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The Plug-in Drug

by Marie Winn

The Plug-in Drug Cover

 

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

In The Plug-In Drug, Marie Winn demonstrates "with devastating persuasiveness" (The Washington Post) that television has a negative impact on child development, school achievement, and family life. But rather than focusing on program improvement as a solution, Winn proposes that the problem lies within the seductive act of TV watching itself. Extensive TV watching alters children's relations with the real world, depriving them of far more valuable real life experiences, especially playing and reading. Ever sympathetic to parents' need for relief, Winn proposes ways to control this addictive medium and live with it successfully. This 25th anniversary edition addresses the variety of new electronic media that have supplemented television in the home and increased children's bondage to screen experiences. It includes new sections on:

* Computers in the classroom

* Computer and video games

* The VCR

* The V-Chip and other control devices

* TV programming for babies

* Television and physical health

Book News Annotation:

This is the new edition of a book criticizing the effects of television on children, their schooling, and family relationships. The author argues that pretty much nothing has changed since the book was first published in 1977. Expanding her analysis to other electronic media, she suggests that many of the same problems are associated with the use of other electronic media. In chapters new to this edition, she discusses computers in the classrooms; video games, VCRS, and other electronic playthings.
Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Synopsis:

How does the passive act of watching television and other electronic media-regardless of their content-affect a developing child's relationship to the real world? Focusing on this crucial question, Marie Winn takes a compelling look at television's impact on children and the family. Winn's classic study has been extensively updated to address the new media landscape, including new sections on: computers, video games, the VCR, the V-Chip and other control devices, TV programming for babies, television and physical health, and gaining control of your TV.

Synopsis:

The landmark book on TV addiction and children is now completely revised and updated to include the variety of electronic media (computers, VCRs, and video games) that have supplemented TV in the home and increased children's bondage to the screen. (Available now)

About the Author

Marie Winn has written thirteen books, among them Children Without Childhood, Unplugging the Plug-In Drug, and Red-Tails in Love. She currently writes a column about nature for the Wall Street Journal. She has two grown children and four grandchildren who are growing up without television.

Table of Contents

Preface

The Good-Enough Family

Note about the Twenty-fifth Anniversary Edition

Part I. The Television Experience

1. It's Not What You Watch

The Concerns

About the Contents and Susceptible Kids

What Does Not Happen

Why Do Parents Focus on Content?

Television Savants

A Strange and Wonderful Quiet

2. A Changed State of Consciousness

Television Zombies

The Shutdown Mechanism

Concentration or Stupor?

Passivity

The Reentry Syndrome

3. The Power of the Medium

Why Is It So Hard to Stop Watching?

Why It Captures the Child

Cookies or Heroin?

4. The Experts

Dr. Spock and the Tube

The Medical Establishment

Physical Effects

5. Television and Violence: A Different Approach

First a Disclaimer

Looking for a Link

Making the Wrong Connection

Part II. Television and Early Childhood

6. Television for Tots

Baby Viewers

Sesame Street Revisited

The Echoes of Sesame Street

How Much Do They Understand?

7. Television and the Brain

Brain Changes

Critical Early Experience

A Caveat

Nonverbal Thinking

Brain Hemispheres

A Commitment to Language

8. Television and Play

Less Play

The Meaning of Play

An Experiment of Nature

Play Deprivation

Part III. Television and the School Years

9. A Defense of Reading

What Happens When You Read

Losing the Thread

The Basic Building Blocks

A Preference for Watching

Home Attitudes

Lazy Readers

Nonbooks

What About Harry Potter?

Radio and Reading

If You Can't Beat 'Em, Join 'Em

Why Books?

10. Television and School

A Negative Relationship

A Stepping Stone out of a Stumbling Block (Media Literacy)

Television for Homework

Commercials in the Classroom

A Primary Factor

Part IV. How Parents Use Television

11. Before Television

The Bad Old Days

A New Light on Childhood

How Modern Parents Survived Before Television

Finally It "Took"

12. Free Time and Resourcefulness

No Free Time

Attachment and Separation

Why Kids Can't Amuse Themselves

"Nothing to Do"

Competing with TV

The Half-Busy Syndrome

Waiting on Children

Sickness as a Special Event

Back to the Past

13. Family Life

The Quality of Life

Family Rituals

Real People

Undermining the Family

Part V. New Technologies

14. Computers in the Classroom

Do They Help?

Big Bucks

Computers in Early Childhood

Why Computers Are Not the Answer

What Are They Replacing?

The Computer-Television Connection

Why Not Get Rid of Them?

The Problems of Bucking the Tide

Computers to Enhance Reading

Computer vs. Workbook

On the High School and College Front

A Matter of Balance

15. Home Electronics

The VCR

A Wonderful Addition to the Family

Lapware

Computer Toys

Video Games

Computer Games

Screen Time

Part VI. Controlling Television

16. Out of Control

How Parents Get Hooked

A Terrible Saga

Undisciplined, Grumpy Children

Ten Reasons Why Parents Can't Control TV

Ubiquity

A Chilling Episode

A Longing for Passivity

17. Gaining Control

Real Conviction

Firm Rules

Control Devices and the V-Chip

Natural Control

Decontrol as a Means of Control

Help from the Outside

Videoholics Anonymous

Part VII. No Television

18. TV Turnoffs

Three Family Before-and-After Experiments

Organized TV Turnoffs

Why Did They Go Back?

19. No-TV Families

Getting Rid of Television: Four Families That Did It

No Television Ever

CODA: The Television Generation

Who Is the Televisin Generation?

Mystery of the Declining SATs

Making Inferences

Writing Is Book Talk

Television and the Social Chill

What Is to be Done?

The Passive Pull

Helpful Organizations

Brief Bibliography

Endnotes

Acknowledgments

Index

Product Details

ISBN:
9780142001080
Author:
Winn, Marie
Publisher:
Penguin Books
Location:
New York
Subject:
Children's Studies
Subject:
Parenting
Subject:
Mass Media - Electronics Media
Subject:
Computers and children
Subject:
Television and children
Subject:
Television and family
Subject:
Television programs for children
Subject:
Computers and family.
Subject:
Parenting - General
Subject:
Media Studies - Electronic Media
Subject:
Child Development
Subject:
General Family & Relationships
Subject:
Sociology-Media
Copyright:
Edition Number:
25
Edition Description:
Anniversary
Series Volume:
v. 4
Publication Date:
20020331
Binding:
TRADE PAPER
Grade Level:
from 12
Language:
English
Illustrations:
Yes
Pages:
352
Dimensions:
7.75x5.07x.64 in. .52 lbs.
Age Level:
from 18

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The Plug-in Drug Used Trade Paper
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Product details 352 pages Penguin Books - English 9780142001080 Reviews:
"Synopsis" by ,
How does the passive act of watching television and other electronic media-regardless of their content-affect a developing child's relationship to the real world? Focusing on this crucial question, Marie Winn takes a compelling look at television's impact on children and the family. Winn's classic study has been extensively updated to address the new media landscape, including new sections on: computers, video games, the VCR, the V-Chip and other control devices, TV programming for babies, television and physical health, and gaining control of your TV.
"Synopsis" by , The landmark book on TV addiction and children is now completely revised and updated to include the variety of electronic media (computers, VCRs, and video games) that have supplemented TV in the home and increased children's bondage to the screen. (Available now)

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