This document discusses a study that analyzed gender representation on male-targeted and female-targeted Dutch television channels. It hypothesized that women would be underrepresented on male channels compared to their presence in society, but not on female channels. It also examined whether genre differences and country of origin played a role in gender representation. The study analyzed 115 programs across two female channels and two male channels, coding for the presence, age, occupation, and roles of 1091 characters. It found that women were underrepresented on male channels, while representation was more equal on female channels. It also found that women were portrayed in more stereotypical ways (e.g. younger, fewer occupations) on male channels compared to female channels. This implies gender
This document summarizes a research article that examines gender stereotyping in the reality TV show Jersey Shore through a content analysis of its first season. It provides background on reality TV and gender representation in media, discussing how past research has found stereotypical and limited portrayals of women. The literature review examines gender roles, audience perception, and character analyses. It introduces the research question about the relationship between reality TV and gender stereotyping. The methodology section describes using a content analysis of Jersey Shore to examine themes of gender stereotyping across physical appearance, social roles, and behaviors.
Television Programing and Adolescents’ Principles around Sexualityijtsrd
Numerous studies testified confirmatory associations between evolving adults’ television programing and expectations around peer sexual practices and sexual labels. In our study, these associations are re examined in a younger mockup. Additionally, the regulating impact of sexual involvement is tested does existent sexual involvement strengthen the outcome of television disclosure, or does it make the anticipated associations vanish Respondents from a mockup of 15 to 17 years described their programing diet, assessed the occurrence of given sexual happenings, and assessed labels about males as being thoughtful of sex, males as leading sexual associations, and sex as a virtuously physical action. Findings revealed relations with reference to television programing and sexual principles. More precisely, greater disclosure to early evening amusement series, action series, soap theatricals and nightfall exploit series were recurrently related to sexual approaches. Additional examination revealed that some of these associations become tougher as sexual involvement levels advance. Yembi John "Television Programing and Adolescents’ Principles around Sexuality" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-5 | Issue-2 , February 2021, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd38589.pdf Paper Url: https://www.ijtsrd.com/humanities-and-the-arts/education/38589/television-programing-and-adolescents’-principles-around-sexuality/yembi-john
Chapter 27Gender and Media Content, Uses, and ImpactDar.docxwalterl4
Chapter 27
Gender and Media: Content, Uses, and Impact
Dara N. Greenwood and Julia R. Lippman
Although research offers compelling evidence to suggest that men and women are far more simi-
lar than they are different across a wide variety of domains, our perceptions of gender difference
can lead us to believe that men and women do inhabit distinct gendered universes and can trigger
self-fulfilling prophecies that confirm these expectations. These perceptions can even guide how aca-
demics choose to interpret the research literature. Hyde’s (2005) review of 46 meta-analyses supports
a “gender similarities hypothesis,” namely, the magnitude of gender differences across these studies
as measured by effect size is small or negligible in over three quarters of the cases assessed. Put
differently, a “small” effect size (i.e., d < 0.35; Hyde, 2005) means that 85% of the distributions for
women and men overlap. This is not to say that a 15% difference in distributions is an insignificant
percentage, but it certainly illustrates that emphasizing difference to the exclusion of similarity paints
an inaccurate picture. Further, where moderate or large gender differences did emerge, they were
often the product of social context. For example, women are more likely than men to smile when
they know they are being observed (LaFrance, Hecht, & Paluck, 2003, as cited in Hyde, 2005). The
latter finding suggests that a given social situation may be of paramount importance in the apparent
differences between men and women.
The social environment can influence the manifestation of present attitudes and behaviors, but
it is also a powerful shaping force throughout the lifespan. In their discussion of a social cognitive
approach to gender development, Bussey and Bandura (2004) suggested that the mass media, in
addition to ongoing input from parents and peers, offer a “pervasive cultural modeling of gender
roles” (p. 108). It is not just children who assimilate cultural models, however; research on the
phenomenon of “possible selves” (Markus & Nurius, 1986) suggests that over the course of our
lives, we continue to draw hoped for as well as feared selves from “the categories made salient by the
individual’s particular sociocultural and historical context and from the models, images, and symbols
provided by the media and by the individual’s immediate social experiences” (p. 954, emphasis
added).
So how does the media environment contribute to our gendered perceptions and experiences?
With a few exceptions, the basic cognitive and emotional processes by which media exert an impact
tend to be similar for both men and women. The most robust gender differences exist at the level
of media representation and content and the selective exposure patterns that are, in part, a response
to gender-typed content. In order to understand how media affect women and men, it is crucial first
to understand systematic gender differences in media content, as well as any gender difference.
Chapter 27Gender and Media Content, Uses, and ImpactDar.docxketurahhazelhurst
Chapter 27
Gender and Media: Content, Uses, and Impact
Dara N. Greenwood and Julia R. Lippman
Although research offers compelling evidence to suggest that men and women are far more simi-
lar than they are different across a wide variety of domains, our perceptions of gender difference
can lead us to believe that men and women do inhabit distinct gendered universes and can trigger
self-fulfilling prophecies that confirm these expectations. These perceptions can even guide how aca-
demics choose to interpret the research literature. Hyde’s (2005) review of 46 meta-analyses supports
a “gender similarities hypothesis,” namely, the magnitude of gender differences across these studies
as measured by effect size is small or negligible in over three quarters of the cases assessed. Put
differently, a “small” effect size (i.e., d < 0.35; Hyde, 2005) means that 85% of the distributions for
women and men overlap. This is not to say that a 15% difference in distributions is an insignificant
percentage, but it certainly illustrates that emphasizing difference to the exclusion of similarity paints
an inaccurate picture. Further, where moderate or large gender differences did emerge, they were
often the product of social context. For example, women are more likely than men to smile when
they know they are being observed (LaFrance, Hecht, & Paluck, 2003, as cited in Hyde, 2005). The
latter finding suggests that a given social situation may be of paramount importance in the apparent
differences between men and women.
The social environment can influence the manifestation of present attitudes and behaviors, but
it is also a powerful shaping force throughout the lifespan. In their discussion of a social cognitive
approach to gender development, Bussey and Bandura (2004) suggested that the mass media, in
addition to ongoing input from parents and peers, offer a “pervasive cultural modeling of gender
roles” (p. 108). It is not just children who assimilate cultural models, however; research on the
phenomenon of “possible selves” (Markus & Nurius, 1986) suggests that over the course of our
lives, we continue to draw hoped for as well as feared selves from “the categories made salient by the
individual’s particular sociocultural and historical context and from the models, images, and symbols
provided by the media and by the individual’s immediate social experiences” (p. 954, emphasis
added).
So how does the media environment contribute to our gendered perceptions and experiences?
With a few exceptions, the basic cognitive and emotional processes by which media exert an impact
tend to be similar for both men and women. The most robust gender differences exist at the level
of media representation and content and the selective exposure patterns that are, in part, a response
to gender-typed content. In order to understand how media affect women and men, it is crucial first
to understand systematic gender differences in media content, as well as any gender difference ...
Research Report on "Sexual Content on Television and Youth in Malaysia"Aditi Verma
A research report on "Sexual Content on Television and Youth in Malaysia."
RQ1: To what extent is the youth population exposed to sexual content shown on television today in Malaysia?
RQ2: How does sexual content on television affect the youth of Malaysian Society in terms of beliefs, behaviour, and emotions?
RQ3: What is the attitude and level of acceptance among the youth in Malaysian Society towards the amount of sexual content shown on television today?
(Though no actual research was carried out, so there are no results and discussions in this paper, although all the other elements of a research paper are present - This is more like a project proposal in depth).
Media has become more and more important in our society today, in the United States but also in other developed countries of the world. Since media and advertisement were created close to about a century ago, several changes have been made in terms of how people and products are advertised, and its consequences on the society.
CMS 480 - Final Presentation - Television Advertisements and Their Representa...Andrew Sinclair
This document provides an overview and summary of Andrew Sinclair's presentation on gender representation in television advertisements. It begins with an introduction to the topic and theories that framed the analysis. It then discusses common male and female stereotypes found in ads and background on television viewing habits. The document outlines Sinclair's content analysis methodology of coding 167 ads and presents results showing high levels of attractiveness and objectification themes. It concludes by discussing the implications of perpetuating outdated gender norms in television ads and proposes solutions like increased media literacy.
This document summarizes a research article that examines gender stereotyping in the reality TV show Jersey Shore through a content analysis of its first season. It provides background on reality TV and gender representation in media, discussing how past research has found stereotypical and limited portrayals of women. The literature review examines gender roles, audience perception, and character analyses. It introduces the research question about the relationship between reality TV and gender stereotyping. The methodology section describes using a content analysis of Jersey Shore to examine themes of gender stereotyping across physical appearance, social roles, and behaviors.
Television Programing and Adolescents’ Principles around Sexualityijtsrd
Numerous studies testified confirmatory associations between evolving adults’ television programing and expectations around peer sexual practices and sexual labels. In our study, these associations are re examined in a younger mockup. Additionally, the regulating impact of sexual involvement is tested does existent sexual involvement strengthen the outcome of television disclosure, or does it make the anticipated associations vanish Respondents from a mockup of 15 to 17 years described their programing diet, assessed the occurrence of given sexual happenings, and assessed labels about males as being thoughtful of sex, males as leading sexual associations, and sex as a virtuously physical action. Findings revealed relations with reference to television programing and sexual principles. More precisely, greater disclosure to early evening amusement series, action series, soap theatricals and nightfall exploit series were recurrently related to sexual approaches. Additional examination revealed that some of these associations become tougher as sexual involvement levels advance. Yembi John "Television Programing and Adolescents’ Principles around Sexuality" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-5 | Issue-2 , February 2021, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd38589.pdf Paper Url: https://www.ijtsrd.com/humanities-and-the-arts/education/38589/television-programing-and-adolescents’-principles-around-sexuality/yembi-john
Chapter 27Gender and Media Content, Uses, and ImpactDar.docxwalterl4
Chapter 27
Gender and Media: Content, Uses, and Impact
Dara N. Greenwood and Julia R. Lippman
Although research offers compelling evidence to suggest that men and women are far more simi-
lar than they are different across a wide variety of domains, our perceptions of gender difference
can lead us to believe that men and women do inhabit distinct gendered universes and can trigger
self-fulfilling prophecies that confirm these expectations. These perceptions can even guide how aca-
demics choose to interpret the research literature. Hyde’s (2005) review of 46 meta-analyses supports
a “gender similarities hypothesis,” namely, the magnitude of gender differences across these studies
as measured by effect size is small or negligible in over three quarters of the cases assessed. Put
differently, a “small” effect size (i.e., d < 0.35; Hyde, 2005) means that 85% of the distributions for
women and men overlap. This is not to say that a 15% difference in distributions is an insignificant
percentage, but it certainly illustrates that emphasizing difference to the exclusion of similarity paints
an inaccurate picture. Further, where moderate or large gender differences did emerge, they were
often the product of social context. For example, women are more likely than men to smile when
they know they are being observed (LaFrance, Hecht, & Paluck, 2003, as cited in Hyde, 2005). The
latter finding suggests that a given social situation may be of paramount importance in the apparent
differences between men and women.
The social environment can influence the manifestation of present attitudes and behaviors, but
it is also a powerful shaping force throughout the lifespan. In their discussion of a social cognitive
approach to gender development, Bussey and Bandura (2004) suggested that the mass media, in
addition to ongoing input from parents and peers, offer a “pervasive cultural modeling of gender
roles” (p. 108). It is not just children who assimilate cultural models, however; research on the
phenomenon of “possible selves” (Markus & Nurius, 1986) suggests that over the course of our
lives, we continue to draw hoped for as well as feared selves from “the categories made salient by the
individual’s particular sociocultural and historical context and from the models, images, and symbols
provided by the media and by the individual’s immediate social experiences” (p. 954, emphasis
added).
So how does the media environment contribute to our gendered perceptions and experiences?
With a few exceptions, the basic cognitive and emotional processes by which media exert an impact
tend to be similar for both men and women. The most robust gender differences exist at the level
of media representation and content and the selective exposure patterns that are, in part, a response
to gender-typed content. In order to understand how media affect women and men, it is crucial first
to understand systematic gender differences in media content, as well as any gender difference.
Chapter 27Gender and Media Content, Uses, and ImpactDar.docxketurahhazelhurst
Chapter 27
Gender and Media: Content, Uses, and Impact
Dara N. Greenwood and Julia R. Lippman
Although research offers compelling evidence to suggest that men and women are far more simi-
lar than they are different across a wide variety of domains, our perceptions of gender difference
can lead us to believe that men and women do inhabit distinct gendered universes and can trigger
self-fulfilling prophecies that confirm these expectations. These perceptions can even guide how aca-
demics choose to interpret the research literature. Hyde’s (2005) review of 46 meta-analyses supports
a “gender similarities hypothesis,” namely, the magnitude of gender differences across these studies
as measured by effect size is small or negligible in over three quarters of the cases assessed. Put
differently, a “small” effect size (i.e., d < 0.35; Hyde, 2005) means that 85% of the distributions for
women and men overlap. This is not to say that a 15% difference in distributions is an insignificant
percentage, but it certainly illustrates that emphasizing difference to the exclusion of similarity paints
an inaccurate picture. Further, where moderate or large gender differences did emerge, they were
often the product of social context. For example, women are more likely than men to smile when
they know they are being observed (LaFrance, Hecht, & Paluck, 2003, as cited in Hyde, 2005). The
latter finding suggests that a given social situation may be of paramount importance in the apparent
differences between men and women.
The social environment can influence the manifestation of present attitudes and behaviors, but
it is also a powerful shaping force throughout the lifespan. In their discussion of a social cognitive
approach to gender development, Bussey and Bandura (2004) suggested that the mass media, in
addition to ongoing input from parents and peers, offer a “pervasive cultural modeling of gender
roles” (p. 108). It is not just children who assimilate cultural models, however; research on the
phenomenon of “possible selves” (Markus & Nurius, 1986) suggests that over the course of our
lives, we continue to draw hoped for as well as feared selves from “the categories made salient by the
individual’s particular sociocultural and historical context and from the models, images, and symbols
provided by the media and by the individual’s immediate social experiences” (p. 954, emphasis
added).
So how does the media environment contribute to our gendered perceptions and experiences?
With a few exceptions, the basic cognitive and emotional processes by which media exert an impact
tend to be similar for both men and women. The most robust gender differences exist at the level
of media representation and content and the selective exposure patterns that are, in part, a response
to gender-typed content. In order to understand how media affect women and men, it is crucial first
to understand systematic gender differences in media content, as well as any gender difference ...
Research Report on "Sexual Content on Television and Youth in Malaysia"Aditi Verma
A research report on "Sexual Content on Television and Youth in Malaysia."
RQ1: To what extent is the youth population exposed to sexual content shown on television today in Malaysia?
RQ2: How does sexual content on television affect the youth of Malaysian Society in terms of beliefs, behaviour, and emotions?
RQ3: What is the attitude and level of acceptance among the youth in Malaysian Society towards the amount of sexual content shown on television today?
(Though no actual research was carried out, so there are no results and discussions in this paper, although all the other elements of a research paper are present - This is more like a project proposal in depth).
Media has become more and more important in our society today, in the United States but also in other developed countries of the world. Since media and advertisement were created close to about a century ago, several changes have been made in terms of how people and products are advertised, and its consequences on the society.
CMS 480 - Final Presentation - Television Advertisements and Their Representa...Andrew Sinclair
This document provides an overview and summary of Andrew Sinclair's presentation on gender representation in television advertisements. It begins with an introduction to the topic and theories that framed the analysis. It then discusses common male and female stereotypes found in ads and background on television viewing habits. The document outlines Sinclair's content analysis methodology of coding 167 ads and presents results showing high levels of attractiveness and objectification themes. It concludes by discussing the implications of perpetuating outdated gender norms in television ads and proposes solutions like increased media literacy.
This document summarizes research on representations of ethnic minorities in UK television advertisements. It finds that ethnic minorities are underrepresented, with only 5% of ads in 2011 featuring them. Focus group discussions revealed that some advertisements used ethnic stereotypes or excluded certain minorities. Content analysis of 402 ads showed white actors in 97% of ads, but black actors in only 27%, Asians in 4%, and mixed or other ethnicities even less. Overall, the research concludes ethnic minorities have low visibility and are often portrayed through stereotypes in UK television advertising.
An Examination of Gender Roles and Homophobia in the TV program, "Friends"Zoe_Cumler
This document provides an analysis of gender roles and homophobia in the TV show "Friends" from the 1990s. It summarizes previous research on how sitcoms from this era shaped concepts of gender and sexuality. The author then analyzes 5 consecutive episodes of "Friends" to identify instances of prescribed gender roles, stereotypes, disciplining of gender norms, and homophobia. Examples found include characters upholding expectations of masculinity and femininity, as well as discomfort with behaviors that disrupt heteronormativity. The analysis uses concepts like cisgender, doing gender, and hegemony to examine how the show reinforced dominant social attitudes.
This document summarizes a research study that examined how opinions of homosexuality have changed over time and whether preferred news media outlet is related to opinions. The study surveyed 88 people and found that participants reported decreased homophobia from age 14 to their current age. It also found that those viewing a moderate amount (3-4 sources) of news media had higher homophobia than those viewing low or high amounts. There was no relationship between social media use and homophobia. The document provides background on measuring homophobia and past research on media portrayals of homosexuality and their influence on public opinion.
Students will complete two Concept Engagement assignments during the semester where they analyze a media example using concepts from course readings. For each assignment, students must engage with a key concept, explore what the concept means in relation to the source reading, and use the concept to analyze their chosen media example. Students can submit a written analysis, create a short video, or propose another creative format. The first Concept Engagement will cover course materials up to a specified date. The assignments will be evaluated based on clear identification and understanding of the concept, a meaningful analysis of the media example using citations, and well-organized writing or presentation.
Beyond Soap Opera for Social Change: An Analysis of Kenya's The TeamMelissa Tully
The document summarizes a study of the Kenyan TV series "The Team", which uses an entertainment-education model to promote national unity following ethnically motivated political violence. It incorporates social networking to encourage audience participation and discussion. Mobile screenings in conflict areas generated discussions that launched peace initiatives. While aiming to deliver moral messages, the series' ambiguous characters were interpreted differently, especially the complex character of Priest, who some viewers mourned when he was killed off despite being intended as a "bad" character.
The document analyzes research into existing television programs similar to the topic of the author's documentary on young people and politics. Secondary quantitative research found shows on different channels that relate to the topic, such as ones about unemployment and education. Primary qualitative research involved analyzing conventions of two documentaries and their target audiences. Vox pops with teenagers and adults provided feedback, finding they were interested in comedic, celebrity-involved shows about young people and politics aired on BBC3 and Channel 4. The research provided guidance on appealing to the target audience for the author's documentary.
This study examined the portrayal of women in television commercials on ESPN (a male-oriented network) versus TLC (a female-oriented network). The researchers coded 70 commercials based on the display of women's cleavage, buttocks, and midriff as indicators of sexual objectification. They found that commercials on ESPN displayed women's bodies in a more sexualized manner than commercials on TLC. This supported the hypothesis that women would be objectified more on a network targeting male audiences. The sexual objectification of women in media can influence self-esteem, body image, and gender stereotypes, especially for young women. Further research is needed to develop empowering alternatives to harmful portrayals.
This report presents the key findings of the Comprehensive Annenberg Report on Diversity (CARD) which assesses inclusion on screen and behind the camera across major media companies. The report found that females represent only 33.5% of all speaking characters and fill 28.7% of roles in films. It also found that women make up only 15.2% of directors and 28.9% of writers. Additionally, roughly 20% of corporate boards and executives at media companies are women. The presence of more women behind the camera is correlated with a greater percentage of female characters on screen.
This report summarizes the key findings of the Comprehensive Annenberg Report on Diversity (CARD) regarding gender and racial/ethnic diversity in popular media across film, television, and digital content from 10 major media companies. The report found that female characters make up only 33.5% of speaking roles, with a ratio of 2 male characters for every 1 female character. It also found low levels of racial/ethnic diversity both on screen and behind the camera. The report provides company and media platform-specific data on representation and inclusion to evaluate diversity in the media landscape.
Write a one to two (1-2) page paper in which you1. Use the p.docxericbrooks84875
Write a one to two (1-2) page paper in which you:
1. Use the print screen option on a keyboard or a snipping tool to capture screen shots of your telnet session into the Oracle server. Note: The graphically depicted solution is included in the required page length.
2. Briefly describe the steps used to log into the Strayer Oracle server.
Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:
Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.
Include diagrams or screen shots created through the use of a snipping tool or print screen keyboard option. The completed diagrams / screen shots must be imported into the Word document before the paper is submitted.
Running head: Assignment 2 Final Project: Literature Review 5
Assignment 2 Final Project: Literature Review
Student’s Name:
Instructor’s name:
Affiliation:
Course:
Date:
Assignment 2 Final Project: Literature Review
Eisend & Möller (2007) believe that media consumption plays a vital role to influence body images and body satisfaction. Television and magazine advertisement with attractive role models will raise comparison standards for physical attractiveness. Prior research on mass media exposure and its effect on body images emphasize on body dissatisfaction and body perception while it fails to integrate beauty-related consumption behavior. Eisend & Möller (2007) provide a cultivation theory that holds that the continued exposure of television t adolescents will have a subtle and cumulative effect to shape views of social reality. Most of the young people consume a lot of television content to define their representations of reality. Television reality contains a lot of distortion and reality, and that leads to heavy consumers of it to form a distorted social perception concerning the world. An increase in television viewing leads one to have biased social perceptions. Other cultivation studies provide evidence that television exposure influences perceptions of consumer reality. Socio-cultural ideals for body appearance illustrate that repeated exposure to media would have an effect on women measure of self-worth. The western culture has recently endorsed thin female body an issue that affects women. Similarly, the ideal male body is a tall, lean, and muscular figure. Granatino & Haytko (2013) finds that girls begin to have a desire to become thin at the age of seven and boys are aware of their body size at the age of nine. Most of the researchers agree that at a young age, both boys and girls are awar.
This document summarizes a research study that examined how sex, brain dimorphism (as measured by the 2D:4D digit ratio), and mating preferences influence perceptions of attractiveness in human faces. 413 participants rated the attractiveness of male and female face composites that varied levels of masculinity and femininity. Results showed no significant connections between sex, digit ratio, or mating preferences with evaluations of attractiveness. However, differences were found between ratings of male and female faces, with both men and women consistently finding feminine female faces most attractive. The study aims to better understand similarities and differences in human perceptions of facial attractiveness.
Sample Student Paper1 Abstract The purpose of this.docxtodd331
Sample Student Paper1
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to analyze if and how television affects peoples' perception
of society. Social learning theory and cultivation theory are introduced as two possible reasons
why television can have such an influence over its viewers. This report analyzes how body
image, stereotypes, and job glorification are affected by what is shown on television. An online
survey was taken by twenty-two people in order to see if the amount of television people
watched affected television's influence over its viewers. The questions attempted to analyze how
television affected their perceptions of themselves, others, and the professions of doctors,
lawyers, and police officers. Although the sample size was rather small the results showed that
reality television was affected by the frequency one watched television. However, more studies
should be conducted to analyze if realism or frequency plays a more predominant role in the
effects of television.
Key terms: Body image, Cultivation theory, Job glorification, Social learning theory,
Stereotypes, Television influence
Problem Statement
On average Americans, spend 2.8 hours watching television every day (American Time
Use Survey Summary). Television shows can be very influential to people, they have the ability
to move, inspire, and educate them. However, this may be causing people to believe that
television is always an accurate portrayal of real life. The belief that television shows are always
factual has the potential to affect one's judgments, which could lead to body image issues,
increased stereotyping, job glorification and more. "In addition to exposure to television, the
extent to which individuals perceive content as realistic is related to their social judgments"
Sample Student Paper2
(Busselle 47). This paper will analyze if and how, through the factors set forth in the social
learning and cultivation theories, television affects peoples' perception of society.
Literature Review
In 1939 television first started being broadcasted, and ever since the effects television has
on its viewers has been the focus of many debates and concerns. The censorship of television
shows has greatly decreased since its early days. "In the 1950s and 1960s, networks and
advertisers imposed strict controls on what could be show on television" (Hanson 329). In the
early days of television, content was highly regulated and there were a lot of rules about what
was acceptable to show on television. For example, Laura and Rob Petrie, from the Dick Van
Dyke show, had to sleep in separate beds even though they were married. Even Lucille Balls’s
pregnancy caused great concern (Hanson 329). In the 1950s and 1960s, married couples were
shown sleeping separately; however, today it is commonplace to find unmarried couples sharing
a bed on television. Although the rules and regulations about what is appropria.
Sample Student Paper1 Abstract The purpose of this.docxjeffsrosalyn
Sample Student Paper1
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to analyze if and how television affects peoples' perception
of society. Social learning theory and cultivation theory are introduced as two possible reasons
why television can have such an influence over its viewers. This report analyzes how body
image, stereotypes, and job glorification are affected by what is shown on television. An online
survey was taken by twenty-two people in order to see if the amount of television people
watched affected television's influence over its viewers. The questions attempted to analyze how
television affected their perceptions of themselves, others, and the professions of doctors,
lawyers, and police officers. Although the sample size was rather small the results showed that
reality television was affected by the frequency one watched television. However, more studies
should be conducted to analyze if realism or frequency plays a more predominant role in the
effects of television.
Key terms: Body image, Cultivation theory, Job glorification, Social learning theory,
Stereotypes, Television influence
Problem Statement
On average Americans, spend 2.8 hours watching television every day (American Time
Use Survey Summary). Television shows can be very influential to people, they have the ability
to move, inspire, and educate them. However, this may be causing people to believe that
television is always an accurate portrayal of real life. The belief that television shows are always
factual has the potential to affect one's judgments, which could lead to body image issues,
increased stereotyping, job glorification and more. "In addition to exposure to television, the
extent to which individuals perceive content as realistic is related to their social judgments"
Sample Student Paper2
(Busselle 47). This paper will analyze if and how, through the factors set forth in the social
learning and cultivation theories, television affects peoples' perception of society.
Literature Review
In 1939 television first started being broadcasted, and ever since the effects television has
on its viewers has been the focus of many debates and concerns. The censorship of television
shows has greatly decreased since its early days. "In the 1950s and 1960s, networks and
advertisers imposed strict controls on what could be show on television" (Hanson 329). In the
early days of television, content was highly regulated and there were a lot of rules about what
was acceptable to show on television. For example, Laura and Rob Petrie, from the Dick Van
Dyke show, had to sleep in separate beds even though they were married. Even Lucille Balls’s
pregnancy caused great concern (Hanson 329). In the 1950s and 1960s, married couples were
shown sleeping separately; however, today it is commonplace to find unmarried couples sharing
a bed on television. Although the rules and regulations about what is appropria.
The document provides information about The Muses Project, a non-profit organization that aims to empower young women of color through arts, mentorship, and addressing issues of misrepresentation in media. Specifically, it discusses the organization's mission to encourage healthy development for girls ages 6-18 through various creative expression and growth opportunities. It also outlines the need for the organization by discussing research on lack of representation of women of color in media and leadership roles, as well as benefits of afterschool programs. Finally, it provides details on programs and operations including academic tutoring, leadership summits, expenses, revenues, and references.
This document proposes creating a relationship education curriculum for adolescent boys to help them empathize with girls struggling with media messages about physical beauty. It reviews research showing that mass media portrays unrealistic thin ideals that negatively impact girls' body satisfaction and may influence how boys view attractiveness in girls. Studies suggest boys place some importance on thinness in girls and may be affected by thin-ideal images. The curriculum aims to make boys allies for girls rejecting these images and foster respectful relationships.
The document summarizes several audience theory models:
1) The effects model views audiences as passive recipients of media messages. More recent models see audiences as more active.
2) Uses and gratifications theory sees audiences as active in selecting media to fulfill needs like entertainment and social interaction.
3) The active audience model recognizes that audiences can interpret media messages in different, sometimes opposing ways.
4) The ethnographic model examines audience behaviors and preferences through qualitative research like interviews in cultural contexts.
(U) WHAT INSIGHTS ARE DERIVED FROM OPERATION ANACONDA IN REGARDS TMoseStaton39
(U) WHAT INSIGHTS ARE DERIVED FROM OPERATION ANACONDA IN REGARDS TO THE NCO COMMON CORE COMPENTENCY (NCOCCC) OF OPERATIONS?
The NCOCCC of Operations is a combination of operational skill sets that, when mastered by senior leaders can save lives and ensure effective unified action. Some of its key tenets include: Large-scale combat operations; understanding operational and mission variables; resolving complex, ill-structured problems with the use of Mission Command; and understanding how to integrate the different branches of the military into successful joint operations (Department of the Army [DA], 2020, pp. 2-3). This final principle of conducting joint operations becomes increasingly important as contemporary conflicts continue to venture further into the realm of multi-domain warfare (Marr, 2018, pp. 10-11). In order to execute such a complex task, Joint Force Commanders (JFC) must “integrate, synchronize, and direct joint operations” through the use of seven Joint Functions (Joint Chiefs of Staff [JCS], 2017, p. III-1). One of these functions, Command and Control, is how the JFC directs the forces toward accomplishment of the mission, and its essential task is to “Communicate and ensure the flow of information across the staff and joint force” (JCS, 2017, p. III-2). This task is critical to the creation of a shared understanding, which allows the separate branches to work seamlessly together toward a common goal. The absence of this unifying component hinders missions and increases casualties. In Operation ANACONDA, JFC Major General (MG) Hagenbeck failed to create such a shared understanding with his subordinate Air Force assets, which contributed to increasing the amount of casualties his forces incurred. Although the warning order was published on 6 January, MG Hagenbeck did not notify the Combined Force Air Component Commander of Operation ANACONDA until 23 February, just days before the operation began (Fleri et al., 2003). This failure to ensure the flow of information across the joint force, caused downstream effects in planning and preparation that led to diminished air support during the initial stages of the operation. As noted by Lambeth (2005) in his comprehensive analysis, “because so little air support had been requested…coalition troops entered the fight virtually unprotected by any preparatory and suppressive fire” (pp. 204-205). Operation Anaconda provides a clear case of how proficiency in the realm of Operations can result in fewer U.S. casualties.
M451: Decisive Action
Case Study Defense Support of Civil Authorities
1. Scenario
Good morning, welcome to VNN -- local officials are celebrating this morning as a new industrial
park is being christened in our community, there’s a ribbon-cutting scheduled for 10am this
morning. Officials say the new Hampton Industrial Park will bring millions of dollars of new tax
revenues and thousands of new jobs to state and local communities. But a group of activi ...
(Remarks)Please keep in mind that the assiMoseStaton39
(Remarks)
Please keep in mind that the assignment states, "Each of your sections’ content must be at least one full page in length, in Times New Roman 12-pt. font, double-spaced, with 1” margins." When you turn something in that is about half of the required length, you take a bit of a double hit. The first hit is for not meeting minimum expectations for the assignment. The second hit is for not going into as much detail as needed to get a high grade. I can see that you are ahead on the sections. That is not a problem as those have not been graded yet. However, understand that as is, they will also have significant point deductions.
1
4
A Pollution Prevention Plan (P3) Pre-Assessment Study
[Student name here…remove brackets]
Columbia Southern University
ENV 4301: Pollution Prevention
[Instructor name here…remove brackets]
[Date here…remove brackets]
Abstract
Block one full paragraph (no indenting the first line or any subsequent lines). Provide one full sentence here for each unit as you complete a level 1 heading section, describing what material or calculations were presented in that section. By the time the Unit VII material is complete, you will have six or seven sentences in this abstract (one for each unit, for Units II–VII).
Pollution Prevention Plan (P3) Pre-Assessment Study
General Operational Characteristics
Start typing here for Unit II in non-italicized font (despite the different font types and sizes allowed with APA 7th edition, please stay in Times New Roman 12-pt. font for this document, since this template is already in that font and size), citing with
CSU APA Citation Guide p. 6 styled citations to defend what you state as fact.
Potential Ecological Health Impacts
Fill this in for Unit II. Remove each blank section before submittal in each unit.
Potential Human Health Impacts
Fill this in for Unit III.
Potential Societal Health Impacts
Fill this in for Unit IV.
Risk Assessment and Regulatory Requirements
Fill this in for Unit V.
Pollution Prevention Technologies
Fill this in for Unit VI.
Engineering Opportunities for Pollution Prevention
Fill this in for Unit VII.
References
Brusseau, M. L., Pepper, I. L., & Gerba, C. P. (2019).
Environmental and pollution science (3rd ed.). Academic Press. https://online.vitalsource.com/#/books/9780128147207
List additional references here alphabetically (you may need to list some before the textbook reference). Be sure to double-space and use a hanging indent for each subsequent line in each reference entry, formatting according to CSU APA Citation Guide pp. 8–11.
1
4
A Pollution Prevention Plan (P4) Pre-Assessment Study
Abstract
This undertaking essentially entails a Pre-Assessment study on behalf of the board of directors at ABC Agriculture Production Inc; it explores the general operational characteristics, potential ecological health effects, potential human health impacts, potential societal health impacts, risk ...
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Students will complete two Concept Engagement assignments during the semester where they analyze a media example using concepts from course readings. For each assignment, students must engage with a key concept, explore what the concept means in relation to the source reading, and use the concept to analyze their chosen media example. Students can submit a written analysis, create a short video, or propose another creative format. The first Concept Engagement will cover course materials up to a specified date. The assignments will be evaluated based on clear identification and understanding of the concept, a meaningful analysis of the media example using citations, and well-organized writing or presentation.
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The document summarizes a study of the Kenyan TV series "The Team", which uses an entertainment-education model to promote national unity following ethnically motivated political violence. It incorporates social networking to encourage audience participation and discussion. Mobile screenings in conflict areas generated discussions that launched peace initiatives. While aiming to deliver moral messages, the series' ambiguous characters were interpreted differently, especially the complex character of Priest, who some viewers mourned when he was killed off despite being intended as a "bad" character.
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Running head: Assignment 2 Final Project: Literature Review 5
Assignment 2 Final Project: Literature Review
Student’s Name:
Instructor’s name:
Affiliation:
Course:
Date:
Assignment 2 Final Project: Literature Review
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Sample Student Paper1 Abstract The purpose of this.docxtodd331
Sample Student Paper1
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to analyze if and how television affects peoples' perception
of society. Social learning theory and cultivation theory are introduced as two possible reasons
why television can have such an influence over its viewers. This report analyzes how body
image, stereotypes, and job glorification are affected by what is shown on television. An online
survey was taken by twenty-two people in order to see if the amount of television people
watched affected television's influence over its viewers. The questions attempted to analyze how
television affected their perceptions of themselves, others, and the professions of doctors,
lawyers, and police officers. Although the sample size was rather small the results showed that
reality television was affected by the frequency one watched television. However, more studies
should be conducted to analyze if realism or frequency plays a more predominant role in the
effects of television.
Key terms: Body image, Cultivation theory, Job glorification, Social learning theory,
Stereotypes, Television influence
Problem Statement
On average Americans, spend 2.8 hours watching television every day (American Time
Use Survey Summary). Television shows can be very influential to people, they have the ability
to move, inspire, and educate them. However, this may be causing people to believe that
television is always an accurate portrayal of real life. The belief that television shows are always
factual has the potential to affect one's judgments, which could lead to body image issues,
increased stereotyping, job glorification and more. "In addition to exposure to television, the
extent to which individuals perceive content as realistic is related to their social judgments"
Sample Student Paper2
(Busselle 47). This paper will analyze if and how, through the factors set forth in the social
learning and cultivation theories, television affects peoples' perception of society.
Literature Review
In 1939 television first started being broadcasted, and ever since the effects television has
on its viewers has been the focus of many debates and concerns. The censorship of television
shows has greatly decreased since its early days. "In the 1950s and 1960s, networks and
advertisers imposed strict controls on what could be show on television" (Hanson 329). In the
early days of television, content was highly regulated and there were a lot of rules about what
was acceptable to show on television. For example, Laura and Rob Petrie, from the Dick Van
Dyke show, had to sleep in separate beds even though they were married. Even Lucille Balls’s
pregnancy caused great concern (Hanson 329). In the 1950s and 1960s, married couples were
shown sleeping separately; however, today it is commonplace to find unmarried couples sharing
a bed on television. Although the rules and regulations about what is appropria.
Sample Student Paper1 Abstract The purpose of this.docxjeffsrosalyn
Sample Student Paper1
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to analyze if and how television affects peoples' perception
of society. Social learning theory and cultivation theory are introduced as two possible reasons
why television can have such an influence over its viewers. This report analyzes how body
image, stereotypes, and job glorification are affected by what is shown on television. An online
survey was taken by twenty-two people in order to see if the amount of television people
watched affected television's influence over its viewers. The questions attempted to analyze how
television affected their perceptions of themselves, others, and the professions of doctors,
lawyers, and police officers. Although the sample size was rather small the results showed that
reality television was affected by the frequency one watched television. However, more studies
should be conducted to analyze if realism or frequency plays a more predominant role in the
effects of television.
Key terms: Body image, Cultivation theory, Job glorification, Social learning theory,
Stereotypes, Television influence
Problem Statement
On average Americans, spend 2.8 hours watching television every day (American Time
Use Survey Summary). Television shows can be very influential to people, they have the ability
to move, inspire, and educate them. However, this may be causing people to believe that
television is always an accurate portrayal of real life. The belief that television shows are always
factual has the potential to affect one's judgments, which could lead to body image issues,
increased stereotyping, job glorification and more. "In addition to exposure to television, the
extent to which individuals perceive content as realistic is related to their social judgments"
Sample Student Paper2
(Busselle 47). This paper will analyze if and how, through the factors set forth in the social
learning and cultivation theories, television affects peoples' perception of society.
Literature Review
In 1939 television first started being broadcasted, and ever since the effects television has
on its viewers has been the focus of many debates and concerns. The censorship of television
shows has greatly decreased since its early days. "In the 1950s and 1960s, networks and
advertisers imposed strict controls on what could be show on television" (Hanson 329). In the
early days of television, content was highly regulated and there were a lot of rules about what
was acceptable to show on television. For example, Laura and Rob Petrie, from the Dick Van
Dyke show, had to sleep in separate beds even though they were married. Even Lucille Balls’s
pregnancy caused great concern (Hanson 329). In the 1950s and 1960s, married couples were
shown sleeping separately; however, today it is commonplace to find unmarried couples sharing
a bed on television. Although the rules and regulations about what is appropria.
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1) The effects model views audiences as passive recipients of media messages. More recent models see audiences as more active.
2) Uses and gratifications theory sees audiences as active in selecting media to fulfill needs like entertainment and social interaction.
3) The active audience model recognizes that audiences can interpret media messages in different, sometimes opposing ways.
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Similar to (1) Post a responsive review to someone elses essay paper from We (20)
(U) WHAT INSIGHTS ARE DERIVED FROM OPERATION ANACONDA IN REGARDS TMoseStaton39
(U) WHAT INSIGHTS ARE DERIVED FROM OPERATION ANACONDA IN REGARDS TO THE NCO COMMON CORE COMPENTENCY (NCOCCC) OF OPERATIONS?
The NCOCCC of Operations is a combination of operational skill sets that, when mastered by senior leaders can save lives and ensure effective unified action. Some of its key tenets include: Large-scale combat operations; understanding operational and mission variables; resolving complex, ill-structured problems with the use of Mission Command; and understanding how to integrate the different branches of the military into successful joint operations (Department of the Army [DA], 2020, pp. 2-3). This final principle of conducting joint operations becomes increasingly important as contemporary conflicts continue to venture further into the realm of multi-domain warfare (Marr, 2018, pp. 10-11). In order to execute such a complex task, Joint Force Commanders (JFC) must “integrate, synchronize, and direct joint operations” through the use of seven Joint Functions (Joint Chiefs of Staff [JCS], 2017, p. III-1). One of these functions, Command and Control, is how the JFC directs the forces toward accomplishment of the mission, and its essential task is to “Communicate and ensure the flow of information across the staff and joint force” (JCS, 2017, p. III-2). This task is critical to the creation of a shared understanding, which allows the separate branches to work seamlessly together toward a common goal. The absence of this unifying component hinders missions and increases casualties. In Operation ANACONDA, JFC Major General (MG) Hagenbeck failed to create such a shared understanding with his subordinate Air Force assets, which contributed to increasing the amount of casualties his forces incurred. Although the warning order was published on 6 January, MG Hagenbeck did not notify the Combined Force Air Component Commander of Operation ANACONDA until 23 February, just days before the operation began (Fleri et al., 2003). This failure to ensure the flow of information across the joint force, caused downstream effects in planning and preparation that led to diminished air support during the initial stages of the operation. As noted by Lambeth (2005) in his comprehensive analysis, “because so little air support had been requested…coalition troops entered the fight virtually unprotected by any preparatory and suppressive fire” (pp. 204-205). Operation Anaconda provides a clear case of how proficiency in the realm of Operations can result in fewer U.S. casualties.
M451: Decisive Action
Case Study Defense Support of Civil Authorities
1. Scenario
Good morning, welcome to VNN -- local officials are celebrating this morning as a new industrial
park is being christened in our community, there’s a ribbon-cutting scheduled for 10am this
morning. Officials say the new Hampton Industrial Park will bring millions of dollars of new tax
revenues and thousands of new jobs to state and local communities. But a group of activi ...
(Remarks)Please keep in mind that the assiMoseStaton39
(Remarks)
Please keep in mind that the assignment states, "Each of your sections’ content must be at least one full page in length, in Times New Roman 12-pt. font, double-spaced, with 1” margins." When you turn something in that is about half of the required length, you take a bit of a double hit. The first hit is for not meeting minimum expectations for the assignment. The second hit is for not going into as much detail as needed to get a high grade. I can see that you are ahead on the sections. That is not a problem as those have not been graded yet. However, understand that as is, they will also have significant point deductions.
1
4
A Pollution Prevention Plan (P3) Pre-Assessment Study
[Student name here…remove brackets]
Columbia Southern University
ENV 4301: Pollution Prevention
[Instructor name here…remove brackets]
[Date here…remove brackets]
Abstract
Block one full paragraph (no indenting the first line or any subsequent lines). Provide one full sentence here for each unit as you complete a level 1 heading section, describing what material or calculations were presented in that section. By the time the Unit VII material is complete, you will have six or seven sentences in this abstract (one for each unit, for Units II–VII).
Pollution Prevention Plan (P3) Pre-Assessment Study
General Operational Characteristics
Start typing here for Unit II in non-italicized font (despite the different font types and sizes allowed with APA 7th edition, please stay in Times New Roman 12-pt. font for this document, since this template is already in that font and size), citing with
CSU APA Citation Guide p. 6 styled citations to defend what you state as fact.
Potential Ecological Health Impacts
Fill this in for Unit II. Remove each blank section before submittal in each unit.
Potential Human Health Impacts
Fill this in for Unit III.
Potential Societal Health Impacts
Fill this in for Unit IV.
Risk Assessment and Regulatory Requirements
Fill this in for Unit V.
Pollution Prevention Technologies
Fill this in for Unit VI.
Engineering Opportunities for Pollution Prevention
Fill this in for Unit VII.
References
Brusseau, M. L., Pepper, I. L., & Gerba, C. P. (2019).
Environmental and pollution science (3rd ed.). Academic Press. https://online.vitalsource.com/#/books/9780128147207
List additional references here alphabetically (you may need to list some before the textbook reference). Be sure to double-space and use a hanging indent for each subsequent line in each reference entry, formatting according to CSU APA Citation Guide pp. 8–11.
1
4
A Pollution Prevention Plan (P4) Pre-Assessment Study
Abstract
This undertaking essentially entails a Pre-Assessment study on behalf of the board of directors at ABC Agriculture Production Inc; it explores the general operational characteristics, potential ecological health effects, potential human health impacts, potential societal health impacts, risk ...
(This is provided as an example of the paper layout and spacMoseStaton39
This document provides an outline and instructions for a business report on improving the hiring process at Maryland Technology Consultants (MTC). The report should include: an introduction explaining the context and purpose of the report; an analysis of how improving hiring supports MTC's business strategy and competitive advantage; objectives and metrics for strategic goals; how decision-making roles would use information from the new system; and a process analysis of the current and improved hiring processes. The report should follow APA style guidelines and include references.
(Student Name)Date of EncounterPreceptorClinical SiteClMoseStaton39
(Student Name)
Date of Encounter:
Preceptor/Clinical Site:
Clinical Instructor: Grivel J. Hera Gomez APRN, FNP-C
Soap Note # ____ Main Diagnosis ______________
PATIENT INFORMATION
Name:
Age:
Gender at Birth:
Gender Identity:
Source:
Allergies:
Current Medications:
·
PMH:
Immunizations:
Preventive Care:
Surgical History:
Family History:
Social History:
Sexual Orientation:
Nutrition History:
Subjective Data:
Chief Complaint:
Symptom analysis/HPI:
The patient is …
Review of Systems (ROS)
CONSTITUTIONAL:
NEUROLOGIC:
HEENT:
RESPIRATORY:
CARDIOVASCULAR:
GASTROINTESTINAL:
GENITOURINARY:
MUSCULOSKELETAL:
SKIN:
Objective Data:
VITAL SIGNS:
GENERAL APPREARANCE:
NEUROLOGIC:
HEENT:
CARDIOVASCULAR:
RESPIRATORY:
GASTROINTESTINAL:
MUSKULOSKELETAL:
INTEGUMENTARY:
ASSESSMENT:
Main Diagnosis
(Include the name of your Main Diagnosis along with its ICD10 I10. (Look at PDF example provided) Include the in-text reference/s as per APA style 6th or 7th Edition.
Differential diagnosis (minimum 3)
-
-
-
PLAN:
Labs and Diagnostic Test to be ordered (if applicable)
· -
· -
Pharmacological treatment:
-
Non-Pharmacologic treatment:
Education (provide the most relevant ones tailored to your patient)
Follow-ups/Referrals
References (in APA Style)
Examples
Codina Leik, M. T. (2014). Family Nurse Practitioner Certification Intensive Review (2nd ed.).
ISBN 978-0-8261-3424-0
Domino, F., Baldor, R., Golding, J., Stephens, M. (2010). The 5-Minute Clinical Consult 2010
(25th ed.). Print (The 5-Minute Consult Series).
(Student Name)
Date of Encounter:
Preceptor/Clinical Site:
Clinical Instructor: Dr. David Trabanco DNP, APRN, AGNP-C, FNP-C
Soap Note # Main Diagnosis ( Exp: Soap Note #3 DX: Hypertension)
PATIENT INFORMATION
Name: Mr. DT
Age: 68-year-old
Gender at Birth: Male
Gender Identity: Male
Source: Patient
Allergies: PCN, Iodine
Current Medications:
· Atorvastatin tab 20 mg, 1-tab PO at bedtime
· ASA 81mg po daily
· Multi-Vitamin Centrum Silver
PMH: Hypercholesterolemia
Immunizations: Influenza last 2018-year, tetanus, and hepatitis A and B 4 years ago.
Preventive Care: Coloscopy 5 years ago (Negative)
Surgical History: Appendectomy 47 years ago.
Family History: Father- died 81 does not report information
Mother-alive, 88 years old, Diabetes Mellitus, HTN
Daughter-alive, 34 years old, healthy
Social History: No smoking history or illicit drug use, occasional alcoholic beverage consumption on social celebrations. Retired, widow, he lives alone.
Sexual Orientation: Straight
Nutrition History: Diets off and on, Does not each seafood
Subjective Data:
Chief Complaint: “headaches” that started two weeks ago
Symptom analysis/HPI:
The patient is 65 years old male who complaining of episodes of headaches and on 3 different occasions blood pressure was measured, which was high (159/100, 158/98 and 160/100 respectively). Patient noticed the problem started two weeks ago and somet ...
(TITLE)Sung Woo ParkInternational American UniversityFINMoseStaton39
(TITLE)
Sung Woo Park
International American University
FIN 500: Financial management
Vahick Yedgarian, Ph.D., J.D., M.B.A., M.S.
April 15th, 2021
TITLE
According to the market analysis of Walmart, the retail firm is considered an unstoppable retail force. It is ranked as the first or number retail firm and the largest business organization in revenue and employee size. The company's total number of employees is estimated to be 2.2 million employees across its different stores. Apart from the retail business line, it also undertakes wholesale business activities (Tan, 2017). It provides all types of assortment merchandise as well as services for affordable costs. In this research paper, the main objective is to undertake a cash flow analysis statement of Walmart and its Relevance to its investors (Tan, 2017).
A cash flow statement is an important financial statement. A cash flow statement is understood as the financial statement that summarizes the financial or cash amounts. It is a summary of the amount in cash and cash equivalents (Murphy, 2021). In other words, it reflects the amount of cash entering and leaving an organization. The cash flow statement provides measures of a company’s financial strength and reflects its position in terms of revenue (Murphy, 2021). Besides, it helps investors to make the right financial decision.
The cash flow statement is an important financial document to investors. Investors always have a trait of looking at how a company is performing by evaluating the progress, the trends among other issues, and deciding whether to invest in the company. Investment decision-making in an in-depth analysis is usually achieved by looking at the cash flow performance based on an analysis of different elements of the statement.
The cash flow statement for Walmart is an important document to its investors. The cash flow statement of Walmart is an important measure of the profitability of the company. Besides, it provides investors with a clear picture and future projection outlook of how the company will be. Based on the analysis of the company’s cash flow statement company has been recording high levels of revenue over the past few years. As a result, it has been ranked as the largest company in terms of revenue collected. Such a specific entity of the company is a clear reflection that Walmart is indeed a profitable firm in profitability (Tan, 2017). Hence, it is a clear reflection to the investors that the company is making money instead of losses. For instance, over the past few years, the company has recorded a revenue increment and stability. The economic analysis measures the company revenue growth in terms of net sales changes to be 7.2% (WMT | Walmart Inc. Annual Cash Flow Statement | Market Watch. Market Watch, 2021). Such a growth rate is indeed admirable and attractive to investors searching for companies to invest in. The company's revenue level is a general overview and clear or direct instant and r ...
(Student Name) UniversityDate of EncounterPreceptorCliniMoseStaton39
(Student Name)
University
Date of Encounter:
Preceptor/Clinical Site:
Clinical Instructor:
Soap Note # Main Diagnosis ( Exp: Soap Note #3 DX: Hypertension)
PATIENT INFORMATION
Name: Mr. DT
Age: 68-year-old
Gender at Birth: Male
Gender Identity: Male
Source: Patient
Allergies: PCN, Iodine
Current Medications:
· Atorvastatin tab 20 mg, 1-tab PO at bedtime
· ASA 81mg po daily
· Multi-Vitamin Centrum Silver
PMH: Hypercholesterolemia
Immunizations: Influenza last 2018-year, tetanus, and hepatitis A and B 4 years ago.
Preventive Care: Coloscopy 5 years ago (Negative)
Surgical History: Appendectomy 47 years ago.
Family History: Father- died 81 does not report information
Mother-alive, 88 years old, Diabetes Mellitus, HTN
Daughter-alive, 34 years old, healthy
Social History: No smoking history or illicit drug use, occasional alcoholic beverage consumption on social celebrations. Retired, widow, he lives alone.
Sexual Orientation: Straight
Nutrition History: Diets off and on, Does not each seafood
Subjective Data:
Chief Complaint: “headaches” that started two weeks ago
Symptom analysis/HPI:
The patient is 65 years old male who complaining of episodes of headaches and on 3 different occasions blood pressure was measured, which was high (159/100, 158/98 and 160/100 respectively). Patient noticed the problem started two weeks ago and sometimes it is accompanied by dizziness. He states that he has been under stress in his workplace for the last month. Patient denies chest pain, palpitation, shortness of breath, nausea or vomiting.
Review of Systems (ROS)
CONSTITUTIONAL: Denies fever or chills. Denies weakness or weight loss. NEUROLOGIC: Headache and dizziness as describe above. Denies changes in LOC. Denies history of tremors or seizures.
HEENT: HEAD: Denies any head injury, or change in LOC. Eyes: Denies any changes in vision, diplopia or blurred vision. Ear: Denies pain in the ears. Denies loss of hearing or drainage. Nose: Denies nasal drainage, congestion. THROAT: Denies throat or neck pain, hoarseness, difficulty swallowing.
RESPIRATORY: Patient denies shortness of breath, cough or hemoptysis.
CARDIOVASCULAR: No chest pain, tachycardia. No orthopnea or paroxysmal nocturnal
dyspnea.
GASTROINTESTINAL: Denies abdominal pain or discomfort. Denies flatulence, nausea, vomiting or
diarrhea.
GENITOURINARY: Denies hematuria, dysuria or change in urinary frequency. Denies difficulty starting/stopping stream of urine or incontinence.
MUSCULOSKELETAL: Denies falls or pain. Denies hearing a clicking or snapping sound.
SKIN: No change of coloration such as cyanosis or jaundice, no rashes or pruritus.
Objective Data:
VITAL SIGNS: Temperature: 98.5 °F, Pulse: 87, BP: 159/92 mmhg, RR 20, PO2-98% on room air, Ht- 6’4”, Wt 200 lb, BMI 25. Report pain 2/10.
GENERAL APPREARANCE: The patient is alert and oriented x 3. No acute distress noted. NEUROLOGIC: Alert, CNII-XII grossly intact, oriented to person, ...
(Student Name)Miami Regional UniversityDate of EncounterMoseStaton39
(Student Name)
Miami Regional University
Date of Encounter:
Preceptor/Clinical Site:
Clinical Instructor: Patricio Bidart MSN, APRN, FNP-C
Soap Note # ____ Main Diagnosis ______________
PATIENT INFORMATION
Name:
Age:
Gender at Birth:
Gender Identity:
Source:
Allergies:
Current Medications:
·
PMH:
Immunizations:
Preventive Care:
Surgical History:
Family History:
Social History:
Sexual Orientation:
Nutrition History:
Subjective Data:
Chief Complaint:
Symptom analysis/HPI:
The patient is …
Review of Systems (ROS) (This section is what the patient says, therefore should state Pt denies, or Pt states….. )
CONSTITUTIONAL:
NEUROLOGIC:
HEENT:
RESPIRATORY:
CARDIOVASCULAR:
GASTROINTESTINAL:
GENITOURINARY:
MUSCULOSKELETAL:
SKIN:
Objective Data:
VITAL SIGNS:
GENERAL APPREARANCE:
NEUROLOGIC:
HEENT:
CARDIOVASCULAR:
RESPIRATORY:
GASTROINTESTINAL:
MUSKULOSKELETAL:
INTEGUMENTARY:
ASSESSMENT:
(In a paragraph please state “your encounter with your patient and your findings ( including subjective and objective data)
Example : “Pt came in to our clinic c/o of ear pain. Pt states that the pain started 3 days ago after swimming. Pt denies discharge etc… on examination I noted this and that etc.)
Main Diagnosis
(Include the name of your Main Diagnosis along with its ICD10 I10. (Look at PDF example provided) Include the in-text reference/s as per APA style 6th or 7th Edition.
Differential diagnosis (minimum 3)
-
-
-
PLAN:
Labs and Diagnostic Test to be ordered (if applicable)
· -
· -
Pharmacological treatment:
-
Non-Pharmacologic treatment:
Education (provide the most relevant ones tailored to your patient)
Follow-ups/Referrals
References (in APA Style)
Examples
Codina Leik, M. T. (2014). Family Nurse Practitioner Certification Intensive Review (2nd ed.).
ISBN 978-0-8261-3424-0
Domino, F., Baldor, R., Golding, J., Stephens, M. (2010). The 5-Minute Clinical Consult 2010
(25th ed.). Print (The 5-Minute Consult Series).
Nutrition and Diet.
Semester:
Spring
Course:
MSN6150C Advanced Practice Pediatrics
Preceptor:
REYES-CHOUZA, CARLOS
Clinical Site:
IDEAL MEDICAL CENTER
Setting Type:
Patient Demographics
Age:
12 years
Race:
Black or African American
Gender:
Male
Insurance:
Medicaid
Referral:
No referral
Clinical Information
Time with Patient:
25 minutes
Consult with Preceptor:
15 minutes
Type of Decision-Making:
Moderate complexity
Reason for Visit:
New Consult
Chief Complaint:
Felling pressure behaving my eyes
Type of HP:
Detailed
Social Problems Addressed:
Sanitation/Hygiene
Emotional
Prevention
Procedures/Skills (Observed/Assisted/Performed)
Physical Assessment - Physical Assessment (Perf)
General Skills - Vital Signs (Perf)
ICD-10 Diagnosis Codes
#1 -
J01.10 - ACUTE FRONTAL SINUSITIS, UNSPECIFIED
CPT Billing Codes
#1 -
99214 - OFFICE/OP VISIT, EST PT, MEDICALLY APPROPRIATE HX/EXAM; MODERATE LEVEL MED DECISION; 30-39 MIN
Birth & Delivery
Medications
# OTC Drugs taken regularly:
0
# Prescriptions currently pre ...
(Student Name)Miami Regional UniversityDate of EncounterPMoseStaton39
(Student Name)
Miami Regional University
Date of Encounter:
Preceptor/Clinical Site:
Clinical Instructor: Dr. David Trabanco DNP, APRN, AGNP-C, FNP-C
Soap Note #1 DX: Allergic Rhinitis
PATIENT INFORMATION
Name: Ms. JD
Age: 23-year-old
Gender at Birth: Female
Gender Identity: Female
Source: Patient
Allergies: NKDA
Current Medications:
· Cetirizine 10mg/d
· Mucinex-D
PMH:
Immunizations: Tetanus.
Preventive Care: No history.
Surgical History: No history of surgery.
Family History: Father- alive, 60 years old, healthy.
Mother-alive, 54 years old, HTN, hyperlipidemia.
Sister-alive, 20 years old, Asthma.
Social History: Denies alcohol, tobacco or illicit drugs use. College student, lives alone in campus hostels. Physically active and occasionally does exercise.
Sexual Orientation: Active
Nutrition History: Eats balance diet but avoids excessive junk food.
Subjective Data:
Chief Complaint: “stuffy nose” that has lasted for two weeks.
Symptom analysis/HPI:
Ms. JD is a 23-year-old patient who presents with complaints of a stuffy nose, rhinorrhea, congestion and sneezing. She reports a spontaneous start of the symptoms that have remained consistent. Indicates no particular aggravating symptoms but reports higher severity of the symptoms in the morning. She complains of a sore throat and itchy eyes. She reports an all-day clear runny nose. She indicates consistent outdoor handball practice routine. She reports using Cetirizine and Mucinex-D which do not help. She denies vision or taste changes. She denies fever or chills. Denies diagnosis with allergies.
Review of Systems (ROS)
CONSTITUTIONAL: Denies change in weight, fatigue, fever, night sweats or chills. NEUROLOGIC: Denies seizure, numbness or blackout.
HEENT: HEAD: Denies headache. Eyes: Reports itchy eyes. Denies vision change. Ear: Denies hearing loss, pain or discharge. Nose: Admits stuffiness, nasal congestion and clear discharge. Denies nose bleeds. THROAT: Reports a sore throat.
RESPIRATORY: Patient denies breathing difficulties, cough, wheezing, TB, pneumonia.
CARDIOVASCULAR: No palpitations or chest pain. No edema, PND or orthopnea.
GASTROINTESTINAL: Denies nausea, abdominal pains, vomiting and diarrhea. Denies ulcers hx.
GENITOURINARY: Denies change in urine color, urgency and frequency. Regular menses cycle. Denies ovulation pain. Denies hematuria and dysuria.
MUSCULOSKELETAL: Denies back and joint pains or stiffness.
SKIN: No skin rashes or lesions.
Objective Data:
VITAL SIGNS: Temperature: 36.7 °C, Pulse: 78, BP: 119/87 mmHg, RR 20, PO2-97% on room air, Ht- 1.60m, Wt 67kg, BMI 26.
GENERAL APPREARANCE: Healthy appearing. Alert and oriented x 3. No acute distress. Well-groomed and responds appropriately.
NEUROLOGIC: Alert, oriented, posture erect, clear speech. gait. to person, place, and time.
HEENT: Head: Normocephalic, atraumatic, symmetric, non-tender. Maxillary sinuses mild tenderness. Eyes: Bilateral conjunctival inject ...
(Monica)Gender rarely shapes individual experience in isolation buMoseStaton39
(Monica)Gender rarely shapes individual experience in isolation but is instead linked to other social statuses in the effects it has on our lives. The gender distinction reflects what we see as appropriate “masculine” or “feminine.” For example, some societies expect men to be more aggressive and competitive and women to be emotionally nurturing. I was playing with dolls one day and was playing with two dolls: a female doll and a male doll. Upon passing by, an uncle of mine saw me playing with my toys and frowned. When I asked what was wrong, he seemed uncomfortable. In this statement, he suggested that girls should act like girls and play with girlie things, while boys should play with boy things, including boy dolls. The family experiences that taught me about gender and gender roles are vividly in my memory. Throughout my childhood, my mother and father stressed how essential it is for me to understand and know that I am a girl, and I should always act and carry myself accordingly.
I found conversations like that to be overly exaggerated at the time, but I subsequently understood why my parents did what they did. We were a family of six, with five girls and one boy. As a child, my parents, specifically my mother, stressed what clothing the girls wore. Our mother was always careful not to let us wear anything provocative, and we were to get married and have our own families. Girls are often told that it's alright to cry because girls cry, and if I was a boy, I'd be made to suck it up and deal with it. In addition, my mother taught me that women nurture and that we take care of the home, including cooking, cleaning, and taking care of the children. As girls, we could not play any sports that were deemed "too rough" or to be performed by boys. From a young age, we chose professional careers. All these careers involved female dominating industries, such as nursing, teaching, caretaking, and hairdressing. They all contributed to the construction of my gender.
Multiple ways are available to conceptualize gender; essentialists see it as a binary division, which classifies you as male or female at birth. In contrast, mainstream social scientists take a constructionist approach to gender. Page 242 argues that gender is a constructed concept that has been shaped through culture and history. Finally, people internalize the social expectations they are introduced to.(Ferris & Stein, 2020) (Links to an external site.)
Resources
Ferris, T., & Stein, J. (2020). Chapter 9/ Page 242. In The Real World: An Introduction to Sociology (7th ed., pp. 236–242). essay, W.W. Norton.
...
(Monica) A summary of my decision-making process starts with flippMoseStaton39
(Monica) A summary of my decision-making process starts with flipping through ads to find a job, I was concerned with what companies offered for pay, the type of work I would be doing, and how long would the job last. There were a few companies that were only looking to hire temporarily and again not an ideal situation if I am already concerned with having a steady income. Between the three ads, Office temp, a server at a restaurant making $2.13hr plus tips with hours varying, and a warehouse position, starting at $14Hr with hours from 12 pm to 7 pm. I chose to pick the warehouse position since it offers the most money and a set schedule. Continuing with the simulation, my monthly take-home pay after taxes is $1,224, making my weekly pay only $306. Ideally $1,224 is not enough funds to help sustain a family, barely one person. During this time, I have to pick my insurance, which is a requirement through the Affordable Care Act. Luckily my child is covered and I picked the cheapest plan that I could afford, the bronze plan and it costs $303 a month, which averages to almost $76 a paycheck. I have to ensure I have a place to live, paying rent over $720 and traveling puts my monthly rental and traveling costs at more than 800 dollars a month. The results of me living further away from my job, so that my rent is lower also increased gas costs. According to the simulation, every working household that saves a dollar spends 77 cents on transportation. My balance jumps from $1000 to $192 after paying rent only to find out my apartment is too small for my things, so I chose to have a yard sale. I only made $150 from the yard sale and made the decision to get paid by the piece, since I am barely making a living wage on an hourly paycheck, and in doing so my paycheck decreased by 25cents. I skipped my grandfather’s memorial service because I can not afford to travel, I paid $25 to replace a broken item I fixed, even though considered hiding the evidence. Grocery shopping is next on my to-do list, spending only 30 for things I needed, I felt was hardly enough food, but could not really afford to splurge and spend on extra things. During this time my stress levels are at an all-time high, but I turn the offer for a cigarette down because I do not want to get addicted. As a result, the simulation states there is a misconception that smoking relieves stress during difficult situations in life.
Now that I have come to payday, I decided to start my fitness journey by asking a friend to be my running partner. On the way to work, something blew in the car and needed to get fixed, and asking a friend to look at the issue saved money. The landlord decided to raise rent and $150 had to be paid or I could spend more on legal fees fighting it in court. On the way out to work, someone stole my gas from my car, so I had to make the decision to take the bus and the result where it took me three buses and fives times longer to get there, making me miss a few hours of p ...
(Note This case study is based on many actual cases. All the nameMoseStaton39
Marci is a 22-year-old college student who was arrested five months ago for a DUI. She has a history of regular alcohol and marijuana use since high school. Her family has a history of substance use disorders and mental health issues. While Marci's grades have declined due to her substance use, she does not feel she has a problem with alcohol or marijuana. She is concerned about legal and academic consequences but does not want to change her substance use behaviors.
(Individuals With Disabilities Act Transformation Over the Years)DMoseStaton39
(Individuals With Disabilities Act Transformation Over the Years)
Discussion Forum Instructions:
1. You must post at least three times each week.
2. Your initial post is due Tuesday of each week and the following two post are due before Sunday.
3. All post must be on separate days of the week.
4. Post must be at least 150 words and cite all of your references even it its the book.
Discussion Topic:
Describe how the lives of students with disabilities from culturally and/or linguistically diverse backgrounds have changed since the advent of IDEA. What do you feel are some things that can or should be implemented to better assist with students that have disabilities? Tell me about these ideas and how would you integrate them?
ANOVA
ANOVA
• Analysis of Variance
• Statistical method to analyzes variances to determine if the means from more than
two populations are the same
• compare the between-sample-variation to the within-sample-variation
• If the between-sample-variation is sufficiently large compared to the within-sample-
variation it is likely that the population means are statistically different
• Compares means (group differences) among levels of factors. No
assumptions are made regarding how the factors are related
• Residual related assumptions are the same as with simple regression
• Explanatory variables can be qualitative or quantitative but are categorized
for group investigations. These variables are often referred to as factors
with levels (category levels)
ANOVA Assumptions
• Assume populations , from which the response values for the groups
are drawn, are normally distributed
• Assumes populations have equal variances
• Can compare the ratio of smallest and largest sample standard deviations.
Between .05 and 2 are typically not considered evidence of a violation
assumption
• Assumes the response data are independent
• For large sample sizes, or for factor level sample sizes that are equal,
the ANOVA test is robust to assumption violations of normality and
unequal variances
ANOVA and Variance
Fixed or Random Factors
• A factor is fixed if its levels are chosen before the ANOVA investigation
begins
• Difference in groups are only investigated for the specific pre-selected factors
and levels
• A factor is random if its levels are choosen randomly from the
population before the ANOVA investigation begins
Randomization
• Assigning subjects to treatment groups or treatments to subjects
randomly reduces the chance of bias selecting results
ANOVA hypotheses statements
One-way ANOVA
One-Way ANOVA
Hypotheses statements
Test statistic
=
𝐵𝑒𝑡𝑤𝑒𝑒𝑛 𝐺𝑟𝑜𝑢𝑝 𝑉𝑎𝑟𝑖𝑎𝑛𝑐𝑒
𝑊𝑖𝑡ℎ𝑖𝑛 𝐺𝑟𝑜𝑢𝑝 𝑉𝑎𝑟𝑖𝑎𝑛𝑐𝑒
Under the null hypothesis both the between and within group variances estimate the
variance of the random error so the ratio is assumed to be close to 1.
Null Hypothesis
Alternate Hypothesis
One-Way ANOVA
One-Way ANOVA
One-Way ANOVA Excel Output
Treatme
(Kaitlyn)To be very honest I know next to nothing about mythology,MoseStaton39
(Kaitlyn)To be very honest I know next to nothing about mythology, it has never been something that I have had around me or taught in school, I guess it was one of those subjects that got kind of, overlooked. But history is history and in my opinion, it’s important to know what happened in the past to prevent future mishaps or wrongdoings. Therefore I don't know anything about mythology to start, but I am eager to learn more about all these different gods, goddesses, etc., and am surprised to find out that entire towns or civilizations would support the myths or people I am reading about.
The gods and goddesses seem to all have their sanction of what was claimed as their own, one wraps his arms around the earth floating the continents with his aqua arms, and another is essentially the undertaker and decides whose soul belongs where. The people are peasants and they are unequal to those that are considered the higher power, they are the protected and shall not reach out to become a protector. From what I have read it doesn't seem like the gods step on each other’s territory or have competitions to push each other out, it seems as though all that made it up there are respected and get to look down on those that are less than them.
While reading I noticed that there is a bit of a divide between men and women the same as we have today. A big part of societal issues today is gender equality and the general outlook on how each gender is portrayed without any prior information. Men are supposed to be large, strong, and tall, to protect and conquer for the interest of mankind. Women are supposed to be dainty and spread love, make a house a home, and show endearing qualities. I can see the reverse argument for Cupid who is the God of Love being that Eros is a male, being portrayed as the, "fairest of the deathless gods," (Hamilton, 36) but that is one instance in an array of different people. It seems that even though we have come a long way to today with working on gender-specific stereotypes, for these "myths" to be ancient and long ago, it doesn't seem like we have come that far. Yes women are seen as loving and they can be attractive to people around them, but in the man’s brain, they are simply there to be of service to the man, and to man the home when they are not present. It's interesting because even though the language of the reading may be hard for me to get used to, being that it is not in modern English, I can still very well understand one thing. Women like Aphrodite would "...[laugh] sweetly or mockingly at those her wiles had conquered, the irresistible goddess who stole away even the wits of the wise" (Hamilton, 32). Being a woman I translated this to essentially smiling in the faces of those who either are factually in the wrong, or have done wrong to you, and that is something that is still very much alive today. From history, we know that women were seen as property or disposable at the discretion of the man that homed her, and f ...
(Harry)Dante’s Inferno is the first of the three-part epic poem, DMoseStaton39
(Harry)Dante’s Inferno is the first of the three-part epic poem, Divine Comedy, written by Dante Alighieri. The Inferno depicts Dante’s journey through Hell, accompanied and guided by the ancient Roman poet Virgil. In his poem, Dante describes Hell’s topography consisting of nine circles, each representing the seriousness of the sin committed by its offenders, these sins are categorized (by the Catholic Church), grouped, and commonly known as the nine deadly sins. Each level of Hell represent places of torment where the first level is home to less serious offenders, and increase in severity in each circle. As they go deeper into each level, our characters, Dante and Virgil encounter offenders within each ring of hell who have committed more serious offenses and the sins are more egregious. We find that the lowest part of hell houses the betrayers, and punishment here is more severe. Punishment in the poem is handed out in a poetic justice fashion Dante calls contrapasso. In this last (deepest) level or ring of Hell the betrayers of Julius Caesar: Brutus and Cassius are prime tenants, along with Judas, who had betrayed Jesus.
As I read this poem, I can agree with how Hell was organized, and as it sits currently, those guilty of child sexual abuse could reside along with those who are being tortured in the second circle: Lust. But Dante seemed to portray these sins as less severe. But personally, I think that those guilty of committing child sexual abuse should be in the ninth circle of Hell, along with those committing treachery because what is child sexual abuse if not treachery! It is treacherous against the innocent children, who fall betrayed by those who they must respect and obey (adults or those older then they), it is an act of treason to the victim who may have trusted the person committing such a heinous act. But after much contemplation, I still cannot agree with this placement. Child sexual abuse and child sexual assault is, in a very real way, equal to those types of betrayals. The innocence of a child makes those crimes so bad that I feel so uncomfortable writing about. As defined on their website, child sexual abuse includes: any sexual act between an adult and a minor, or between two minors, when one exerts power over the other, forcing, coercing or persuading a child to engage in any type of sexual act, non-contact acts such as exhibitionism, exposure to pornography, voyeurism, and communicating in a sexual manner by phone or Internet. In Dante’s world, those guilty of child sexual assault are far more wicked than those guilty of other sexual sins, and even worse than those guilty of aberrant sexual behavior (as it was understood at the time). Therefore, these sinners would have their very own special place below the ninth circle.
For sinners tormented in the tenth circle, the torture must be as gruesome as the act committed by the sinners. For someone who has committed such a abominable act as is child sexual abuse, assault, ...
(Lucious)Many steps in the systems development process may cause aMoseStaton39
(Lucious)Many steps in the systems development process may cause a project to balloon out of control, affecting the scope's size, where the budget and timeline remain the same. Unfortunately, this is a widespread problem known as scope creep during an IS development. Scope creep is an unexpected demand that moves a project past its predetermined limits. Projects are always documented with a planning outline, which covers in-depth details on boundaries, schedules, major deliverables, time, and budget. Unfortunately, individuals involved in the project may intentionally or unintentionally cause a project to not meet its goals due to the unpredictable nature of adding tasks to a project in progress. Project managers can ensure that the scope is clear by referring to the project planning outline, where all the boundaries and parameters of the project stipulate all deliverables. Spending extra time finalizing the plan can dial in a clear and detailed scope for everyone involved in the project. A project manager needs to engage directly with the clients by speaking with them and thoroughly walking them through all the parameters and deliverables. Closely collaborating with clients throughout the various stages of the project can prevent hiccups that may occur. If issues arise during project development, it is always best to be transparent with the client about every problem. Being able to work through solutions with clients will ease the anxieties as strategies are planned. To ensure deliverables are to the client's expectations, necessary features should be identified as critical for delivering a usable end product. For example, managing a scope creep can be difficult if not handled correctly. However, managing change in a project development does not have to be a battle of wills. Knowing how to address change can be beneficial. It can be outlined in the project planning document with parameters that will deliver the best product for the client without derailing the project. (Joseph S. Valacich, 2015)
REFERENCES
Joseph S. Valacich, J. F. (2015). Essentials of Systems Analysis and Design Sixth Edition. Pearson Education, Inc.
i1v2e5y5pubs
W21153
NEDBANK GROUP: LEADERSHIP AND ADAPTIVE SPACE FOR
DIGITAL INNOVATION
Caren Scheepers, Jill Bogie, and Michael Arena wrote this case solely to provide material for class discussion. The authors do not
intend to illustrate either effective or ineffective handling of a managerial situation. The authors may have disguised certain names
and other identifying information to protect confidentiality.
This publication may not be transmitted, photocopied, digitized, or otherwise reproduced in any form or by any means without the
permission of the copyright holder. Reproduction of this material is not covered under authorization by any reproduction rights
organization. To order copies or request permission to reproduce materials, contact Ivey Publishing, Ivey Business Sch ...
(Eric)Technology always seems simple when it works and it is when MoseStaton39
The document summarizes the history of Versare, a company that manufactures portable room partitions. It describes how Versare was initially dependent on a large distributor for 95% of its sales. Over time, the relationship with the distributor became increasingly contentious as the distributor demanded price cuts and changes to Versare's products. By 2005, Versare's profitability had declined significantly due to its reliance on the problematic distributor relationship.
(ELI)At the time when I first had to take a sociology class in higMoseStaton39
(ELI)At the time when I first had to take a sociology class in high school, I was staunchly anti-feminism, as I felt it was unnecessary in first world countries and primarily focused on encouraging immodesty and considering women to be worth more than men. At that time, my only education on feminism or feminist issues had come from my parents during homeschooling. I clearly remember getting into a heated debate with a classmate whom I considered "the feminist equivalent of a vegan," (referring to the stereotypical joke, "How do you know if someone is a vegan? Don't worry, they'll tell you,") and I told her I simply could not see any situations in real life where women aren't being represented without a real reason. She introduced me to the term Bechdel Test, and encouraged me to spend a few weeks watching my usual shows, but counting how many times the female characters spoke to each other about anything other than men.
As my understanding of feminism and of the world around me has evolved, I have seen an increase in media that passes the Bechdel Test, but have also been surprised to find it is significantly less common than I expected. Additionally, the Bechdel Test only looks at named female characters who discuss something other than men. It does not look at factors of race, sexuality, topics of conversation, or visual presentation. Some argue that although media increasingly passes the test, the quality of that media is lacking and therefore the value of the Bechdel Test does not hold up (How does the Bechdel Test measure up in evaluating film representations of women, 2021). More detailed studies show that women remain underrepresented in media, both behind and before the camera (Smith et. al, 2016). The female characters that are portrayed in trend towards being young and traditionally attractive, reinforcing the "ideal" image as the standard and further raising the standard for the average woman. Additionally, women of color and women belonging to other racial or social minority groups are even less visible, impacting the expectations that society has of women based on how they are shown, and influencing what women consider "normal" in themselves.
How does the Bechdel Test measure up in evaluating film representations of women? (2021, April 19). UWIRE Text, 1.
Smith, S., Choueiti, M., & Pieper, K. (2016). Inclusion or invisibility? Comprehensive Annenberg Report on diversity in entertainment. Media, Diversity & Social Change Initiative. USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.
...
(Executive Summary)MedStar Health Inc, a leader in the healthcMoseStaton39
(Executive Summary)
MedStar Health Inc, a leader in the healthcare industry regionally and nation-wide, is a constant target of the malicious attempts of cyber criminals. Over the past 6 years MedStar Health Inc. has faced several instances of data breach most notably, the 2016 breach that compromised 370 computer systems and halted its operations. As the organization continues to digitize and broaden the use of electronic medical records across its facilities, the threat of cyber-attack remains even more pervasive. The purpose of this report is to provide an overview of MedStar Health Inc cybersecurity vulnerabilities, examine the overall causes and impact of the breaches and explore solutions to meet the organization’s cybersecurity challenges.
With a focal point on MedStar Health breaches, a literature-based study was conducted, and various news articles, academic journals and company publications were analyzed. It was found that the 2016 and 2020 data breaches were attacks on the organization’s internet servers. The 2020 hack compromised the records of 668 patients, whereas the 2016 hack was a result of a ransomware infection that compromised 7500 individuals’ records and halted the organizations’ operations. The cost of the virus infection was greater than the $19,000 ransom requested due to additional recovery and remediation costs. It was also revealed that the 2019 breach was due to human error.
To best combat the efforts of cyber criminals, it is recommended that MedStar Health Inc. place greater emphasis on cyber awareness training for employees/professionals, implementing multiple factor authentications and a strong password and identity management system to reinforce its IT infrastructure against future hacks. Failure to effectuate these measures pose significant risk to MedStar Health Inc., its affiliates and patients that extend beyond ransom payments, fines, imprisonment, lawsuits and costs incurred for subsequent identity theft protection services. The damage caused by data security breaches may prove fatal for patients, the company’s most valued asset, compromising public perception and the company’s mission to provide the highest quality of medical care and build long-term relationships with the patients they serve.)
Actual Technical Report
MedStar Medical Vs. Cybercrime
In the health sector, experts "see persistent cyber-attacks as the single greatest threat to the protection of healthcare data" (Moffith & Steffen, 2017). To the world at large, this is not the most absurd news or revelation. Healthcare data embodies some of the most marketable information, and for the black market this is Eldorado – the fictional tale of the city of gold. Healthcare organizations are tasked with fighting the uphill battle of providing quality medical care to their number one stakeholder – patients – while also ensuring that their valuable information is kept safe and secure. Despite their efforts, healthcare organizations sometimes fail in ...
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
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This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
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There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
RHEOLOGY Physical pharmaceutics-II notes for B.pharm 4th sem students
(1) Post a responsive review to someone elses essay paper from We
1. (1) Post a responsive review to someone else's essay paper from
Week #14 (last week) according to the directions that are posted
there
IN THE FOLLOWING ABBREVIATED (!!) WEEK: Each
student will post one review of one of the essay papers that
another student has posted. No late reviews will be accepted
for any reason. Reviews should be substantively interactive,
constructively critical, and at least 35 sentences long. Reviews
should be "spread around" so that everyone's essay paper is
reviewed by at least one other student. Also, reviews
should utilize the FIVE STAR RATING SCHEME feature. The
peer rating feature has to do with the 5 stars as shown here (see
below). Reviews will be figured into the grade for this "Essay
Paper" assignment.
ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Gender Representation on Gender-Targeted Television
Channels:
A Comparison of Female- and Male-Targeted TV
Channels in the Netherlands
Serena Daalmans1 & Mariska Kleemans1 & Anne Sadza1
Published online: 5 January 2017
# The Author(s) 2017. This article is published with open access
at Springerlink.com
Abstract The current study investigated the differences in the
2. representation of gender on male- and female-targeted channels
with regard to recognition (i.e., the actual presence of men and
women) and respect (i.e., the nature of that representation or
portrayal). To this end, the presence of men and women on two
female- and two male-targeted Dutch channels (N = 115 pro-
grams, N = 1091 persons) were compared via content analysis.
The expectation that men’s channels would portray a less equal
and more traditional image of gender than women’s channels
was generally supported by the results. Regardless of genre as
well as country of origin of the program, women were under-
represented on men’s channels, while gender distribution on
women’s channels was more equal. The representation of wom-
en in terms of age and occupation was more stereotypical on
men’s channels than on women’s channels, whereas men were
represented in more contra-stereotypical ways (e.g., performing
household tasks) on women’s channels. Since television view -
ing contributes to the learning and maintenance of stereotyped
perceptions, the results imply that it is important to strengthen
viewers’ defenses against the effects of gender stereotyping
when watching gendered television channels, for instance
through media literacy programs in schools.
Keywords Gender-targeted channels . Gender stereotyping .
Gender representation . Content analysis . Television
Over the past decades, research has made it abundantly clear
that women are underrepresented in the media and that, when
they are present, they are more often than not represented in
stereotypical roles (Collins 2011; Emons et al. 2010; Furnham
and Paltzer 2010; Lauzen et al. 2008; Signorielli and Bacue
1999). Because the roles of women in society have expanded
tremendously as a result of the ongoing process of emancipa-
tion, these consistent findings are often seen as remarkable
(Collins 2011; Emons et al. 2010; Lauzen et al. 2008;
Signorielli and Bacue 1999). However, recent developments
3. in the television landscape may provide new insights on the
issue. There are indications that specific gender-targeted
genres (e.g., soaps and teen scene) might actually showcase
both a more equal distribution of men and women as well as
less stereotyping in its gender portrayals (Gerding and
Signorielli 2014; Lauzen et al. 2006). Following on from this
speculation, the emergence of channels that specifically define
men or women as their target group and thus predominantly
broadcast gender-targeted genres (also called narrowcasting,
Kuipers 2012; Smith-Shomade 2004) might be a promising
development with regard to a more representative portrayal of
both men and women. However, gender portrayal on such
gendered channels is rather unexplored, and is therefore cen-
tral to the current study.
Narrowcasting, or organizing user groups into specific au-
dience markets, started from the 1980s onward in the United
States (Kuipers 2012; Lotz 2006). It meant that specific, often
gendered, audience groups were targeted via specific pro-
gramming and advertising content (Sheperd 2014).
Following this pattern, we term narrowcasting on channels
that explicitly target either a female or a male audience
Bgender-targeted channels^ here. Gender-targeted television
channels employing narrowcasting currently form an increas-
ingly large portion of the television landscape in a multitude of
countries (Kuipers 2012; Smith-Shomade 2004; Van Bauwel
* Serena Daalmans
[email protected]
1 Behavioural Science Institute, Communication Science,
Radboud
University, Postbus 9104, 6500, HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Sex Roles (2017) 77:366–378
DOI 10.1007/s11199-016-0727-6
4. http://crossmark.crossref.org/dialog/?doi=10.1007/s11199-016-
0727-6&domain=pdf
2016). Previous research into narrowcasting has, on the one
hand, focused on the emergence of female-targeted channels,
such as Lifetime and Oxygen, and its programming strategies,
content choices, and rhetoric used to win female audiences
and advertisers of female products (Byars and Meehan 1994;
Hundley 2002; Lotz 2006; Meehan and Byars 2000; Tankel
and Banks 1997). On the other hand, researchers studied
whether specific gender-targeted programs such as Sex and
The City and Ally McBeal can be considered (post-) feminist
texts (Akass and McCabe 2004; Dubrofsky 2002). What re-
mains unclear based on previous research is how the gendered
focus of such channels and of programs suitable to broadcast
on gender-targeted channels affect the representation of men
and women in terms of presence and stereotyping.
Investigation of the portrayal of men and women in pro-
grams broadcast at gender-targeted channels becomes urgent
when considering statements by television scholars who label
gender-targeting or narrowcasting as a hegemonic practice
(Meehan 1990; Sheperd 2014; Smith-Shomade 2004).
Moreover, studying gender representation remains of the ut-
most importance because watching television still is the most
time-consuming pastime (Collins 2011; Signorielli 2012). As
a result, television is seen as one of the main institutions as -
sociated with disseminating stereotyped views of the world
and its gender roles. From the theoretical vantage point of
cultivation theory as well as social learning theory, television
is confirmed as one of the main agents of socialization
(Bandura 1977; Gerbner 1979; Signorielli 2012). Research
has shown that television viewing contributes to the mainte-
nance as well as the learning (molding) of gender stereotyped
perceptions among children, adolescents, and adults (Larson
5. 2001; McGhee and Frueh 1980; Signorielli 1989; Welch et al.
1979). Furthermore, it is generally accepted that television
impacts gender socialization in people’s self-image as well
as their image of others (Signorielli 2012). Assuming that
television has the potential to shape attitudes, self-perception,
and behavior—on top of the idea that stereotyping plays a
crucial role in the maintenance of power inequalities within
wider social, cultural, political, and economic structures
(Cottle 2000; Dyer 1993, 1997; Morgan 2007)—it becomes
important to analyze and understand the nature of gender-role
portrayals on gender-targeted channels.
Previous research on gender stereotyping in media has gen-
erally focused on two levels of gender stereotyping. The first
level of gender stereotyping includes the actual presence of
men and women in television programs (whether they ap-
pear), termed recognition. The second level focuses on the
nature of that representation or portrayal (how they appear),
termed respect (Collins 2011; Signorielli and Bacue 1999).
Research into narrowcasting remains inconclusive about
whether the representation of men and women on gender-
targeted channels differs from the overall established patterns
of underrepresentation of women (i.e., recognition) and
stereotyping portrayal of both men and women (i.e, respect).
Moreover, known previous research into narrowcasting has
only studied female-targeted channels (Byars and Meehan
1994; Hundley 2002; Lotz 2006; Meehan and Byars 2000;
Tankel and Banks 1997), but a comparison between the gen-
der representation on male-targeted and female-targeted chan-
nels is lacking. This comparison is important because, if these
gender-targeted channels differ in how they represent gender,
this might lead to differing conceptions of gender roles and
gender aspirations between their male and female target audi -
ences (Gerding and Signorielli 2014).
6. In all, the question that is central to the current study is: What
are the differences in the representation of gender on male- and
female-targeted Dutch channels with regard to the characteriza-
tion concepts of recognition and respect? This question will be
investigated by analyzing gender-targeted television channels in
the Netherlands, a country in which 40% of the television land-
scape currently explicitly targets a gendered target audience
(Stichting Kijkonderzoek [SKO] 2014).
In their longitudinal analysis of gender on television,
Signorielli and Bacue (1999) use presence and gender-role
stereotyping as indicators of recognition and respect respec -
tively. These concepts stem from a study of televised racial
minorities by Clark (1972), who posited that positive changes
in the treatment of lower status groups (minorities including
women) can be seen as a process that follows two stages:
recognition and respect. In gender research, recognition can
be seen as the presence of women on the television screen
(Lauzen and Dozier 2005; Signorielli and Bacue 1999).
Respect is measured by the extent toward which women are
not portrayed in stereotypical roles, but rather represented in a
diverse manner because this diversity is necessary to be rep-
resented fairly and positively (Signorielli and Bacue 1999).
Recognition: Presence of Men and Women
on Television
Recognition is defined as men and women being represented on
television proportional to their presence in society (Signorielli
and Bacue 1999). Research into gender representation has over -
whelmingly found that women are underrepresented on televi-
sion compared to their presence in society (Collins 2011; Emons
et al. 2010; Glascock 2001; Greenberg and Atkin 1980;
Koeman et al. 2007; Signorielli and Bacue 1999; Tedesco
1974). The last decades have shown a trend towards a more
equal distribution of male and female characters (Elasmar
7. et al. 1999; Emons et al. 2010; Glascock 2001; Greenberg and
Collette 1997; Lauzen and Dozier 2005; Vande Berg and
Streckfuss 1992), but increases are often small and women re-
main underrepresented (Koeman et al. 2007; Segijn et al. 2014).
There are some indications that levels of over- or under-
representation are connected to the gender of the target
Sex Roles (2017) 77:366–378 367
audience. Gunter (1986) found that soap operas in 1970s that
were specifically geared toward a female audience had an
equal distribution of male and female characters. Gerding
and Signorielli (2014) similarly found that whereas females
were underrepresented in ‘tween programs geared towards
male adolescents, the programs geared towards female ado-
lescents mirrored the U.S. population. Based on previous re-
sults we posit that women will be underrepresented compared
to their presence in society on men’s channels, but not on
women’s channels (Hypothesis 1).
Previous studies have revealed that television genres can
differ in the ways they represent gender. It has been shown that
gender stereotyping is surely still present, but has generally re -
vealed a trend of decreasing stereotyping in genres such as tel e-
vision fiction (Emons et al. 2010; Greenwood and Lippman
2010; Gunter 1986; Signorielli and Bacue 1999), teen scene
programming (Gerding and Signorielli 2014), and advertising
(Wolin 2003). Moreover, the portrayal of women in these genres
has become more representative of the lives and status of con-
temporary women. In contrast, other studies—mostly on televi-
sion advertising, but also on fictional programs—conclude that
women are still underrepresented and portrayed in a stereotyp-
ical way and that the degree of stereotyping is even worsening
8. (Allen and Coltrane 1996; Bretl and Cantor 1988; Ganahl et al.
2003; Harwood and Anderson 2002; Koeman et al. 2007;
Milner and Higgs 2004). Based on the latter results, some have
argued that, due to its continued gender-stereotyped nature,
tele-
vision forms a lagging social indicator, which reflects Bhow the
economy or society was rather than how it is or how it will be^
(Estes 2003, p.4; see also Emons 2011; Kim and Lowry 2005).
Taken together these results reveal that there is inconsisten-
cy in the literature about the relation between genre and gen-
der-stereotyping. These possible genre differences become
relevant and important when combined with the increased
attention from a cultivation perspective that has been given
to the possibility of genre-specific cultivation effects
(Bilandzic and Busselle 2008; Bilandzic and Rössler 2004;
Cohen and Weimann 2000; Grabe and Drew 2007; Morgan
and Shanahan 2010). Following the idea put forth by Hawkins
and Pingree (1981) that different TV genres may cultivate
different views of the world, research has revealed large dif-
ferences between genres (Gomes and Williams 1990; Koeman
et al. 2007; Pennekamp 2011). Because men’s and women’s
channels cater to different expected audiences most likely
with a selection of different gendered genres, this might influ-
ence the gender representation on these channels as a whole.
This then leads to the following research question: Do genre-
differences play a role in the presence of men and women on
gender-targeted television channels? (Research Question 1).
The country of origin of the selected programming might
also play a role in gender representational differences between
channel types. Previous research has revealed that country of
origin plays a significant role in the degree of stereotyping
present in the representation of gender (Emons et al. 2010;
Furnham and Paltzer 2010; Wiles et al. 1995). For example,
9. Emons et al. (2010) found that U.S. programs on Dutch tele-
vision represented more male adults, more women involved in
childcare, more men involved in a job, and fewer males in-
volved in other activities compared to Dutch programs on the
same channels. Based on this comparison, they conclude that
American programs on Dutch television are more gender-
stereotyped than programs of Dutch origin. Their research
indicates that gender portrayals on television can be artifacts
of the culture of the society they were created and thereby
potentially reflective of the degree of gender equality in the
culture of origin. Because the Dutch television landscape
hosts a large degree of foreign (especially American) pro-
gramming, it becomes interesting to see how this affects gen-
der representation on Dutch gendered channels (Kuipers
2008, 2011). We therefore pose the following research ques-
tion: Do differences in country of origin of the program play a
role in the presence of men and women on gender-targeted
television channels? (Research Question 2).
Respect: Stereotyping in Gender Representation
Analyzing the presence of women in the television world is only
a relatively small aspect the representation of women on TV.
BA
more complete understanding of how women are portrayed on
television comes from examining the type and depth of the roles
in which they are cast – what Clark (1972) referred to as
respect^ (Signorielli and Bacue 1999, p. 530). We therefore also
investigate how women appear in television programs.
The first indicator of respect analyzed in the present study
is age. Studies have found that inequalities in the age of tele-
vised men and women persist because women are continually
represented as younger than their male counterparts are
(Emons et al. 2010; Glascock 2001; Signorielli and Bacue
1999). The fact that men on television are predominantly rep-
10. resented as older and therewith are perceived to be wiser than
their female counterparts can be interpreted as women being
given less respect (Signorielli and Bacue 1999).
Furthermore, previous research on gender-targeted children’s
programming has revealed that programs geared toward a boy
audience often showcased rather traditional gender-biased por-
trayals, whereas programs geared toward a girl audience less
often featured gender-stereotypical roles and sometimes even
showcased counter-stereotypical roles (Banet-Weiser 2004;
Gerding and Signorielli 2014; Leaper et al. 2002; Northup and
Liebler 2010; Thompson and Zerbinos 1995). Taken together
with previous research on age as an indicator of respect (Emons
et al. 2010; Glascock 2001; Signorielli and Bacue 1999), we
expect a more traditional image on men’s channels than on
women’s channels. This leads to the expectations that a larger
percentage of women will be young adults on men’s channels
368 Sex Roles (2017) 77:366–378
than on women’s channels (Hypothesis 2a) and a larger percent-
age of men will be adults on men’s channels than on women’s
channels (Hypothesis 2b).
The second aspect of respect that we will analyze focuses on
the social roles in which men and women are cast (Emons et al.
2010; Gerbner 1995; Greenberg and Atkin 1980; Gunter 1986;
Signorielli and Bacue 1999). Studies showed that televised men
are more likely to be cast in occupational roles, whereas tele -
vised women are more likely to be cast in nurturing or marital
roles (Gunter 1986; Lauzen et al. 2008; Signorielli and Bacue
1999; Tedesco 1974). Televised women are traditionally repre -
sented as housewives who perform housekeeping chores and
are preoccupied with family life (Emons et al. 2010; Gunter
11. 1986; Koeman et al. 2007; Signorielli and Bacue 1999). The
results on gendered representation of social roles, combined
with the previously outlined results regarding the predominance
of traditionally gender-stereotyped portrayals in programming
geared towards boys and a more gender-balanced representation
in programming geared towards girls (Banet-Weiser 2004;
Gerding and Signorielli 2014; Leaper et al. 2002; Northup and
Liebler 2010; Thompson and Zerbinos 1995), leads us to expect
that women on men’s channels will be represented performing
household/caregiving tasks more often than women on
women’s channels (Hypothesis 3a) and men on men’s channels
will be represented performing household/caregiving tasks less
often than men on women’s channels (Hypothesis 3b).
In line with this reasoning, studies have found women to be
underrepresented with regard to being professionally employed
(Elasmar et al. 1999; Gunter 1986; Coltrane and Adams 1997;
McNeil 1975; Signorielli 1989; Signorielli and Bacue 1999),
which is the next indicator for respect that we will analyze.
Over time, there appears to be an increase of women
represented
as having a job and a decrease of men represented as have a job
(Signorielli and Bacue 1999). Again, however, this trend is not
straightforward because the occupational status of men and
women on television tends to fluctuate (Emons et al. 2010).
Nevertheless, due to the expectedly more gender-traditional rep-
resentation on men’s channels (Banet-Weiser 2004; Gerding
and Signorielli 2014; Leaper et al. 2002; Northup and Liebler
2010; Thompson and Zerbinos 1995), we predict that women
will be granted less respect on men’s channels in terms of oc-
cupational status. Thus we hypothesize that women on men’s
channels will be represented as being professionally employed
less often than women on women’s channels (Hypothesis 4a)
and that men on men’s channels will be represented as being
professionally employed more often than men on women’s
channels (Hypothesis 4b).
12. The suggestion that family life and parenthood are of greater
significance to women than to men is also implicit in the fact
that parental status is more often made explicit for women than
for men (Davis 1990; Emons et al. 2010; Glascock 2001;
Gunter 1986; McNeil 1975). The final indicator of respect that
we will analyze, therefore, is parental status. Again there is a
trend toward a more egalitarian distribution of known parental
status for characters over time. The percentages of known pa-
rental status decreased from 81% for women and 54% for men
in McNeil’s (1975) study to 56% for women and 42% for men
in Glascock’s (2001) study. Again, a more traditional represen-
tation is expected to be more prevalent on men’s channels than
on women’s channels (cf. Banet-Weiser 2004; Gerding and
Signorielli 2014; Leaper et al. 2002; Northup and Liebler
2010; Thompson and Zerbinos 1995). We therefore expect
women on men’s channels to be represented as mothers more
often than women on women’s channels will be (Hypothesis 5a)
and men on men’s channels to be represented as fathers less
often than men on women’s channels will be (Hypothesis 5b).
Combined, these hypotheses test differences in the levels of
recognition and respect given to men and women on men’s
and women’s television channels by testing differences in
terms of stereotypical or counter-stereotypical role portrayals
between the two channel types, comparable to what Gerding
and Signorielli (2014) did in their study on ‘tween programs.
As we argued, these differences may impact the ideas that men
and women have about what are acceptable gender-role pat-
terns and what to expect from oneself and others.
Method
To test our hypotheses, we conducted a quantitative content
analysis of gender-role portrayals of 1091 characters in tele-
13. vision 115 programs aired during primetime on four gender-
specific television channels in the Netherlands in 2014. All
four gendered cable channels on the Dutch television were
analyzed: RTL7 and Veronica as men’s channels and RTL8
and Net5 as women’s channels. This distinction was made
clear in the explicit statements on their marketing pages as
well as their slogans broadcasted during their televised com-
mercial breaks (e.g., BEverything women love,^ BWhat wom-
en want,^ BRTL7 knows what men want,^ and BMore for
men^). Examples of programs on women’s channels are 15
Kids and Counting and Sex and The City; men’s channels
broadcast, for instance, Top Gear and programs about soccer.
All included channels are commercial broadcasters because
Dutch public service broadcasters do not identify specific tar-
get audience but are (by law) aimed at informing and enter-
taining the general population (Koeman et al. 2007).
A check of the validity of the distinction in gendered chan-
nels was conducted by verifying the audience profiles, based
on gendered viewer ratings, for each channel (Stichting
Kijkonderzoek [SKO] 2014, p. 39). The ratings revealed that
the audience profile of the male channels RTL 7 and Veronica
is indeed male-dominated, with respectively 64.0% and
55.1% of the viewers in 2014 being male. The women’s chan-
nels RTL8 and Net5 were shown to have a more female audi -
ence. Women represented 64.2% of the audience watching
Sex Roles (2017) 77:366–378 369
RTL8, and 63.5% of the audience watching Net5. In terms of
market share, the male channels RTL7 (5.0%) and Veronica
(4.4%) had a combined market share of just below 10%,
whereas the women’s channels RTL8 (2.4%) and Net5
(3.5%) had a combined market share of just below 6%
14. (Stichting Kijkonderzoek [SKO] 2014).
Sample
For each of the four channels, five primetime evenings
(6 PM–midnight) of broadcasting were coded and analyzed.
The evenings were recorded as part of a larger clustered sam-
ple of several constructed weeks and the channels were there-
fore recorded on consecutive days over the course of several
weeks (29 March 2014–12 May 2014). This type of sampling
leads to more representative results than recording an actual
week (Riffe et al. 2005) because television channels some-
times have thematic weeks that may not be representative of
year-long programming. All programs were analyzed but only
if the complete episode was aired within the timeframe of the
sample. The context unit of our study was one episode, there-
fore only information that was shown in the specific episode
was used for coding.
A total number of 56 programs (48.3%) were broadcasted
on a women’s channel: NET5 (26, 22.6%) and RTL8 (30,
26.1%), and 59 programs (51.7%) were broadcasted on a
men’s channel: RTL7 (24, 20.9%) and Veronica (35,
30.4%). From the total of 1091 characters that were present
in the programs, 597 (54.7%) were presented on men’s chan-
nels; 494 (45.3%), on women’s channels.
Recording Units and Coding Procedure
The two channel types constitute the units of analysis for our
study. Recording units were storylines (for fictional programs)
and items (for entertainment and reality programs) within pro-
grams and the main characters or persons who were featured in
them. Entertainment and reality as a genre contained programs,
such as Masterchef and Top Gear, whereas fiction as a genre
contained both comedic fiction, such as Two and a Half Men
15. and Mike & Molly, and dramatic fiction, such as Criminal
Minds
and The Bold and the Beautiful. The women’s channels sample
consisted of 56 programs, of which 34 (60.7%) were fictional
and 22 (39.3%) were entertainment and reality. The men’s chan-
nels sample consisted of 59 programs, of which 30 (50.9%)
were fictional and 29 (49.1%) were entertainment and reality.
Coding initially differentiated between fictional and non-
fictional programming, of which the latter included the genres
News and Information and Entertainment and Reality.
However, the results revealed that there were actually no pro-
grams in the sample which belonged to the News and
Information genre.
Based on Emons et al. (2010) up to ten items or storylines,
each with up to eight persons, were coded. For fiction these
eight
characters were selected by coding only main characters in the
episode. A main character was defined as a character who plays
a
leading role in the narrative and whose choices and behavior
were essential for the development of the plot (Egri 1960;
Lauzen and Dozier 2005; Weijers 2014). In entertainment and
reality programs, the eight persons who had the most speaki ng
and/or screen time per item were coded. Show hosts and re-
porters were coded but excluded from the analyses because they
differed from the rest of the population as a result of their func -
tion rather than their gender or the channel type on which they
were portrayed (i.e., every show host always has an occupation;
marital and parental status are very rarely made explicit).
Moreover, only a minority of the initial sample consisted of
these
types of characters (n = 50). In addition, animated persons from
three program broadcast on men’s channels were also excluded.
16. The coding instrument used to analyze the persons and
characters in the sample (see Table 1 for coding definitions,
categories, and frequencies) was developed using prior studies
of prime-time television (Davis 1990; Elasmar et al. 1999;
Emons et al. 2010; Glascock 2001; Greenberg and Atkin
1980; Koeman et al. 2007; Signorielli and Bacue 1999).
Two coders were involved in the coding process. Coders re-
ceived coder training and independent practice on programs
that were not part of the sample. The coders independently
coded practice materials and then compared and discussed the
results. The coding instrument was edited after these discus-
sions to fix potential problems prior to coding and analysis.
After the final revisions in the coding instrument, a little over
10% of the program sample (n = 14; 12.1%) was randomly
selected to be double coded.
Intercoder reliabilities were calculated in SPSS using the
macro by Hayes for Krippendorff’s alpha (Hayes and
Krippendorff 2007). All variables were analyzed as nominal
variables except for age, which was analyzed as an ordinal
variable. The cut-off points were defined based on Lombard
et al. (2002) who suggest that Krippendorff’s alpha coeffi -
cients of .90 or higher are always acceptable and .80 or higher
are acceptable in most situations. As reported in Table 1,
intercoder reliabilities are acceptable for all variables
(Kalphas > .87).
Results
Presence as an Indicator of Recognition
The first hypothesis stated that women would be underrepre-
sented on men’s channels, but not on women’s channels, com-
pared to their presence in (Dutch) society (Hypothesis 1). In
2014, 49.5% of the Dutch population (N = 16,829,289) was
male whereas 50.5% of the population was female (Centraal
17. 370 Sex Roles (2017) 77:366–378
Bureau voor de Statistiek 2014). The gender distribution on
men’s and women’s channels was examined with a Chi square
goodness of fit test whereby the societal percentage was used
as the expected value. The results showed that women were
significantly underrepresented on men’s channels compared
to their presence in society. Women made up only 22% of
the cast, whereas men (78%) were much more present com-
pared to the gender distribution in society, χ2(1,
n = 597) = 192.48, p < .001, Cramer’s V = .57. In contrast,
women (and men) on women’s channels were not underrep-
resented. Their presence did not differ significantly from so-
ciety in terms of gender. Women composed 48.6% of the
population whereas men composed 51.4%, χ2(1,
n = 494) = .73, p = .394, Cramer’s V = .04. In all, the results
provide support for Hypothesis 1 because underrepresentation
of women was only found on men’s channels.
The first research question asked if the genre of the pro-
grams presented on men’s and women’s channels would lead
to a differing presence of men and women on these channels.
The results revealed that, based on the adjusted residuals on
men’s channels, the percentage of men significantly exceeded
expected frequencies within the entertainment and reality
genre (87.9%, adjusted residuals =8.1), whereas the percent-
ages for women (although still underrepresented) significantly
exceeded expected frequencies within the fictional genre on
men’s channels (40.1%, adjusted residuals =8.1), χ2(1,
n = 597) = 65.20, p < .001, Cramer’s V = .33. In contrast,
on women’s channels the percentage of women significantly
exceeded expected frequencies within the entertainment and
reality genre (54.8%, adjusted residuals =2.4), whereas the
18. percentage of men (55.9%, adjusted residuals = 2.4) signifi -
cantly exceeded expected frequencies in fictional genre, χ2(1,
n = 494) = 5.57, p = .018, Cramer’s V = .11. In all, there is a
more pronounced difference in the representation of gender on
men’s channels in different genres than on women’s channels,
where gender is more evenly divided.
The second research question asked if country of origin of
the programs presented on men’s and women’s channels
would lead to a differing presence of men and women on these
channels. Overall, results showed that women were underrep-
resented in programming from all countries. However, on
men’s channels in programs created in the United States, the
percentage of women significantly exceeded expected fre-
quencies (34%, adjusted residuals =8.0) with the percentage
of men (66.0%) falling below expected rates, χ2(2,
n = 597) = 64.85, p < .001, Cramer’s V = .33.
Comparatively, men are starkly overrepresented in program-
ming from both the Netherlands (95.2%, adjusted residuals
= 5.8) and Other countries (91.1%, adjusted residuals =3.7),
with the percentage of women falling below expected rates
(NL: 4.8%, Other: 8.9%). In contrast, on women’s channels
there were no significant differences between countries of
origin in the presence of men and women, χ2(2,
n = 494) = 4.35, p = .114, Cramer’s V = .10.
These results prompted a closer inspection of the particular
programming originating in the Netherlands and Other coun-
tries in the sample. Programs on men’s channels that were
created in The Netherlands were predominantly sports talk
shows (n = 4) and reality crime shows (n = 5). We need to
note here that Dutch programs constitute only 17.9% of the
Table 1 Overview of coded variables
19. Variable Definition Categories Kalpha Frequencies
n (%)
Genre Genre to which the program belongs
(N = 115)
Entertainment and Reality Fiction 1.00 52 (45%)
63 (55%)
Country of origina Country of origin of the program
(N = 115)
The Netherlands
United States,
Great-Britain / Other
1.00 22 (20%)
85 (73%)
4 (3.5%) / 4 (3.5%)
Gender Person or character’s gender
(N = 1091)
Male
Female
.98 720 (66%)
371 (34%)
Age Person or character’s age in terms of the life cycle
(N = 1091)
Child (0–12)
Teenager (13–18)
Young adult (19–34)
Adult (35–49)
20. Middle-aged (50–64)
Senior (65+)
.87 21 (1.9%)
45 (4.1%)
408 (37.4%)
455 (41.7%)
116 (10.6%)
46 (4.2%)
Household and caregiving tasks Whether the person or character
engages in household
or caregiving tasks (for example: cleaning, doing
the laundry, or taking children to school)
(N = 1091)
Yes
No
.93 71 (6.5%)
1020 (93.5%)
Employment Whether the person or character is portrayed as
being
professionally employed or explicitly mentions
having a job
(N = 1091)
Yes
No
Unknown
.96 681 (62.4%)
20 (1.8%)
21. 390 (35.7%)
Parental status Whether the person or character is portrayed as a
parent
or explicitly mentions being a parent
(N = 1091)
Yes
No
Unknown
.96 147 (13.7%)
19 (1.8%)
905 (84.5%).
a In the analyses, the categories of BGreat-Britain^ and BOther^
were combined due to low cell frequencies
Sex Roles (2017) 77:366–378 371
programming on men’s channels. All other programs were
originally from United States (71.4%) or from Great Britain
and other countries (10.7%). Programs on men’s channels
from other countries were all male-oriented shows such as
Top Gear, the famous BBC car talk show. Comparatively,
the programs aired on men’s channels originating in the
United States are a little more mixed, consisting of for exam-
ple the reality crime show Cops as well as comedy shows such
as Mike & Molly and drama such as Criminal Minds.
Age as Indicator of Respect
The second set of hypotheses stated that women would be
22. represented as young adults on men’s channels more often
than on women’s channels (Hypothesis 2a), whereas men
would be portrayed as adults on men’s channels more often
than on women’s channels (Hypothesis 2b). The distribution
of women along age categories differed significantly between
channel types, χ2 (5, n = 372) = 13.70, p = .018, Cramer’s
V = .19 (see Table 2a). In accordance with hypothesis 2a, the
residual analysis revealed that on men’s channels over half of
all women (56.8%, adjusted residuals =2.7) were portrayed as
young adults which was significantly more than the 42.1% on
women’s channels. As predicted in Hypothesis 2b, 49.2% of
men (adjusted residuals =2.9) were represented as adults on
men’s channels, and this was also significantly more than the
37.8% on women’s channels, χ2(5, n = 719) = 19.04, p = .002,
Cramer’s V = .16. Although not hypothesized, these results
also revealed that adult women (40.0%, adjusted residuals
=2.8) were significantly more present on women’s channels
than on men’s channels (25.8%).
As the percentages above already indicate, most of main
characters in the sample were either young adults or adults.
The other age categories that we discerned (child, teenager,
middle-aged adults, and seniors) appeared less frequent (12.3–
14.6% for middle aged men, all other percentages <7.5%, see
Table 2a). No notable differences in presence of men and
women of these age categories on either men’s or women’s
channels were found, except for significantly more male chil -
dren on women’s channels (3.9%, adjusted residuals = 3.5)
than on men’s channels (.4%).
Tasks as Indicators of Respect
We expected that women on men’s channels would be over-
represented performing household or caregiving tasks com-
pared to women on women’s channels (H3a). We did not find
23. support for this hypothesis, since 12.1% of women on men’s
channels and 11.7% of women on women’s channels per-
formed these tasks and these numbers did not differ signifi -
cantly, χ2(1, n = 372) = .017, Cramer’s V = .007, p = .897 (see
Table 2b).
It was further hypothesized that men on men’s channels
would be significantly underrepresented performing house-
hold or caregiving tasks compared to men on women’s chan-
nels (Hypothesis 3b). The results supported this hypothesis as
Table 2 Indicators of respect for
women and men on gender-
targeted channels
Represented women Represented men
Indicators Men’s channels Women’s channels Men’s channels
Women’s channels
(a) Age
Child 3.8% 1.7% .4% 3.9%*
Teenager 4.5% 4.2% 3.7% 4.7%
Young adult 56.8%* 42.1% 31.0% 34.6%
Adult 25.8% 40.0%* 49.2%* 37.8%
Middle aged 3.0% 7.5% 12.3% 14.6%
Senior 6.1% 4.6% 3.4% 4.3%
n 132 240 465 254
(b) Household and caregiving tasks
Yes 12.1% 11.7% 1.5% 7.9%*
No 87.9% 88.3% 98.5%* 92.1%
n 132 240 465 254
24. (c) Employment
Yes 43.2% 57.1%* 64.9% 72.8%*
No 3.0% 4.6% .4% 1.2%
Unknown 53.8%* 38.3% 34.3%* 26.0%
n 132 240 465 254
(d) Parental status
Yes 19.7% 23.8% 5.4% 15.4%*
No .8% 5.4%* .2% 1.6%*
Unknown 79.5% 70.8% 94.4%* 83.1%
n 132 240 465 254
* Frequency significantly exceeded expectations by adjusted
standardized residuals
372 Sex Roles (2017) 77:366–378
7.9% of men on women’s channels performed household or
caregiving tasks (adjusted residuals =4.3) compared to only
1.5% of men on men’s channels, χ2(1, n = 719) = 18.44,
p < .001, Cramer’s V = .16 (see Table 2b).
Employment as Indicator of Respect
Women on men’s channels were expected to be represented as
having an occupation less often than women on women’s
channels (Hypothesis 4a), whereas men on men’s channels
were expected to be represented as having an occupation more
often than men on women’s channels (Hypothesis 4b). A sig-
nificantly larger percentage of women (57.1%, adjusted resid-
uals = 2.6) was indeed portrayed as having an occupation on
25. women’s channels than on men’s channels (43.2%), χ2 (2,
n = 372) = 8.31, p = .016, Cramer’s V = .15 (see Table 2c).
This finding confirms Hypothesis 4a. Contrary to Hypothesis
4b, men on men’s channels were portrayed as having an oc-
cupation significantly less often than men on women’s chan-
nels were (see Table 2c). On men’s channels, 64.9% (adj usted
residuals = − 2.6) of the men were portrayed as having an
occupation compared to 72.8% of men on women’s channels,
χ2(2, n = 719) = 6.75, p = .035, Cramer’s V = .10.
Furthermore, the results also revealed a significant overrepre-
sentation within the unknown category of occupation for both
women (53.8%, adjusted residuals = 2.9) and men (34.6%,
adjusted residuals = 2.4) on men’s channels.
Parental Status as Indicator of Respect
The final set of hypotheses predicted that women on men’s
channels would be represented as mothers more often than
women on women’s channels (Hypothesis 5a) and, converse-
ly, that men on men’s channels would be represented as fathers
less often than men on women’s channels (Hypothesis 5b).
The results revealed that women’s parental state significantly
differed between the channel types, χ2(2, n = 372) = 6.41,
p = .040, Cramer’s V = .13 (see Table 2d). However, the
residual analysis shows that this difference is due to the
knowledge of explicit childlessness of women between chan-
nel types, where women were significantly more often explic-
itly childless on women’s channels (5.4%, adjusted residuals
= 2.3) than on men’s channels (.8%). There was no significant
difference between the representation of women as mother
between men’s channels (19.7%) and women’s channels
(23.8%). We thus need to reject Hypothesis 5a. The results
also indicated that men were, as expected in Hypothesis 5b,
significantly more often represented as fathers (15.4%, adjust-
ed residuals = 4.5) on women’s channels than on men’s chan-
nels (5.4%), χ2(2, n = 719) = 25.08, p < .001, Cramer’s V = .19
26. (see Table 2d). Hypothesis 5b is thus supported.
Discussion
The primary goal of our study was to provide insight into the
way
that gender was represented on television channels targeting ei-
ther men or women. The overarching expectation that, due to
the
target audience, men’s channels would portray a less equal and
more traditional image of gender than women’s channels would
in terms of both recognition and respect was generally
supported
by our results. In line with the results of Gerding and
Signorielli
(2014), our study revealed that whereas women were grossly
underrepresented on men’s channels, gender distribution on
women’s channels mirrored the Dutch population. This phenom-
enon cannot be explained by the idea that audiences would
prefer
watching members of their own gender because women should
then have been overrepresented on women’s channels just like
men are on men’s channels. Because this was not the case, we
can conclude that in contrast to women’s channels, men’s chan-
nels show a lack of recognition for women. Moreover, an explo-
ration of the level of recognition per genre and per country of
origin of the programs on the gendered channels also revealed
that women’s channels, regardless of genre as well as the
country
of origin of the program, showcased a more equal presence of
men and women than men’s channels did. In all, this means that
only women’s channels fulfill the first of the two stages towards
positive and fair treatment of women: recognition (Clark 1972;
Lauzen and Dozier 2005; Signorielli and Bacue 1999).
In addition, our results revealed that men’s channels also
27. lagged behind in terms of the second stage of positive and
equal portrayal (Clark 1972): respect. First, the stereotypical
value of youth for women (as an indicator of a lack of respect,
see also Davis 1990; Emons et al. 2010; Lauzen and Dozier
2005; Signorielli and Bacue 1999) is much more pronounced
on men’s channels than it is on women’s channels. Women on
women’s channels were not only represented as older than
they were on men’s channels, but they were also distributed
more evenly over the age categories of young adult and adult.
Second, in terms of occupational status, women on women’s
channels were more likely to be portrayed as being profession-
ally employed than women on men’s channels were.
However, the results for the other indicators of respect re-
vealed a less straightforward conclusion. As for the percentage
of women performing household or caregiving tasks and the
overrepresentation of women as parents, there were no signifi -
cant differences between men’s and women’s channels.
However, it should be noted that women’s channels were more
likely than men’s channels were to represent men as performing
household and caregiving tasks and being parents. Household
and caregiving tasks especially were divided rather equally be -
tween both genders—in contrast to the results by Emons et al.
(2010). Therefore we conclude that at least the degree of gender
stereotyping (at least in terms of these indicators) is lower on
women’s channels and that they thereby still grant more respect
to women and men than men’s channels do.
Sex Roles (2017) 77:366–378 373
The most striking result found in our study is that it is the
representation of men (rather than women) in which the true
differences between men’s and women’s channels are found.
Men are represented in counter-stereotypical ways on women’s
28. channels and become connected to the home and family almost
as much as women. This focus on home and family life on
women’s channels could be interpreted as a post-feminist resur-
gence of the focus on gender differences and stereotypical fem-
inine values on women’s channels (Gill 2007; McRobbie 2009).
Another, more positive, interpretation might, however, be that
the private domain is being re-evaluated. Women’s channels
seem to present an image in which home and family life are
important—for both men and women. This might be interpreted
as the private domain itself increasingly gaining respect on
these
channels. Also, besides their connection to family life, high
percentages of both men and women are represented as being
professionally employed on these channels, resulting in a more
diverse depiction of both genders.
Limitations and Directions for Future Research
Although the findings here are of clear importance in adding
to our understandings of the differences in gender representa-
tion on gender-targeted channels, there are some limitations to
our study that should be addressed. First, the sample consisted
of a constructed week recorded on consecutive days.
Therewith, we did not control for seasonal differences in pro-
gramming. Recording several weeks, one in each season may
contribute to the representativeness of the results.
Second, in terms of variables we decided to code as many
of the aspects that were associated with the central concepts of
recognition and respect as discerned by Clark (1972) and
Signorielli and Bacue (1999). To this end, we closely followed
previous codebooks (Davis 1990; Elasmar et al. 1999; Emons
et al. 2010; Glascock 2001; Greenberg and Atkin 1980;
Koeman et al. 2007; Signorielli and Bacue 1999) in the
operationalization of our variables. As a consequence, we
were not able to explore every one of the aspects in an in-
29. depth manner. For example, household and caregiving tasks
were coded as either being performed or not performed.
Because of this, if one character was portrayed performing
household tasks for an entire episode and another performed
only one such task, both were coded as performing these tasks
in the same way. It is recommended that future research would
measure the number of tasks performed by each character so
as to gain more insight into gendered task distribution.
Furthermore, with regard to the variable of occupation, the
coding based on previous work relatively simplistically
reflected
if a person had a job or not (or if it was unknown). Even though
the differentiation between having a job or not captures implicit
messages of gendered worth in the public sphere, future
research
should add a dimension of gender-role stereotyping to this vari-
able in building on previous work (Coltrane and Adams 1997;
Glascock 2001; Signorielli 1989; Signorielli and Bacue 1999;
Signorielli and Kahlenberg 2001). Future research could
establish
for gendered channels if there are differences between men and
women with regard to the type of occupation, the prestige asso-
ciated with that occupation, as well as the authority they have
over other workers in that occupation in order to determine how
stereotypical the representation of work for men and women is
on
these channels. This is important because media portrayals pro-
vide one of the sources of information against which people in
modern societies give meaning to in their work and family lives
(Coltrane and Adams 1997; Signorielli and Kahlenberg 2001).
Seen in this light, the media’s previously documented tendency
of linking men with jobs in which they have authority and wom-
en with jobs with less prestige and less authority over other
workers (Coltrane and Adams 1997; Glascock 2001; Signorielli
30. 1989), potentially aids in the perpetuation of gender stereotypes
and the maintenance of the gendered status quo.
Third, we decided to exclude show hosts and reporters in
entertainment and reality programs because there was almost
no variation with regard to the dependent variables. Although
their presence was low compared to the other characters who
were coded, their representation is important against the back-
ground of the current study. For instance, talk shows are fre-
quently watched, and the position of host carries a certain
amount of authority and expertise with it, implying that the
gender representation of show hosts may also contribute to
viewers’ stereotyped views of the world and its gender roles.
Previous research has already outlined that men form the ma-
jority of show hosts in programs devoted to Bhard^ content
(e.g.,
politics and economy), whereas women are dominant as show
hosts for Bsoft^ topics (e.g., family and romance) (Gerbner
1995; Koeman et al. 2007; Segijn et al. 2014). Therefore, future
research should include an in-depth analysis of these roles on
gendered channels to assess potential differences.
In addition to including show hosts and reporters in future
analyses, it might be interesting to explore the relationship of
the gender of individuals behind the scenes of the gender -
targeted television channels (e.g., managers, writers, directors,
advertisers) and the on-screen portrayal of men and women.
This is particularly interesting because it could explore the
assumption which some media analysts and scholars have
put forward that if more women had positions of authority
behind the scenes in the entertainment world, the media would
offer less gender-stereotyped portrayals of men and women
(Benét 1978; Lauzen and Dozier 1999; Mills 1988). Some of
these dynamics have been explored for prime-time program-
ming by other researchers (e.g., Glascock 2001; Lauzen and
Dozier 1999; Lauzen et al. 2006; Lauzen et al. 2008), but
31. never systematically for gendered television channels.
A final recommendation for future research would be to
complete a cultivation analysis to measure how the audiences’
conceptions of gender are affected by the programming on
these gendered channels (Gerbner et al. 1978; Morgan 2007;
374 Sex Roles (2017) 77:366–378
Signorielli 1989; Signorielli and Bacue 1999). This directive
for future cultivation research is further strengthene d by re-
search based in social role theory (Eagly and Wood 2012)
which proposed that gender stereotypes might change when
gender distribution changes (Diekman and Eagly 2000), and it
is encountered in daily life or through mediated exposure
(Eagly and Steffen 1984). Future research could then assess
if more traditional or progressive role-pattern expectancies are
indeed cultivated in the audiences of men’s and women’s
channels respectively. This would necessitate surveying
viewers of both types of channels with varying levels of ex-
posure to television about their conceptions of gender roles.
As outlined previously, some of the findings presented in our
study are concerning; however, until a cultivation analysis is
conducted, the actual influence of these programs on actual
perceptions of gender and gender roles remain unknown.
Practice Implications
Television broadcasters work fervently to entertain and keep
their audiences watching and loyal, all in order to turn a profit
by selling advertising space to makers of products and services
aimed at specific (gendered) niche audience groups (Kuipers
2012; Turow 1998). However, through their politics of narrow -
casting, viewers—and particularly viewers of men’s channels
32. our study points out—are at risk for developing too narrow
conceptions about gender roles that may prove to be limiting
in real life. Because research has shown that television viewing
contributes to the maintenance, as well as the learning, of
gender
stereotyped perceptions (Gerbner et al. 1978; Larson 2001;
McGhee and Frueh 1980; Welch et al. 1979), we would there-
fore argue that the everyday television viewer should be made
aware of the presence of stereotyping on television. A possible
way to do this is to pay attention to this issue in media literacy
programs, which are part of school curricula in an increasing
number of schools (Koltay 2011; Tuominen and Kotilainen
2012). In these lessons, educators at all levels of education
should sensitize their students about gender-role depictions in
television programming and the (possible) effects they have on
men and women. In this way, they would ideally be providing a
continuous strengthening of children’s, adolescents, and young
adults’ defenses against the effects of gender stereotyping they
may encounter when watching various (gendered) television
channels throughout their life.
Conclusion
To conclude, some context for the rise of men’s and women’s
channels might be provided by the idea that we now live in a
post-feminist era in which there has been a resurgence of the
belief in sexual difference (Gill 2007; McRobbie 2009). It has
also been suggested that the increased status of women in
society has put pressure on the concept of masculinity
(Beynon 2002), which could explain the more traditional gen-
der portrayal on channels aimed at male audiences. However,
whatever the cause of the matter may be, our study makes
clear that rather than mirroring emancipatory changes in soci -
ety via a trend towards a more equal representation of gender
on television, the Dutch television landscape has become di -
33. vided through some large differences in the way gender is
represented on men’s versus women’s channels.
Taken together, we can conclude that, in the
Netherlands, it seems that a more equal image of gender
might be cultivated particularly for female audiences,
while the messages cultivated for male audiences remain
highly gender-stereotyped. These findings highlight a wor-
risome phenomenon when combined with several com-
plexities in gender-related practices and attitudes in the
Netherlands. The Netherlands is generally regarded as
one of the more gender-equal countries in the world
(United Nations Development Program [UNDP], 2015),
due for example to the continuously growing working
force participation of women, the increasing percentage
of women with a college degree, the increase of women
with a seat in parliament, a growing participation of men
in household chores as well as childcare in the last de-
cades, and a continuous increase in the share of individ-
uals who do not favor gender stereotypes in upbringing,
education, and the workplace (Arends-Tóth and van de
Vijver 2007; Collier et al. 2013; Emons 2011;
Gesthuizen et al. 2002; UNDP 2015). However, the
Netherlands also recently dropped three places in the
Gender Gap Index (World Economic Forum 2016) due
to the fact that in the Netherlands women’s workforce
participation rate is still lower than men’s. Women gener-
ally have part-time jobs, earn considerably less than men
do, and are severely underrepresented in senior executive
positions. Considering these complex and conflicting real -
ities in gender-related practices and attitudes in the
Netherlands, we feel that the results of our study seen in
the light of cultivation theory (Gerbner et al. 1978) and
social learning theory (Bandura 1977), combined with the
persistent finding that men in general tend to hold more
traditional gender views than women do (Bolzendahl and
34. Myers 2004; Brewster and Padavic 2000; Cameron and
Lalonde 2001), highlight issues that are important and
relevant to consider when examining the potential effects
of these gendered representations. As such, the gendered
representation on particularly men’s TV channels might
form a roadblock that stands in the way of true emanci-
pation and ideas of gender equality being reinforced in the
minds of not only women but particularly men.
Compliance with Ethical Standards The authors declare that
they have
no conflict of interest and that they have complied with the
APA ethical
standards.
Sex Roles (2017) 77:366–378 375
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the
Creative
Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits
unrestricted use,
distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you
give appro-
priate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a
link to the
Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
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55. Abstract
Groupies are understood as a particular type of fan that are most
commonly associated with
rock music. The ‘groupie’ identity is almost exclusively applied
to female fans but sometimes also
to female music producers and is largely used in a derogatory
manner both by the popular media
and by fans themselves. This article argues that the ‘groupie’
identity is used to ‘other’ and exclude
women from creative production in rock music. This study
draws on a rhetorical analysis of five
published biographical accounts of groupies to examine how the
labeling of certain people as ‘groupies’
works as an othering practice that serves to support and
maintain the gendered norms of rock and
identifies three underlying discursive processes. First, popular
and music media played a significant
role in stereotyping groupie as female right from the emergence
of the label. Second, the notions of
‘credibility’ and ‘authenticity’, which are central to serious
music journalism, are constructed in such
a way as to stigmatize and therefore exclude women from rock,
primarily by reframing ‘groupies’ as
inauthentic consumers rather than proper fans. Finally, the
intertwining of femininity with fandom, as
occurs in groupiedom, serves to magnify cultural assumptions
about women as sex objects and as
passive consumers of mass culture. In elucidating both the
gender and marketplace role politics at play
in the ‘groupie’ identity and the mechanisms involved in
othering women, space is opened in which
alternative possibilities for understanding and enacting the role
of women in rock can be imagined.
Keywords
Consumer, creative industries, fans, gender, groupies, music,
56. patriarchy
Introduction
The figure of the groupie looms large in the discourses and
social imaginary surrounding rock
music, playing an integral role in the mythology of ‘sex, drugs
and rock n’ roll’. Groupies can be
Corresponding author:
Gretchen Larsen, Department of Management and Marketing,
Durham University Business School, Durham University,
Queen’s Campus, University Boulevard, Thornaby, Stockton-
on-Tees TS17 6BH, UK.
Email: [email protected]
Article
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398 Organization 24(3)
found across a range of culture, leisure, and sports activities
(Forsyth and Thompson, 2007;
Gauthier and Forsyth, 2000; Gmelch and San Antonio, 1998),
but it is with rock music that they are
most closely associated. The phenomenon of the groupie gained
recognition and took shape as a
social identity within the counter-culture of 1960s’ rock music
57. and continues to hold significant
cultural currency and power. For example, films such as
‘Almost Famous’ (2000) and ‘The Banger
Sisters’ (2002) employ and as such reinforce the media
representation of the groupie, and Hill
(2013) shows how women feel the need to negotiate that same
representation when expressing
their fandom of metal music. There is no agreed definition as to
who or what a groupie is, but a
dominant representation exists in popular media/culture and
academic literature of a more extreme
type of female fan who seeks intimate emotional and/or sexual
relations with musicians (e.g. Cline,
1992; Des Barres, 2005 [1987]; Fonarow, 2006; Forrest,
2010).The consolidation of the groupie
identity can be found in a cover article in Rolling Stone
magazine in 1969 entitled ‘The Groupies
and Other Girls’, by John Burks, Jerry Hopkins, and Paul
Nelson. However, as Rhodes (2005)
explains, this was not the first mention or use of the term
‘groupie’. As the groupie subculture
emerged, several articles about women who could be
categorized as groupies were published, such
as Tom Wolfe’s (1965) ‘The Girl of the Year’ essay on Baby
Jane Holzer. But in the wake of the
Rolling Stone article, ‘alternate visions of what a groupie was
(or could be) were discarded in favor
of that offered by Rolling Stone and its highly sexualized and
misogynistic approach to the groupie
and rock culture’ (Rhodes, 2005: 137). As Rhodes (2005) then
carefully evidences, the Rolling
Stone article, which it is important to note is written entirely by
males, carried such power that any
further negotiation of the groupie identity ceased.
Consequently, it has provided what has been for
a long time, the definitive statement of what groupies are.
58. Warwick (2007) summarizes this view
of the groupie as
a kind of female fan assumed to be more interested in sex with
rock stars than in their music. Groupies are
understood to be ‘easy’ [i.e. sexually promiscuous], with low
self-esteem, and too stupid about music to be
proper fans, but also—paradoxically—predatory and
exploitative of the hapless musicians whose artistry
they cruelly ignore in their lust for celebrity sex. (p. 170)
which she argues is an unmistakably derisive and pejorative
description focusing almost entirely
on the sexual motivations of groupies. One of the greatest
concerns is that the label ‘groupie’ is
almost exclusively applied to females and has become a term
used to describe all female fans,
wives, and girlfriends and even those females who work in rock
music (Davies, 2001). This labe-
ling reduces the experiences of all women in rock to a singular
one driven by sex and effectively
excludes them from productive participation. It is to this crucial
issue that the article turns, as it
examines how the labeling of certain people as ‘groupies’ works
as an othering practice that
serves to support and maintain the gendered norms of rock and
thus exclude women from creative
production.
Beyond a surface-level recognition, we know little about
groupies other than that they are
reduced to some kind of caricature used in a derogatory manner
both by the popular media (Davies,
2001) and by fans (Hill, 2013) and are ‘treated like a punch line
to a never ending joke that only
the boys are in on’ (Forrest, 2010: 135). However, as we prise
59. beneath the surface, we begin to see
that the groupie identity sits at the intersection between the
social identities of gender and market-
place role. Gender has functioned as a primary site for the
analysis and interpretation of diversity
in the creative industries (e.g. Dean, 2008; Nixon and Crewe,
2004; Proctor-Thomson, 2013; Sang
et al., 2014). This is in large part because creativity, creative
work, and creative identities are con-
structed in such a way that women are marginalized or even
excluded. In the music industry,
women are underrepresented at all levels and in all roles
(Leonard, 2015); discounted in the music
Larsen 399
press and media (Davies, 2001), and even where they have been
acknowledged, their participation
is represented in gendered and often highly objectified ways
(Hatton and Trautner, 2011). While,
as Schippers (2000) notes, rock music is a setting in which
gender norms have sometimes been
challenged, particularly those related to appearance such as hair
length and the use of make-up, this
genre of music has long been synonymous with hegemonic
masculinity (e.g. Hill, 2014), heter-
onormativity (e.g. Frith and McRobbie, 1990 [1978]), and
homosociality (e.g. Davies, 2001) which
act as pillars upholding the patriarchy of rock.In the immortal
words of James Brown and (his
lesser known female co-writer and one-time girlfriend) Betty
Jean Newsom, ‘it’s a man’s, man’s,
man’s world’.
60. In working to exclude women from creative production, the
‘groupie’ identity draws not only
on gender identity but also on the dichotomy between work and
non-work. The key, relevant
social identity is what is called here ‘marketplace role’, which
categorizes people according to the
producer–consumer dualism. In the creative industries,
marketplace roles manifest in dualisms
such as artist–audience and musician–fan (e.g. Beauregard,
2012). Like any other social identity,
these categories imply subjectivities which define positions in
relationships between socio-
political actors and carry with them various assumptions and
statuses that serve to structure and
shape experience and engagement with the creative (e.g.
Bradshaw, 2010; Bradshaw et al., 2005).
An important assumption is that because a market requires both
production and consumption to
work, producers and consumers are co-dependent and therefore
hold equal status. This assump-
tion is underpinned by notions of consumer sovereignty
(Rothenberg, 1962), consumer subjectiv-
ity (Firat and Dholakia, 2016), and the logic of co-creation
(Vargo and Lusch, 2004; Venkatesh
and Meamber, 2006). However, not only have producers and
consumers largely been approached
in academia as separate, independent, and somewhat unrelated
entities but also consumers have
been historically viewed, particularly in the cultural and
creative sectors, as secondary, subordi-
nate figures (e.g. Beauregard, 2012; Huyssen, 1986). As noted
in the Call for Papers for this
Special Issue, much remains to be understood about how gender
intersects with other identities in
constructing experiences of creativity and creative wor k. There
has been little exploration of how
61. gender and marketplace roles intersect to frame who and what
type of work is considered to be
‘creative’ or productive and what the practices of inclusion and
exclusion are. This article puts
forth the argument that groupies are othered in both
categories—as women and as consumers, and
that in fact it is the intertwining of the two identities that has
underpinned and reinforced the
groupie identity, and thus helped construct and maintain the
patriarchy of rock music.
Following a deeper examination of the social identities of
gender and marketplace roles in the
context of rock music, this article draws on a rhetorical analysis
of five published biographical
accounts of groupies and rock wives in order to examine how
the labeling of certain people as
‘groupies’ works as an othering practice that maintains the
gendered norms of rock. Examining the
cultural phenomenon of the groupie retrospectively allows the
processes behind the construction
and maintenance of the identity and its consequences to be
explored. Three important discursive
processes emerge. First, popular and music media played a
significant role in stereotyping groupies
right from the emergence of the term. Second, the notions of
‘credibility’ and ‘authenticity’, which
are central to serious music journalism, are constructed in such
a way as to stigmatize and therefore
exclude, discredit, and invalidate the role of women in rock,
primarily by reframing ‘groupies’ as
inauthentic consumers rather than proper fans. Third, the
intertwining of femininity with fandom,
as occurs in the construction of the ‘groupie’, serves to magnify
cultural assumptions about women
as sex objects and as passive consumers of mass culture and
62. thus reinforces the groupie identity
and their exclusion from creative work in the world of rock.
This article contributes in important ways to a growing body of
literature that considers how
intersectional social identities are constructed and articulated in
rock music (Elafros, 2010) and the
400 Organization 24(3)
creative industries. It provides a historically and culturally
embedded account of how the ‘groupie’
label works as an othering practice to exclude women from
creative work. It resonates with and
builds upon other accounts in both the music and creative
industries (e.g. on processes of forgetting
identified by Strong (2011)) that have written women out of the
history of popular culture. It expands
our understanding of the role of gender in diversifying the
creative by locating the groupie identity
as the nexus of gender and marketplace role. Through the
processes identified, and contrary to the
transgressive and liberatory perspective taken by many of the
original groupies, the groupie identity
effectively reproduces and reinforces gendered hierarchies
within the creative industries. Finally, in
elucidating both the gender and marketplace politics at play in
the ‘groupie’ label and the discursive
processes involved in othering women, space is opened up
through which alternative possibilities
for understanding and enacting the role of women in rock can be
imagined.
Gender and rock music
63. The idea that notions of creativity and creative work are
gendered is one that is well established in
the literature (see, for example, Dean, 2008; Grugulis and
Stoyanova, 2012; Huyssen, 1986;
Leonard, 2015; Sang et al., 2014). Sustained academic interest
in gender and diversity in the crea-
tive industries is relatively recent, but the complex and thorny
relationship between gender and the
creative has long underscored important debates surrounding
culture and art. For example, Huyssen
(1986) elucidates and then interrogates the modernist notion of
mass culture as woman, and real,
authentic culture as man. He ultimately argues that while this
particular claim has lost its persua-
sive power as a result of a combination of feminist activism
increasing the presence of women in
art, and the postmodern project of the blurring of boundaries
between high art and mass culture,
gendering of the creative is still pervasive:
certain forms of mass culture, with their obsession with
gendered violence are more of a threat to women
than to men. After all, it has always been men rather than
women who have had real control over the
production of mass culture. (Huyssen, 1986: 62)
This is echoed in more recent research which shows how women
remain marginalized and excluded
from work and identities in such diverse sectors of the creative
industries as film and television
(e.g. Bielby and Bielby, 1996; Grugulis and Stoyanova, 2012),
acting and performance (e.g. Dean,
2008; Dean and Jones, 2003), and music (e.g. Davies, 2001;
Leonard, 2015; Maus, 2011). Even the
creative and cultural products that are produced and/or
64. consumed by females are valued less and
placed further down the cultural hierarchy than those of their
male counterparts, such as in the case
of the ‘inferior’ romance novels preferred by Flaubert’s
Madame Bovary (Huyssen, 1986); the
immensely successful Twilight series (Strong, 2009); and ‘girl
groups’, ‘boy bands’, and other
types of pop music (Railton, 2001). Strong (2009: p.1) argues
that the construction and naturaliza-
tion of females as occupants of the lower levels of the cultural
hierarchy is a form of ‘symbolic
violence that helps reproduce power relations between men and
women’. The key issue here is the
struggle over the control of cultural production, or who has the
power to define what creative work
is, who gets to do it, and under what conditions.
The rock industry has long been acknowledged and criticized
for being gendered male in many
facets and norms. First, the style and form of rock music is
commonly understood to be both
masculine and an expression of male sexuality (Frith and
McRobbie, 1990 [1978]). For example,
in rock performances, musicians are aggressive, dominating,
boastful, and in control; the music is
loud and rhythmically insistent; and the lyrics are assertive and
arrogant. August (2009) elabo-
rates that much, although not all, of the lyrical content of the
songs written by the rock band, the
Larsen 401
Rolling Stones, is misogynistic and promotes the subordination
and objectification of women.
65. ‘Musically, such rock takes off from the sexual frankness of
rhythm and blues but adds a cruder
male physicality (hardness, control, virtuosity)’ (Frith and
McRobbie, 1990 [1978]: 374). Second,
in terms of the nature and means of production, the rock music
business is run predominantly by
males. Musicians, writers, technicians, engineers, producers,
and road crew are largely male
(Frith and McRobbie, 1990 [1978]). Women remain
underrepresented (Leonard, 2015) with roles
limited to those that fit with male notions of female ability, for
example, singers and publicity
agents. Cohen (1997) illustrates how the rock scene is actively
produced as male through various
institutions and social practices. For example, social interaction
inside rock music venues is mas-
culine—referring to each other by nicknames; using technical
and in-house jargon; and sharing
the jokes, myths, and hype that surround the bands on the scene.
Third, mainstream rock music
press is gendered male in associations, assumptions, and
representations of the music and the
musicians (Elafros, 2010). The contributions of female
musicians are often excluded (Davies,
2001) or represented through the male gaze, as little more than
a body. Davies (2001) argues that
the British music press uses its own very particular idiom,
which is very similar to that found in
more explicitly ‘laddish’ magazines such as Loaded: ‘this
distinctive idiom is internalized by
aspiring music journalists, who realise that they must write in
the correct style to be successful.
Such compliance and conservatism mean that the sexism of the
music press is self-perpetuating’
(p. 316). Finally, even practices of fandom in rock music are
gendered male, particularly those
66. that occur publicly and are characterized by communal practices
of engagement (O’Reilly et al.,
2013). Arguing for a new, more gender-inclusive framework for
studying fans of hard rock and
heavy metal as a group, Hill (2014) explains that the
underlying gendered epistemology of fandom has resulted in a
dismissal of women fans or, at best, a
systematic reduction of their experiences as fans (such as
private engagements with the music, the
representation of women fans as groupies, and fannish activities
such as reading magazines and
participating in online fora). (p. 174)
This patriarchy of rock music appears to be held in place by
three distinct but interrelated forces
and their attendant institutions and practices: hegemonic
masculinity, heteronormativity, and
homosociality. Hegemonic masculinity, in its original and most
prevalent formulation, refers to
‘the pattern of practice […] that allowed men’s dominance over
women to continue’ (Connell and
Messerschmidt, 2005: 832). As introduced by Connell (1995),
hegemonic masculinity embodies
the most honored, culturally valued, and therefore ideal way of
being a man. While only a minority
of men might enact hegemonic masculinity, it is normative and
at its most powerful when under-
pinned by complicit masculinities (embodied by men who do
not conform to all characteristics of
hegemonic masculinity but because they do not resist it still
benefit from the patriarchy (Connell,
1995)) and compliance among heterosexual women. In effect, it
ideologically legitimates the sub-
ordination of women and non-hegemonic masculinities, to men.
Much of the existing literature on