Answer: D. Children's bedrooms have increasingly become multi-media centers, raising important issues about supervision and exposure to unlimited content. Children who have TV's in their bedrooms watch an average of 1½ hours more TV in a typical day than children who do not have TV's in their bedroom.
(Source: Kaiser Family Foundation Study: Generation M: Media in the Lives of 8-18 Year-olds, 2005.)
Answer: A. In addition, 7th-12th graders spend an average of 2:16 hanging out with friends, 0:53 talking on the phone, 0:50 doing homework and 0:32 doing chores.
(Source: Kaiser Family Foundation Study: Generation M: Media in the Lives of 8-18 Year-Olds, 2005.)
Answer: B. No studies have conclusively demonstrated a link between TV viewing and attention deficit disorder, although research in this area continues. Excessive TV viewing has been linked to obesity, and may lead to decreased school achievement, poor body image, increased aggression and increased risk of substance abuse.
(Source: Kaiser Family Foundation Issue Brief: The Effects of Electronic Media on Children Ages Zero to Six: A History of Research, 2005.)
Answer: A. Children and teens manage to pack increasing amounts of media content into the same amount of time each day because of the amount of time they spend using more than one medium at a time.
(Source: Kaiser Family Foundation Study: Generation M: Media in the Lives of 8-18 Year-Olds, 2005.)
Answer: D. To help protect children and teens, experts recommended that adults understand and discuss the dangers of the Internet with young people, as well as use filtering and blocking software.
(Source: Cyberangels Statistics.)
Answer: C. While older children and adults may grasp the inherent bias in advertising, child development research shows that children under the age of eight are unable to critically comprehend televised advertising messages and are prone to accept advertiser messages as truthful, accurate and unbiased.
Answer: C. When these popular teen programs contain sexual content, only 10% provide a reference to sexual risks and responsibilities at some point in the episode. In addition, one in every nine shows across the TV landscape (excluding newscasts, sports events and children's programming) includes scenes in which sexual intercourse is either depicted or strongly implied.
(Source: Kaiser Family Foundation: Sex on TV 4, 2005.)
Answer: A. "FV" stands for "Fantasy Violence," and "Y7" lets parents know a program probably isn't appropriate for kids under age 7.
(Source: TV Ratings Guide for Parents.)
Answer: C. The term blog comes from the word Weblog. Blogs are Web sites that are frequently updated with reverse chronological posts. They gained popularity due to cheap, easy tools that allow anyone to start one. To keep up to date on such terms and how media is changing society and culture, visit PBS's MediaShift Web site.
(Source: MediaShift Glossary.)
Answer: D. This figure is more than double the $200 million spent during the 2000 presidential campaign.
(Source: Online NewsHour Ad Watch.)
Answer: B. Interestingly, in this same survey, almost 80 percent of teens indicated that they intend to spend less time playing video games in 2006 and nearly 70 percent indicated that their interest in playing video games is decreasing.
(Source: Taking Stock With Teens' National Study of Teen Shopping Behavior and Brand Preferences, 2006.)
Answer: D. This figure is actually down 6% from 2004; however, teen spending is expected to increase in 2006.
(Source: TRU Projects Teen Spending Total for 2005 at $159 Billion.)
Answer: B. While online news consumption is highest among young people (those under age 30), it is not an activity that is limited to the very young. Three in ten Americans ages 30-49 cite the Internet as a main source of news.
(Source: Pew Research Center Report: Public More Critical of the Press, But Goodwill Persists, 2005.)
Answer: B. In many young people's homes, the TV is a constant companion. In addition to families keeping the TV on during dinner, 51% of children and teens say they live in homes where the TV is left on "most" or "all" of the time, whether anyone is watching it or not.
(Source: Kaiser Family Foundation Study: Generation M: Media in the Lives of 8-18 Year-Olds, 2005.)
Answer: B. That statistic is sharply lower than for older populations -- six in ten Americans age 65 and older read a newspaper on a typical day. According to the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, the age gap in newspaper readership continues to widen.
(Source: Pew Research Center Report: Where Americans Go for News, 2004.)