRST STAGE: ADVANCE
PREPARATION
1. Nominate a committee
to prepare the round table, including:
-the Headmaster/Headmistress
of the school
-a chaplain
-a chairperson
-a representative of the teaching staff
-parents of pupils, etc.
2. Hold a first meeting
to define the tasks of the various members, to make arrangements for the round
table and in particular to:
-look for ways to make
parents grasp just how much effect the media have on their children, e.g.
through surveys among children, parents, teachers (see suggestions below);
-fix the date of the parents' meeting (before the opening of the Centenary year);
-decide on practical issues (possible ordering of relevant publications for
families, special projects in school, songs to learn, etc.).
III. SECOND STAGE:
IMMEDIATE PREPARATION 5
1. The preparatory
committee should:
-study the findings of
its surveys, etc. and send the results to all families, with a reminder of the
date of the parents' meeting;
-decide on who is to lead the discussion, the secretary, etc. and prepare a
brief agenda which can later be abandoned if fruitful debate develops on an unlisted
theme.
IV. THIRD STAGE:
PARENTS' MEETING
The parents should first
assess the results of the surveys, after which the meeting could proceed by
discussing the points suggested in the section for Adult Groups, below. The
Minutes of the Meeting should subsequently be sent to all parents, with a
reminder of the date of the anniversary we are celebrating.
V. SOME SUGGESTIONS FOR
THE PREPARATORY SURVEYS
1. For children
Ask precise questions:
-How many hours a week
do you watch TV?
-Which comics/illustrated magazines do you prefer?
-Have you got a camera? a tape recorder? a video camera?
-How many times do you go to the cinema every month?
Leading questions:
Ask them to
-name three songs by a currently fashinable pop
singer/song writer;
-name the principal characters of a soap or series they particularly like;
-answer a number of questions about TV programmes
they have seen over the last three months.
If the survey is
properly handled, it will be possible to obtain a rough idea of the
intellectual benefit our children receive from television.
Questions of appraisal:
-What film or programme did you enjoy most in the last three months? Why?
-Which programrne seemed the most objective (explain
the word)? Why?
-Which programme did you think was the most useful? Why?
-Which programme was the worst or most unpleasant?
Why?
-Was there any programme that seemed untrue to you?
Why?
-Were there any that seemed harmful?
-Were there any programmes that helped you to see the
goodness in life?
The questions should be
stated so that they require only short answers and can be easily evaluated.
2. For parents
Only a few suggestions
are offered for this second survey, since it is a much more difficult
undertaking. It will only be profitable with a very open and well-disposed group,
i.e. of parents of children in the same class who meet frequently to discuss
their common problems.
All the same, it is
still possible to carry out a very brief enquiry, to check one or two points
emerging from the children's replies. The teachers could send the parents a
short questionnaire, to be returned in a closed envelope, with questions such
as:
-How much time do your
children spend in front of the TV every week (not forgetting when the TV is on
at mealtimes)?
-What comics and illustrated papers do they read?
-Do they like taking photographs? etc.
And one or two more
important questions could also be asked:
-Was there any
particular film/TV programme or magazine in the last
three months that had a good influence on your children? Which?
-Did you all talk about it afterwards?
-Was it in any way helpful for your children's religious education?
3. For teachers
This is even more
difficult but could be very useful. (To avoid any sense of reproof, it should perhaps
be mentioned that according to a recent survey carried out in France 75 percent of
audiovisual teaching aids are never used.)
Possible questions are:
-Do you ever use
audio-visual media in your lessons? Which kind? For what purpose?
-Do you use them to help children to understand the the
values in life? What values, and how?
-Do you encourage the children to start viewing the media according to
aesthetic, moral and spiritual criteria?
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