August 2006 Archives

Working on updating my blog links (and my point of view), and ran across the "Talking with Kids" website. Of particular interest was their guidance on talking with your kids about news. Here's their Step One:

The first step is understanding how the news works. It is important to keep these things in mind when talking with your kids about what they see on the news:

* News reports focus on the unusual. While this might seem obvious to adults, it can be difficult for children to understand. Seldom will you see a news story focused on the thousands of airplanes that take off and land safely on any given day. However, it becomes headline news when out of those many safe flights, one is involved in a plane crash. Often news coverage of particular issues is disproportionate to their occurrences in real life. For example, news coverage of crime has increased in recent years, even though the total crime rate has decreased significantly.

* The news often reports only the simple facts of a story. Who? What? When? Where? Why? How? These are the six questions journalists try to answer in even the briefest news report. This leaves very little time to add background, context, or explanation to complex news. In fact a typical broadcast news story is only 30 seconds long. Even though newspapers can provide more contextual information than TV news, the average print report is only 400 words. The result is our kids only hear who's killing whom with little or no explanation of why those countries are at war.

While several of the 10 tips are kid-centric, I think a few can benefit even the most hard core news junkie like me, for instance Number 5: "Let your kids know the difference between news and reality" and Number 8: "Acknowledge the complexity of the news."

Sometimes it doesn't hurt to get back to basics.

Just got an email from Steve Forbes:

I want to acknowledge your communication with us on the article “Don’t Marry Career Women.” Sensitive issues demand sensitive treatment. The piece that appeared on Forbes.com this past week was intended to be part academic and part humorous. Instead, it profoundly offended hard-working career women everywhere. We deeply regret having done so.

Steve Forbes

President and Editor-in-Chief
Forbes

Yeah, yeah. Still won't make me sign up for Forbes.com or re-subscribe to their rag.

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from August 2006 listed from newest to oldest.

July 2006 is the previous archive.

September 2006 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.