Social Sciences, asked by divyakaveri, 1 year ago

How does television help us? ​

Answers

Answered by samyak03
0

⏩ Hey mate here is your answer ⏪

⏩With more and more ways of viewing TV available we now have access to a plethora of both good quality and inappropriate TV content. In this crowded television environment, the key is to provide young children with a guided viewing experience and to model and teach them the critical thinking skills they need to be active, engaged viewers.

Television offers lots of benefits to kids:

Because of its ability to create powerful touchstones, TV enables young people to share cultural experiences with others.

TV can act as a catalyst to get kids reading—following up on TV programs by getting books on the same subjects or reading authors whose work was adapted for the programs.

Television can teach kids important values and life lessons.

Educational programming can develop young children’s socialization and learning skills.

News, current events and historical programming can help make young people more aware of other cultures and people.

Documentaries can help develop critical thinking about society and the world.

TV can help introduce youth to classic Hollywood films and foreign movies that they might not otherwise see.

Cultural programming can open up the world of music and art for young people.⏪

♥️ Hope this will help you...!!!♥️

Answered by sumankaushal969
134

Explanation:

Television is really a three-part invention: the TV camera that turns a picture and sound into a signal; the TV transmitter that sends the signal through the air; and the TV receiver (the TV set in your home) that captures the signal and turns it back into picture and sound. TV creates moving pictures by repeatedly capturing still pictures and presenting these frames to your eyes so quickly that they seem to be moving. Think of TV as an electronic flick-book. The images are flickering on the screen so fast that they fuse together in your brain to make a moving picture (really, though they're really lots of still pictures displayed one after another).

When TV was first developed, all it could handle was black-and-white pictures; engineers struggled to figure out how to cope with color as well, which was a much more complex problem. Now the science of light tells us that any color can be made by combining a mixture of the three primary colors, red, green, and blue. So the secret of making color TV was to develop cameras that could capture separate red, green, and blue signals, transmission systems that could beam color signals through the air, and TV sets that could turn them back into a moving, multicolored image.

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