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1

Naldi, Hendra. "“POMPAI:” STUDI TENTANG SURAT KABAR ANAK MASA KOLONIAL SUMATERA BARAT." Diakronika 18, no. 1 (November 21, 2018): 55. http://dx.doi.org/10.24036/diakronika/vol18-iss1/61.

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POMPAI is a child newspaper born in colonial times. This newspaper comes along with the emergence of movements in Indonesia. Before becoming a child newspaper, POMPAI was a newspaper that also often voiced national movements. Suspicion and pressure from the colonial government, made POMPAI transformed into a child newspaper with the aim of educating indigenous children, especially in West Sumatra. There are several children's newspapers that appear together with the POMPAI newspaper. Among them; Chain Mas and Pelipoer Heart. Both of these newspapers have similarities and differences but have the same goal of wanting to entertain indigenous children and teach knowledge through newspapers. Not many of these children's newspapers are present in West Sumatra. In addition to the pressure from the colonial government, the economic condition of indigenous newspaper businessmen is often a constraint. Age of this newspaper can be said not long or last long. POMPAI itself only lasted about two years. However, his role in the development of the knowledge of indigenous children is taken into account. This can be seen from the rubric and writing as well as the influence of the newspaper POMPAI. Not many natives children can attend school, this newspaper beceme one means of education for them to be illiterate and learn a little to increase knowledge.
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Tanrıkulu, İbrahim, Sadegül Akbaba Altun, Özgür Erdur Baker, and Oya Yerin Güneri. "Misuse of ICTs among Turkish children and youth: A study on newspaper reports." International Journal of Human Sciences 12, no. 1 (April 14, 2015): 1230. http://dx.doi.org/10.14687/ijhs.v12i1.3131.

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<p>This study investigated the misuse of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) among children and youth. The data source was newspaper reports obtained from three Turkish daily newspapers, between January 2006 and December 2012. In that seven years period, a total of 66 ICT misuse incidents were reported in the selected newspapers. Document analysis was performed on the newspaper reports. Themes and codes were entered as variables to manage the data quantitatively. Results revealed that ICT misuse was most commonly conducted through cell phones, social networking sites, instant messaging and web pages. Young people’s involvement of ICT misuse had three forms; from young perpetrator/s to the young victim/s, from young perpetrator/s to adult victim/s and from adult perpetrator/s to young victim/s. ICTs were commonly misused for sexual abuse, insulting or taking revenge. While perpetrators were mostly males whose ages ranged between 14 and 52, a great majority of ICT misuse victims were females, with an age range from 8 to 46. Negative psychological and physiological impacts were reported by the victims.</p>
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Nkwam-Uwaoma, Adeline O., and Mishack Ndukwu. "Assessment of Nigerian Newspapers’ Reportage of Violence against Children: Case Study of Daily Sun and Punch National Newspapers." Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal 7, no. 12 (January 13, 2021): 704–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.14738/assrj.712.9155.

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Traditionally, child rearing in Nigeria closely reflects the “spare the rod and spoil the child” maxim and as such spanking, flogging, slapping, beating and evening starving a child as a form of punishment for wrong doing and as a method of behavior modification are common. These are not necessarily considered as maltreatment or abuse of the child. Despite the adoption and implementation of the Child Rights Act in Nigeria, violence against children seems to be on a steady increase. Stories of sexual molestation, rape, child labour, infliction of physical injuries and use of children for rituals by parents, guardians and other members of the society abound. Violence against children is considered as those acts by other persons especially adults that undermine and threaten the healthy life and existence of children or those that violet their rights as humans. In Nigeria newspapers are a major source of News, second only to radio and television in coverage, currency and content. National dailies are newspapers with daily publications and national spread or coverage. This study analyzed the frequency, length, prominence level, direction and sources of information reported on violence against children in the selected national daily newspapers. It then provided information on the role of the newspapers in Nigeria in the fight against child violence and public awareness of the impact of violence against children on development of the nation and the attempts to curtail such violence. The composite week sampling technique in which the four weeks of the month are reduced to one and a sample is randomly selected from each day of the week was used. As such 168 editions of Daily Sun and Punch newspapers published from January to December of 2016 were selected. Data were collected using code sheet and analyzed via content analysis. The result showed that the frequency of the newspapers’ reportage of violence against children in Nigeria was low. Again, it was found that the length or space given to reports on violence against children was inadequate, the direction of the few reports on violence against children was in favor of the course or fight against child violence and these newspapers gave no prominence to reports on violence against children. Finally, it was found that major source of news about violence against children was through journalism; government and individual sources provided only minimal information. Adeline Nkwam-Uwaoma and Mishack Ndukwu Keywords – children, Newspapers Reportage, Nigeria, Violence Nkwam-Uwaoma is with the Department of Mass Communication , Imo State University, P.M.B. 200 Owerri , Nigeria (corresponding author, phone +2348035414973; email: nkwamuwaomaadline@yahoo.com ) Ndukwu is with Imo State University, P.M.B. 2020 Owerri, Nigeria (email: mishack.cj@gmail.com ).
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Rush, Lynne, Shona Hilton, and Lisa McDaid. "A simple dose of antibiotics: qualitative analysis of sepsis reporting in UK newspapers." BJGP Open 4, no. 1 (January 21, 2020): bjgpopen20X101005. http://dx.doi.org/10.3399/bjgpopen20x101005.

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BackgroundA recent drive to improve sepsis awareness has been accompanied by prolific media reporting about its management in children. Media reporting is known to influence public understanding of health issues and subsequent health-seeking behaviour.AimTo examine UK newspaper representations of sepsis in children to better understand how the messages they convey may impact on parents' consulting behaviour and expectations about antimicrobial prescribing.Design & settingQualitative analysis of articles published in 12 UK newspapers from January 1988 to June 2018.MethodThematic analysis of 140 articles about sepsis in children identified through a search on the Nexis database.ResultsReporting about sepsis in UK newspapers was characterised by emotive personal narratives about affected children who have suffered death or disability. These events were frequently presented as resulting from failings within the healthcare system that could have been avoided by early treatment. Health professionals were portrayed as inadequately prepared to recognise and manage sepsis, and as reluctant to prescribe antibiotics, even when necessary. Parents were positioned as advocates for their children, and as being ultimately responsible for ensuring that they receive appropriate treatment.ConclusionThis research identified messages about sepsis in the UK news media that could influence public attitudes about antibiotic prescribing in acute childhood illness. Public health communications about sepsis awareness must acknowledge the wider implications of unnecessary antibiotic use as a driver of antimicrobial resistance to reduce the risk of damaging efforts to promote rational prescribing.
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ISHIZUKA, Natsumi, and Soichi TOKIZANE. "Children^|^#39;s Newspapers: Their History and Today." Joho Chishiki Gakkaishi 23, no. 2 (2013): 265–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.2964/jsik.23_265.

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6

Hatcher, Barbara. "Magazines and Newspapers for Young Children and Adolescents." Childhood Education 63, no. 5 (June 1987): 393–404. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00094056.1987.10521492.

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7

Delhez, Julien. "Do French media miseducate the public about intelligence research?" Research on Education and Media 12, no. 1 (December 1, 2020): 77–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/rem-2020-0009.

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Abstract This article provides an assessment of French media coverage of intelligence research. The analysis is based on articles published between 1992 and 2020 in French nationwide newspapers, local newspapers and science magazines. Two themes regularly appear in nationwide newspapers and science magazines: environmental effects on IQ and animal intelligence. High-IQ children are often covered in local newspapers. A substantial proportion of articles on the genetics of intelligence, IQ in general and behavioural genetics in general contain statements contradicting the conclusions of mainstream intelligence research; the tendency is even more pronounced in science magazines than in nationwide newspapers. Implications for relationships between scientists and journalists are discussed.
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Brooks, Brian S., and James R. Kropp. "Persuading children to read: a test for electronic newspapers." Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies 17, no. 1 (January 1996): 3–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02560054.1996.9653162.

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9

Tahnia, Windy. "TINJAUAN KRIMINOLOGI TERHADAP PENJUAL KORAN DENGAN BERSERAGAM SEKOLAH (Studi Di Lampu Lalu Lintas Simpang Tiga Tengku Bey Kota Pekanbaru)." SISI LAIN REALITA 5, no. 01 (June 15, 2020): 76–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.25299/sisilainrealita.2020.vol5(01).6385.

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The purpose of this study was to determine the factors underlying newspaper sellers who did not attend school, but used school uniforms when selling newspapers. As well as this study aims to provide knowledge that children are not only able to become objects but also have the potential to become subjects. The research method used is qualitative with the type of phenomenological research. The research location is the Simpang Tiga Tengku Bey Traffic Lights in Pekanbaru City. The conclusion of this study is VI is the subject of deviant behavior with school uniform symbols as a mode to attract community empathy.
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Planas, Roque. "Don’t Blame Central American Newspapers for Influx of Undocumented Children." NACLA Report on the Americas 47, no. 3 (January 2014): 6–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10714839.2014.11721823.

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Awofeso, Niyi, Sara Al Imam, and Arwa Ahmed. "Content Analysis of Media Coverage of Childhood Obesity Topics in UAE Newspapers and Popular Social Media Platforms, 2014-2017." International Journal of Health Policy and Management 8, no. 2 (November 21, 2018): 81–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.15171/ijhpm.2018.100.

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The 2017 prevalence of obesity among children (age 5–17 years) in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is 13.68%. Childhood obesity is one of the 10 top health priorities in the UAE. This study examines the quality, frequency, sources, scope and framing of childhood obesity in popular social media and three leading UAE newspapers from 2014 to 2017. During the review period, 152 newspaper articles from three leading national newspapers – Gulf News, The National and Al Ittihad – met the eligibility criteria for this study. There were 57 Facebook posts, 50 Twitter posts, 14 posted YouTube videos, and 13 Media releases on related to childhood obesity between 2014 and 2017. Childhood obesity was consistently problematized, primarily in health terms, but was not strongly linked to socio-economic and geographical factors. Childhood obesity was framed as being predominantly influenced by individual and parental behaviours more frequently (n = 76) compared with structural or environmental factors such as the roles of the food and beverage industry (n = 22). Unlike findings from studies with adult obesity, articles advocating individual behavior changes to address childhood obesity were relatively few (n = 29). Social media may be an effective way to help children overcome obesity, in part through online interaction with health care providers and health conscious obese peers. Areas for improvement in social media use to reduce childhood obesity prevalence in UAE include enhancing public engagement with social media posts on childhood obesity, as reflected in the numbers of Likes and Retweets or Shares.
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Bolloten, Bill. "'They don't realise we're humans' – tabloid newspapers' attacks on refugee children." Race Equality Teaching 21, no. 2 (May 1, 2002): 49–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.18546/ret.21.2.14.

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Lestariningrum, Anik, Isfauzi Hadi Nugroho, and Agustia Budiarti. "Kegiatan Meremas Koran Dalam Mengembangkan Kemampuan Motorik Halus Anak Usia Dini." Child Education Journal 2, no. 2 (August 27, 2020): 106–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.33086/cej.v2i2.1617.

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ABSTRAK : Permasalahan yang terjadi dalam pengembangan kemampuan pada anak usia dini terkait kemampuan motorik halus anak terkait koordinasi jari tangan dalam kaitannyan dengan kelenturan jari tangan menyebabkan anak mengalami kesulitan dalam menggengam alat tulis serta alat makan. Untuk membantu permasalahan tersebut kegiatan bermain meremas koran menjadi alternatif solusi pembelajarannya. Pemanfaatkan koran bekas sebagai alternatif akan menstimulasi perkembangan motorik halus . Tujuan dari penelitian untuk memaparkan kegiatan bermain meremas koran untuk mengembangkan kemampuan motorik halus pada anak. Desain penelitian deskriptif kualitatif dengan teknik penilaian observasi, dan dokumentasi. Subjek penelitian ini adalah anak Kelompok Bermain Ceria Desa Kudu Kecamatan Kertosono Kabupaten Nganjuk yang berjumlah 10 siswa, dari hasil penelitian diperoleh data sebanyak 8 anak mendapat predikat berkembang sangat baik, dan 2 anak mendapat predikat mulai berkembang. Hasil penelitian ini direkomendasikan supaya kegiatan bermain meremas koran dikembangkan untuk aspek lain supaya seluruh aspek bisa berkembang dengan kegiatan beragam dan menarik. ABSTRACT : Problems that occur in developing abilities in early childhood are related to children's fine motor skills related to finger coordination in relation to finger flexibility which causes children to experience difficulty in holding stationery and eating utensils. To help with this problem, playing squeezing newspapers is analternative learning solution. Using old newspapers as an alternative will stimulate fine motor development. The purpose of this research is to describe the activity of playing squeezing newspapers to develop fine motor skills in children. Descriptive qualitative research design with assessment techniques,observation and documentation. The research instrument used was the observation and interview guidelines which were analyzed descriptively by the analysis of the Miles and Hubermen model. The subjects of this study were 10 children of the Cheerful Play Group in Kudu Village, Kertosono District, Nganjuk Regency. The results showed that 8 children received the predicate of developing very well, and 2 children received the title of starting to develop. The conclusion in this study is the activity of squeezing newspapers can develop the motor skills of early childhood.
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Goddard, Chris. "Not the last word: point and counterpoint: The historical, political, geographical and personal parameters of child abuse." Children Australia 21, no. 3 (1996): 42–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1035077200007197.

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Stories about children, and particularly about violence towards children, are common in our newspapers. Increased recognition of child abuse has contributed to this increased media coverage. While it is possible to ascribe this interest to a greater concern for the welfare of children, there are limits to the forms of child abuse that receive media coverage.
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Akgul Gok, Fulya, and Elif Gökçearslan Çifci. "Position of the Syrian refugee children in printed media." BORDER CROSSING 7, no. 2 (September 16, 2017): 231–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.33182/bc.v7i2.463.

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Associated with globalization, transformation and mobility all around the world may result in positive and negative impacts on welfare of the countries as well as on psycho-social and economic positions of the individuals. Especially in under developed and developing countries, such effects are more evident. The individuals living in these countries are forced to leave their homeland and become refugees in some other countries due to social, economic, psychological and environmental effects. Migration process has become a threat for physical, psychological, social, economic and cultural development of these children at present and in the future. This study is a content analysis on the position of Syrian children and how they are mentioned in three mainstream newspapers in Turkey (March-April-May 2016). These newspapers are Star, Hürriyet and Cumhuriyet. Only headlines were analyzed and columns were not taken into consideration. News from these papers are categorized according to subjects and contents and then sub-categories were composed. How Syrian children in Turkey have been generally mentioned, on which occasions they have been mentioned and which of their problems have been stated in printed media were analyzed in this study.
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Field, Richard A., Jasmeet Soar, Jerry P. Nolan, and Gavin D. Perkins. "Epidemiology and outcome of cardiac arrests reported in the lay-press: an observational study." Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 104, no. 12 (December 2011): 525–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1258/jrsm.2011.110228.

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Objective The aims of this study were to evaluate the frequency with which cardiac arrests are reported in newspapers, assess the level of detail reported and ascertain whether this coverage gives a realistic portrayal of cardiac arrest outcomes to the lay-reader. Design Observational study. Setting All UK newspaper articles published between 1 January 2010 and 30 June 2010. Participants Articles containing the words ‘cardiac arrest’, ‘CPR’ or ‘resuscitation’ were screen for eligibility. Any articles not involving reference to a real cardiac arrest were excluded. Main outcome measures Data relating to patient demographics, arrest characteristics, treatment (CPR and defibrillation) and survival using the Utstein template were extracted. The results were then compared with cardiac arrest statistics from epidemiological studies. Results Six hundred and forty-eight articles were reviewed, 203 of which referred to individual cardiac arrest events; 22 events occurred in-hospital and 181 occurred out-of-hospital. In the out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) group 32 (17.7%) were reported to survive to hospital discharge, almost all with good neurological outcome. The median age group was 31–45-year-olds, 52 (28.7%) were women and 40 were children. Seventy-five percent of victims received bystander CPR with 13 being attended to by lay-responders using AEDs, eight of which presented with a shockable rhythm of which six made a full recovery. Conclusion Survival to hospital discharge rate among newspaper reports was double that of complete epidemiological studies of OHCAs in urban environments. Newspapers may give readers an over-optimistic portrayal of cardiac arrest survival and neurological outcome following successful resuscitation.
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Lundberg, Björn. "Discipline and Punish at Camp: Citizenship and the Issue of Violence at a Swedish Boy Scout Camp." Nordic Journal of Educational History 5, no. 2 (December 17, 2018): 93–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.36368/njedh.v5i2.119.

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This article examines reports of physical punishment at the national Swedish Boy Scout camp Åvatyr in 1950. The Swedish newspapers Dagens Nyheter and Expressen described the events in terms of bullying and violence, while the camp directors declared that the reports were merely exaggerated accounts of innocent pranks and practical jokes. This article draws information from newspaper articles, Scout magazines and archival sources to discuss how the incidents at the Åvatyr camp tapped into a debate on disciplinary measures against children in Sweden. The analysis also concerns how these acts of punishment related to the Boy Scouts’ scheme of citizenship instruction. Finally, the long-term effects of this purported scandal are evaluated, including a call for reform of masculinity and citizenship ideals within the Boy Scout movement during the following decade.
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Watson, Bruce Kaʻimi. "Ka Moʻolelo o Ka Nuha: the safety zone at the Kamehameha Schools didn’t happen by accident." AlterNative: An International Journal of Indigenous Peoples 16, no. 3 (August 28, 2020): 268–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1177180120952898.

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Written in a style inspired by Hawaiian language newspapers of the 19th century, this moʻolelo (history) seeks to tell the story of Hawaiian patriotism at the Kamehameha Schools, a school for Indigenous children founded and funded by a princess of the Hawaiian Kingdom. With Raphael Lemkin’s phases of genocide in our pocket and Lomawaima and McCarty’s Safety Zone Theory as our guide, readers will journey through the school’s correspondence, teacher meeting minutes, and Hawaiian language newspapers documenting the celebration of the holiday Lā Kūʻokoʻa, the events surrounding the 1895 Kaua Kūloko, and the experiences of the first Indigenous teacher hired by the school.
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Dehavenon, Anna. "Monitoring Emergency Shelter for Homeless Families in New York City." Practicing Anthropology 16, no. 4 (September 1, 1994): 12–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.17730/praa.16.4.1024055517228645.

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"Sleeping on the floor… huddled in corners of the structures in the hallway… filthy, atrocious bathrooms, no toilet paper or paper towels, mice and cockroaches, sick children, children sleeping in strollers, hot, humid, and chaotic conditions; families sleeping on plastic chairs, or on newspapers spread out on the floor; and families with inadequate food and drink." Author's expert witness testimony in McCain vs. Dinkins, 1991.
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Tiyani, Vina Yunia, Triyana Triyana, Nisful Kholisyatun N, and Muhammad Wahyu A. "The Phenomenon of Street Children in Criminology Studies (Study in Sambiroto, Semarang)." Law Research Review Quarterly 5, no. 2 (May 31, 2019): 279–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.15294/snh.v5i2.31150.

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This research is motivated by the many irregularities that occur in urban areas such as the city of Semarang, for example the number of street children. This observation is done by jumping directly to the destination that is on Sambiroto Street, Semarang. There are various kinds of jobs for street children who sell newspapers, provide services to wipe the windshield when passing on the street and sell newspapers. The purpose of this observation is to find out what lies behind these children or adolescents as street children, and to study and analyze internal factors, such as within the scope of the family that makes them street children. To find out their work while on the streets, whether they work for themselves or told by others. The method used in this observation is using qualitative methods. Data collected by in-depth interviews, observation, and documentation. After the data has been collected, data analysis is carried out through the stages, namely data reduction, data presentation and conclusion drawing. The results of these observations show that the main factor that caused them to go to the streets is because of the family's economic limitations, so they voluntarily or with their own initiative to go into the streets by working on the streets. While on the road they often interact with other street children so that they eventually form a group or even a community. Interaction is woven for a specific purpose such as working together when plunging into the road.
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Terzieva, Margarita, and Rumyana Papancheva. "Development of media-education and digital competencies using children and teen newspapers and magazines." New Trends and Issues Proceedings on Humanities and Social Sciences 6, no. 2 (August 20, 2019): 17–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.18844/prosoc.v6i2.4278.

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This paper presents the authors research about the opportunity to develop digital and media competencies of future teachers using contemporary children and teen press. Short historical review of the impact of the periodic press on education is done. New digital environment gives new opportunities for both teachers and students to develop their ways of communication and to enrich the teaching and learning process. The teachers could proceed the education process outside the classroom, developing critical, logical, creative and analytical thinking. Students by themselves could create variety digitally based media to express knowledge and positions. In such a way, together with implication of media education, we have natural impact on the level of students’ digital skills. Some results from a survey of 160 students—future primary school teachers concerning their attitude to children and teen press as educational tool are presented. Some tendencies are outlined, and conclusions are formulated. Keywords: Media education, primary school, children and teen press as educational tool.
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주성재, Kyungja Ahn, and Sun-Ho Hong. "A Corpus-based Analysis of the Vocabulary of English Newspapers for Korean Children." Journal of Research in Curriculum Instruction 20, no. 4 (August 2016): 336–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.24231/rici.2016.20.4.336.

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Asare-Donkoh, Frankie. "Children in the media: how much space do they get in Ghanaian newspapers?" Journal of Children and Media 11, no. 4 (July 13, 2017): 417–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17482798.2017.1348370.

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Rutherford, Leonie. "Forgotten Histories: Ephemeral Culture for Children and the Digital Archive." Media International Australia 150, no. 1 (February 2014): 66–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x1415000115.

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The history of children's popular culture in Australia is still to be written. This article examines Australian print publication for children from the mid-nineteenth to the early twentieth centuries, together with radio and children's television programming from the 1950s to the 1970s. It presents new scholarship on the history of children's magazines and newspapers, sourced from digital archives such as Trove, and documents new sources for early works by Australian children's writers. The discussion covers early television production for children, mobilising digital resources that have hitherto not informed scholarship in the field.
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Putri, Lisa Anggraini. "Dampak Korea Wave Terhadap Prilaku Remaja Di Era Globalisasi." Al-Ittizaan: Jurnal Bimbingan Konseling Islam 3, no. 1 (April 29, 2020): 42. http://dx.doi.org/10.24014/0.8710187.

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Along with the development of technology in this globalization era, it is very easy for humans to obtain information, one of which is by accessing the development of kpop world. The more easy it is to get this information, causing teenagers to become fanatical about what they are idolizing. As a result of the teenage fanatics causes several positive and negative impacts on him. The cause of the drama series, music, fashion, cosmetics, culture, social media. The increase in the development of this newspaper wave is very necessary to be discussed and must be considered by parents in seeing the development of their children. In this journal the author discusses the positive and negative effects of this kpop development. Data taken by the author is obtained from books, journals, internet, newspapers. To address this and reduce adolescent fanaticism towards kpop, the writer shares the ways that parents need to do.
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Meilanov, Vazif, and S. J. Sumner. "Who'd like to speak?: A literary debate in Siberia." Index on Censorship 17, no. 9 (October 1988): 19–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03064228808534533.

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Vazif Meilanov (b. 1938), a mathematician and author of the samizdat book In the Margins of Soviet Newspapers, was arrested in January 1980 for demonstrating in defence of the exiled physicist Andrei Sakharov. Meilanov was sentenced to 7 years in a ‘strict regime’ camp and 2 years in exile for ‘anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda'; a further conviction while he was in camp added an extra 6 months to his sentence. Glasnost and Sakharov's release notwithstanding, Meilanov is still serving his term of exile in the remote settlement of Namtsi in the Verkhnevilusky region of Yakutia, Siberia. It was there, in the local library, that he attended a bizarre public discussion on Children of the Arbat by Anatoly Rybakov (see preceding article: Glasnost bestseller), Meilanov's lively account of this discussion, published here in an abridged version, first appeared in Russian in the Paris newspaper Russkaya Mysl.
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Schrover, Marlou, and Tycho Walaardt. "The Influence of the Media on Policies in Practice: Hungarian Refugee Resettlement in the Netherlands in 1956." Journal of Migration History 3, no. 1 (April 12, 2017): 22–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/23519924-00301002.

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This article analyses newspaper coverage, government policies and policy practices during the 1956 Hungarian refugee crisis. There were surprisingly few differences between newspapers in the coverage of this refugee migration, and few changes over time. The role of the press was largely supportive of government policies, although the press did criticise the selection of refugees. According to official government guidelines, officials should not have selected, but in practice this is what they attempted to do. The refugees who arrived in the Netherlands did not live up to the image the press, in its supportive role, had created: there were too few freedom fighters, women and children. This article shows that the press had an influence because policy makers did make adjustments. However, in practice selection was not what the media assumed it was, and the corrections were not what the media had aimed for.
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Pease, Ted. "Newsroom 2000." Newspaper Research Journal 13, no. 1-2 (January 1992): 34–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/073953299201300105.

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“It's a great job, but not for my kid!” Journalists are happy with their career choices, but only half would want their … children to follow in their footsteps. Why not? Low pay, long hours, poor prospects and “inhuman” management. And – say a sobering number – newspapers are dinosaurs that probably won't survive.
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ISLAM, M. RAKIBUL, M. AMIRUL ISLAM, and BANYA BANOWARY. "DETERMINANTS OF EXPOSURE TO MASS MEDIA FAMILY PLANNING MESSAGES AMONG INDIGENOUS PEOPLE IN BANGLADESH: A STUDY ON THE GARO." Journal of Biosocial Science 41, no. 2 (March 2009): 221–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021932008003088.

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SummaryThis paper evaluates exposure to mass media family planning (FP) messages among the Garo, an indigenous community in Bangladesh. A sample of 223 currently married Garo women were selected purposively from two districts where most of the Garo population live. The analysis demonstrated that television was the most significant form of mass media to disseminate FP messages among the recipients – more so than radio and newspapers. About 80·6% of the respondents had heard of FP messages through television, while for the radio and newspapers the percentages were 55·3% and 22·7% respectively. The contraceptive prevalence rate is much higher (79·5%) in the study area than the national level (55·8%). A linear logistic regression model was employed to identify the confluence of different demographic and socioeconomic characteristics on mass media FP messages. Regarding exposure to FP messages, four independent variables out of six had significant effects on the exposure to FP messages through any one of the types of media, i.e. radio, television and newspapers. These independent variables were age, level of education, occupation and number of children.
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Marina, Potemkina, and Lushina Tatiana. "Moscow Boarding School Pupils in the Ural Rear: Reflection of Military Reality in Synchronous Ego-Documents." TECHNOLOGOS, no. 3 (2020): 123–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.15593/perm.kipf/2020.3.09.

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The Relevance of studying the features of childrens’ perception of extreme conditions transformationis is dictated not only by the need to preserve the traumatic experience of the great Patriotic war. Ongoing military conflicts in the modern world lead to the fact that the victims are civilians including children. Their perception of extreme situations and adaptation mechanisms are of scientific and practical interest. Based on synchronous egodocuments written by children the author examines childrens' perception of the evacuation road to the Ural rear and the image of the enemy during the great Patriotic war. The purpose of this study is to examine the perception and representation of military reality in childrens' writings. The main part of the sources were school essays, notes and poems for the local wall newspaper, written by the Moscow boarding school’s pupils evacuated to Molotov region. The value of children's ego-documents is determined by the fact that they allow us to identify the value system of war children and the degree of influence of official propaganda on the child's psyche. The topic of children's perception in a military reality has been covered in Russian historiography, but researchers rarely use such sources as children's texts intended for wall newspapers. The methodology of the research is based on the theoretical positions and methods of military-historical anthropology, methods of studying and representing oral history. This study highlights the stories that left a mark on the child's psyche: the road to evacuation, living conditions and training of boarding school students in the Soviet rear, ideas about the war, the enemies and the Red Army. It is concluded that in the conditions of war there was a further militarization of children's consciousness. The peculiarities of children's perception of the war are emotionality, simplicity, a clear differentiation between friend or foe categoricalness. The image of the enemy is not different from the key national-Patriotic stereotypes associated with the great Patriotic war. Children's assessments of what is happening and their attitude to the enemy are mostly formed by rhetoric, ideology, and propaganda.
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Arden, Dame Mary. "PRIVACY AND THIRD PARTIES TO CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS." Cambridge Law Journal 76, no. 3 (November 2017): 469–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0008197317000691.

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In Khuja (formerly PNM) v Times Newspapers Ltd. [2017] UKSC 49; [2017] 3 W.L.R. 351, the appellant (A) failed to obtain an injunction restraining two newspapers from publishing information given about him in a criminal trial in which he had been a third party. The defendants were charged with serious sex offences involving children. A feared that the public would associate him with those offences if the information was published. He claimed that publication would interfere with his and his family's private and family life. As against this, the open justice principle means that, wherever possible, proceedings should be heard in public and that there should be fair reporting of the proceedings. This principle carries great weight in the common law.
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Al-Obaidi, Dr Entisar. "The influence of media on upbringing and behavior of children." GIS Business 14, no. 6 (December 12, 2019): 656–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.26643/gis.v14i6.15023.

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Media refers to the channels of communication through which we distribute news, education, movies, music, advertising messages and other information. It includes physical and online newspapers and magazines, television, radio, telephone, the Internet, fax and billboards, are a dominant force in lives of children. Although television is remaining the predominant medium for children and adolescents, the new technologies are become more popular. We have to concern about the potential harmful effects of media "messages and images"; however, the positive and negative effects of media should be recognized. Parents have to establish the plan for all media in family home. Media that are influences on children should be recognized by "schools, policymakers, product advertisers, and entertainment producers".
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Karić, Dženita. "A Sultan's Children: Bosnian Jews in Two Major Newspapers of the Bosnian Vilayet:BosnaandSarajevski Cvjetnik." British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 42, no. 2 (January 28, 2015): 147–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13530194.2014.993849.

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Skagius, Peter. "Brains and psyches: Child psychological and psychiatric expertise in a Swedish newspaper, 1980–2008." History of the Human Sciences 32, no. 3 (July 2019): 76–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0952695118810284.

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Most children and families have not had direct contact with child psychological and psychiatric experts. Instead they encounter developmental theories, etiological explanations and depictions of childhood disorders through indirect channels such as newspapers. Drawing on actor–network theory, this article explores two child psychological and psychiatric modes of ordering children’s mental health discernible in Sweden’s largest morning newspaper, Dagens Nyheter, during the years 1980 to 2008: a psychodynamic mode and a neuro-centered mode. In the article I show how these two relatively contemporaneous modes greatly differed in how they enacted children’s mental health. The psychodynamic mode stressed the parents’ role in structuring and affecting the child’s unconscious and saw them as the primary cause of any mental illness. In contrast, the neuro-centered mode highlighted that mental issues were related to the child’s brain and proposed different solutions depending on whether the child’s brain functioned in a ‘normal’ or ‘atypical’ manner. Each mode moreover suggested differing contexts to their discussions, with the psychodynamic mode solely discussing the parental milieu while the neuro-centered mode mainly focused on how society affected children with ‘atypical’ brains. The two modes thus had significantly diverging implications for the reader on how to understand and manage children and their psychological well-being. I further argue in the article for the relevance of actor–network theory in historical studies of psychology and psychiatry.
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Abramova, Ksenia V. "Avant-Garde Children’s Magazines and Newspapers of the 1920s – 1930s in Siberia." Studies in Theory of Literary Plot and Narratology 14, no. 2 (2019): 84–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.25205/2410-7883-2019-2-84-105.

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The purpose of this article is to analyze the magazines and newspapers for children and youth issued on the territory of Siberia in 1920s – 1930s. A great many children’s books were issued that years, moreover, the approach to design of that books and to the contents of writings for children changed significantly: the topics had to be actual, associated with the construction of the new society. At the same time, exactly in children’s press in 1920s, the new principles of book graphics were formed. There are a large number of magazines and newspapers aimed at youth audiences were published in Siberia in the 1920s and 1930s, but they did not have a long history. Some of them appeared only once or twice, after that they closed. But all the more interesting is the study of these rare publications as experiments that influenced how the Soviet children’s and youth magazine was formed. Viewing magazines and newspapers allows you to observe how the rubrication and the genre system of Soviet publications for children evolved, as well as identify trends that have become a definite “sign of the times”. The article explores archive materials and examines the contents of printed issues, peculiarities of the approaches to the inner composition of the material and design techniques, discovers the features of the “Soviet avant-garde” development in children’s and youth periodicals. It indicates that the majority of the Siberian Children’s and youth magazines issued within that period has demonstrated a strongly demonstrated ideological overtone, claiming its purpose raising the new type of human and orientation on the “iterature of fact”. The article covers the peculiarities of the illustration techniques in Siberian post-revolutionary magazines. The article marks that up to the mid – late 1920s, the children’s and youth periodicals design became composed of such elements as insets, plane drawings based on a contrast combination of black and white, photography and photographic compilation. Furthermore, it describes a number of self-presentation techniques, developed exactly by the avant-garde art. As can be seen from the above, it can be stated that Siberian children’s and youth journalism acquired the avant-garde trends of the first third of the 20th century, however, they haven’t been gradually and fully realized.
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Lavriša, Živa, Karmen Erjavec, and Igor Pravst. "Trends in marketing foods to children in Slovenian magazines: a content analysis." Public Health Nutrition 21, no. 18 (October 8, 2018): 3344–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1368980018002513.

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AbstractObjectiveFood marketing is an important factor influencing children’s food preferences. In Slovenia the use of magazines is widespread among children. We investigated food advertising in children’s and teens’ magazines (CTM) in 2013 and 2017. The penetration of food advertising was compared with magazines targeting the adult population.DesignA repeated cross-sectional study. Magazines were searched for branded food references (BFR). All BFR were categorised and evaluated using the WHO Europe nutrient profile model.SettingSlovenia.SubjectsAll issues of CTM and a selected sample of issues of adult-targeting magazines and newspapers published in Slovenia in 2013 and 2017.ResultsOne hundred and seventy-five issues of CTM (ninety-two in 2013, eighty-three in 2017) and 675 issues of adult-targeted magazines and newspapers were analysed (345 in 2013, 330 in 2017). In 2017, food advertising in CTM dropped notably but the opposite was found for adult-targeted magazines. Regular advertisements dominated in 2017 in CTM, while in 2013, 83 % of BFR types were games/puzzles, competitions and product placements. Chocolate and confectionery were the most advertised in CTM and food supplements in adults’ magazines. Most foods in CTM were classed as ‘not permitted’ in both years (98 % in 2013 and 100 % in 2017).ConclusionsThe advertisements in CTM still mostly refer to unhealthy foods. The extent of food advertising has dropped considerably since 2013. On the contrary, food advertising in printed media targeting adults has increased, chiefly referring to food supplements and foods that do not pass the WHO Europe nutrient profile model criteria.
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Dressman, Mark, Laurie McCarty, and Jonathan Benson. "as Signifier: Considering the Semantic Field of School Literacy." Journal of Literacy Research 30, no. 1 (March 1998): 9–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10862969809547980.

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This article examines the use of the term <whole language> within the educational and national media and by the newspaper and interested parties in 1 college town. Data collected include articles in literacy journals; a search of 5 daily newspapers in the US and other periodicals and TV news; a search of 1 local newspaper; and interviews with 70 teachers, administrators, university faculty, and “concerned citizens” in a mid-sized city in the Southwestern us with a major public university. Using the “discourse-centered approach to culture” proposed by Sherzer (1987) as a revision of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, our interpretive analysis of the data argues that the disputes surrounding the term <whole language> have as much to do with cultural, political, and economic issues confronting the US, and in particular the Southwest, as they do with any philosophical or professional conversation about the “best way” to teach children to read. The implication is that if literacy research is to retain both its legitimacy and its relevance within discussions about literacy, researchers need to become more open about their own cultural and political biases in the stands they take, and more aware of how those positions might be perceived and used by others and by the national media.
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Price, James H., Sharon M. Desmond, Susan K. Telljohann, and Donna Todd. "Parents' Beliefs about Cholesterol and its Effects on Their Children." Psychological Reports 74, no. 2 (April 1994): 611–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1994.74.2.611.

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A random sample of parents of primary grade children ( N = 500) was obtained from two higher socioeconomic-status suburban elementary schools. The respondents ( n = 277) were well educated (92% attended or graduated from college), white (92%), primarily higher in socioeconomic status (79% earned more than $50,000/year), and female (70%). Two-thirds of the parents believed that all elementary school children should have their cholesterol levels checked, 70% believed high cholesterol in children was serious, yet only 21% believed their child would develop a high cholesterol level. To control their children's cholesterol level, the majority of parents (73%) made lifestyle changes for their children since the majority believed high cholesterol levels would clog arteries (95%) and cause heart disease (90%). Parents most often received their information on cholesterol from magazines (73%), newspapers (62%), and physicians (52%).
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Shine, Kathryn. "Are Australian Teachers Making the Grade? A Study of News Coverage of Naplan Testing." Media International Australia 154, no. 1 (February 2015): 25–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1329878x1515400105.

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The standardised testing of school children has been the subject of significant news media attention in recent years in many developed countries around the world. This article examines the reporting of annual National Assessment Program Literacy and Numeracy (NAPLAN) tests in three major Australian newspapers, with a particular focus on the portrayal of school teachers in the coverage. Overall, teachers were presented as strongly opposed to NAPLAN and the publication of test results, yet the newspapers themselves supported the tests as an important accountability measure. Teachers were depicted as trying to influence the testing system through teaching to the test and cheating. They were presented as generally inadequate as teachers, and were blamed for perceived failings in the educational system. These findings point to implications for teacher recruitment and retention, and for journalism education and training.
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Christianakis, Mary. "Victimization and Vilification of Romani Children in Media and Human Rights Organizations Discourses." Social Inclusion 3, no. 5 (September 29, 2015): 48–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/si.v3i5.250.

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Through an analysis of European newspapers, human rights organization reportage, and United Nations documents and websites, this article examines how public discourse regarding education, human rights, poverty, child rearing, and child labour manufactures a dangerous, implausible childhood for Romani children. These discourses, perpetrated by human rights organizations and news media, leverage the languages of intervention, cultural difference, nationalism, and social justice to simultaneously victimize and vilify Romani children, rendering them incapable of experiencing humane childhoods. Employing critical discourse analysis and systemic functional grammar analysis, the proposed article seeks to disentangle the discourses of human rights for Roman children from the assimilationist arguments aimed at compulsory schooling and Eurocentric family and labour practices rooted in access to middle class dominant labor markets.
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Mengal, Taj, Tahir Mahmood, and Rukhsana Faiz. "South Asian Print Media and Children Rights Discourse: A Critical Analysis of Pakistan – India Press." Global Regional Review IV, no. III (September 30, 2019): 348–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/grr.2019(iv-iii).39.

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Children rights are highlighted by various authors, columnist and media persons from time to time. The purpose of this study is to identify the imperative issues of children in South Asia especially Pakistan and India. This research article aims to provide information to the advisers and policy makers to shift particular difficulties of children rights to the forefront of public conscience. For this purpose, two dailies, The Nation from Pakistan and The Hindu from India were selected to find out the value given to children rights. The study shows that the coverage of children rights of education, health, safety and development rights were hardly covered in Pakistan and India print media and it is rarely prominent to identify the important issues related to children rights. This survey also examines that there are significant difference in the coverage of India and Pakistan newspapers which reports to the children issues.
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42

Woo, Seungho, Hwan Son, and Karam Lee. "Zainichi Koreans Invited to Home Base: Building Ethnic Identity and Its Impact on the Development of Korean Baseball (1956–70)." Sport History Review 51, no. 2 (November 1, 2020): 186–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/shr.2019-0037.

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Zainichi Koreans are a unique political product of the Korean Peninsula. They were taken to Japan under the Japanese occupation (1910–45) of Korea and stayed there without becoming naturalized Japanese citizens. Baseball was a mechanism for the children of Zainichi Koreans, who were oppressed on Japanese soil, to overcome the discrimination they were experiencing in their daily lives and assimilate into Japanese society. From 1956 to 1970, South Korean newspapers invited Zainichi Korean children playing baseball to their home country for regular national baseball exchanges. This event provided nourishment for the growth of Korean baseball and served as the only cultural bridge for Zainichi Korean children to experience and understand their motherland, which they had previously only imagined.
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Walkowiak, Natalia. "Rynek prasy kobiecej we Francji w XXI wieku. Charakterystyka na podstawie wybranych tytułów – wstęp do badań." Media Biznes Kultura, no. 2 (9) (2020): 23–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/25442554.mbk.20.015.13179.

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Women’s press market in France in 21st century based on selected titles. Introduction to research Reading magazines is still one of the favourite activities of French society. Despite the general decline in press readership, they have a relatively stable market position. Women’s press, which is a huge segment of the magazine market, deserve a special attention. There are both exclusive and fashion magazines as well as tip magazines, which show French women how to live, dress, cook, raise children or make money. These types of magazines achieve such high sale, that many information newspapers (such as “Le Figaro”) have decided to create women’s addition to the newspaper to increase their entire print – run. The women’s press is also attractive for advertisers, because many global companies in the clothing or cosmetics industry are from France. It all makes up the magazines addressed to the female customer are still an attractive sector of the media market, bringing profits to their owners and constituting an important source of knowledge for their readers.
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Walkowiak, Natalia. "Rynek prasy kobiecej we Francji w XXI wieku. Charakterystyka na podstawie wybranych tytułów – wstęp do badań." Media Biznes Kultura, no. 2 (9) (2020): 23–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/25442554.mbk.20.015.13179.

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Women’s press market in France in 21st century based on selected titles. Introduction to research Reading magazines is still one of the favourite activities of French society. Despite the general decline in press readership, they have a relatively stable market position. Women’s press, which is a huge segment of the magazine market, deserve a special attention. There are both exclusive and fashion magazines as well as tip magazines, which show French women how to live, dress, cook, raise children or make money. These types of magazines achieve such high sale, that many information newspapers (such as “Le Figaro”) have decided to create women’s addition to the newspaper to increase their entire print – run. The women’s press is also attractive for advertisers, because many global companies in the clothing or cosmetics industry are from France. It all makes up the magazines addressed to the female customer are still an attractive sector of the media market, bringing profits to their owners and constituting an important source of knowledge for their readers.
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45

Keenan, Bethany S. "“Before the War, Life Was Much Brighter and Happier than Today”." Historical Reflections/Réflexions Historiques 46, no. 3 (December 1, 2020): 55–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/hrrh.2020.460304.

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This article examines a previously unstudied collection of letters from French World War I orphans and widows, published in US newspapers from 1915 to 1922, as a result of the US humanitarian effort Fatherless Children of France (FCOF). Through the analysis of the letters’ content and style, the article illuminates the lived experience of bereaved lower-income French families, notably highlighting the significance of grief and the impact of paternal loss on economic status, bringing out new evidence on how women and children experienced the war, as well as showing how humanitarian efforts connected French and American civilians during the war period.
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46

Kemp, Max. "Testing in Literacy: The Hidden Agenda." Australasian Journal of Special Education 11, no. 2 (November 1987): 3–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1030011200021758.

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There has been unrest in our newspapers recently about standards of literacy in schools. To those of us who daily are in touch with children who have difficulties in learning to read and write, periodic public forays into the standards issues are usually unhelpful, unwarranted and uninformed. Comparisons between the standards of literacy achieved by different generations of school children are difficult to make, on the one hand because our functional literacy requirements differ from yesterday’s and on the other because the conditions of learning and performance in schools have undergone immense change during the last couple of generations.
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Gándara, Patricia. "Backtalk." Phi Delta Kappan 100, no. 1 (August 27, 2018): 48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0031721718797126.

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Every day, newspapers across the country report on the human tragedies caused by the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement policies: families being separated, neighborhoods ripped apart, children coming home to find their parents gone. However, the press rarely mentions the immense toll this is taking on the nation’s schools, their students, and the educators who work with them. A survey of educators sheds much-needed light on the situation.
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Aramendia-Muneta, Maria Elena. "Nuclear energy promotion using collectable cards aimed at children." Journal of Historical Research in Marketing 12, no. 1 (March 2, 2020): 75–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jhrm-10-2018-0049.

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Purpose This paper aims to examine how an innovative concept was introduced to a new market segment through varied marketing techniques. Design/methodology/approach Newspapers from 1958 were reviewed to assess the impact of a chocolate company advertising campaign targeting children. The paper examines the interpretation of the campaign message and the information contained in an album of collectable cards. Findings Parents leave the teaching role in the hands of companies when they do not clearly understand new technologies such as nuclear energy. Companies can take advantage of what governments introduce into the market to increase their sales. Originality/value The originality of the paper lies in the examination of collectable cards as a means of researching marketing history and contributes to the study of market segmentation, particularly in the case of children, focussing on nuclear energy.
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Westhoff, Wayne W., Martha L. Coulter, Robert J. McDermott, and Derek R. Holcomb. "Assessing the Self-Reported Health Risks of Urban Street Children Working in the Dominican Republic." International Quarterly of Community Health Education 15, no. 2 (July 1994): 137–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/v5te-lhrt-9nwx-xp1d.

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Children throughout the world work on street corners selling newspapers, washing car windows, shining shoes, or hustling anything that will earn cash for the day. Many of them start early in the morning, work all day without attending school, and then return home late in the evening. A 26-item questionnaire was given to a sample of forty children working the streets of Santo Domingo. Examination of the responses revealed that the mean age was 14.5 years. Over 92 percent of the children had contact with a relative in the past thirty days. Fifty percent responded that they were victims of physical abuse at home, while 97 percent said they believe they are healthy. Qualitative data on family, friends, and future goals are discussed.
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Sjøvaag, Helle, and Truls André Pedersen. "Female Voices in the News: Structural Conditions of Gender Representations in Norwegian Newspapers." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 96, no. 1 (August 21, 2018): 215–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699018789885.

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The article presents a hybrid analysis combining manual content analysis of 9,131 sources in 5,544 news stories across 75 publications, with computational gender recognition producing 551,102 names from 320,228 articles across 125 newspapers. The article investigates the significance of structural features for the presence of women in the news. Results show female sources are only equal to men as ordinary citizens and children, and only in lifestyle content. Among the structural features examined, only local distribution and a circulation less than 5,000 exhibit improvements in female representation. Ownership, distribution frequency, market position, and direct press support had little or no effect.
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