Exam 1: Understanding and Evaluating Mass Communication Theory
Exam 1: Understanding and Evaluating Mass Communication Theory30 Questions
Exam 2: Establishing the Terms of the Debate Over Media: The First Trend in Mass Communication Theorymass Society and Propaganda Theories30 Questions
Exam 3: Normative Theories of Mass Communication28 Questions
Exam 4: The Emergence of the Media-Effects Trend in Mass Communication Theory30 Questions
Exam 5: The Consolidation of the Media Effects Trend30 Questions
Exam 6: The Emergence of the Critical Cultural Trend in North America30 Questions
Exam 7: Theories of Media and Social Learning30 Questions
Exam 8: Theories of Media and Human Development27 Questions
Exam 9: Audience Theories: Uses and Reception30 Questions
Exam 10: Theories of Media Cognition and Information Processing30 Questions
Exam 11: Effect of Media on Knowledge, Information, and Perception of Social Issues30 Questions
Exam 12: Effect of Media on Community and Everyday Culture29 Questions
Exam 13: Media and Culture Theories: Meaning Making in the Social World30 Questions
Exam 14: Media and Culture Theories: Commodification of Culture and Mediatization30 Questions
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Which was the first dominant perspective on mass media?
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
B
Most, if not all, who call themselves social scientists adhere to the same standards for conducting research and accepting evidence.
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(True/False)
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Correct Answer:
False
At the heart of the meaning-making trend in theory is a focus on a more-or-less active audience that uses media content to _________.
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(Multiple Choice)
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Correct Answer:
A
Like legacy media, large-scale social media are largely unregulated and are bound by few social or professional norms.
(True/False)
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British cultural studies, which focuses on media and their role in promoting the interests of dominant elites at the expense of less powerful groups, is based on __________ notions of mass communication.
(Multiple Choice)
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Contemporary mass communication theories must be reconsidered inasmuch as large-scale social media, unlike more traditional forms of media, do not rely on advertising for their revenues.
(True/False)
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One of the difficulties in applying notions of causality to human behaviour is that people have goals and are self-reflexive.
(True/False)
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Humans think about their behavior, values, beliefs, and attitudes. In other words, they are ___________
(Multiple Choice)
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Interpretive theorists who set aside their values when investigating a text are said to be ___________.
(Multiple Choice)
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One of the driving forces behind the development of new mass communication theories is changes in media technology.
(True/False)
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Because one essential argument of mass society theory was that media subvert and disrupt the existing social order, fierce debate broke out over who should be trusted control media.
(True/False)
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_______ are older forms of mass media such as newspapers, magazines, radio, movies, and most importantly television.
(Multiple Choice)
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______________ theories are based on empirical research and adherence to the scientific method.
(Multiple Choice)
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The type of mass communication theory that might be involved when studying how well the mainstream American press serve democratic principles is ______________ theory.
(Multiple Choice)
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More so than other mass communication theorists, critical cultural theorists rely heavily on the scientific method when conducting research.
(True/False)
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Questions of the place of values in theory and research are issues of_______.
(Multiple Choice)
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________ occurs when a given factor influences another, even by way of an intervening variable.
(Multiple Choice)
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"I'm not affected by media," Sally often claims, "But those other people? They're easily influenced by slick media messages." Sally suffers from _________.
(Multiple Choice)
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Mass communication researchers sometimes differ in their view of the nature of reality, that is, in their epistemology.
(True/False)
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