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Notes

Some of the references in the notes that follow can be located readily only through the
ERIC Clearinghouse, a U.S. Department of Education--supported computerized
repository of documents relating to all aspects of education and training. Whenever
appropriate, therefore, ERIC Document Reproduction Service numbers are supplied for
the convenience of readers desirous of following up on sources cited.

Readers can access the ERIC system directly by computer in most college and
university libraries. Readers can also obtain hard copy or microfiche prints of
documents by writing or calling the ERIC Document Reproduction Service, 3900
Wheeler Avenue, Alexandria, VA 22303, 1-800-227-3742.


INTRODUCTION
1. James Martin, The Wired City ( Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1978).
2. Eric Barnow, The Image Empire, A History of Broadcasting in the United
States from 1953
( New York: Oxford University Press, 1970), p. 72.
3. Educational Television: The Next Ten Years ( Stanford, CA: The Institute for
Communication Research, 1962), pp. 11, 12.
4. Judith Murphy and R. Gross, Learning by Television ( New York: Fund for the
Advancement of Education, 1966). ERIC Document Reproduction No. ED 012 622.
5. Time, October 20, 1967.
6. "Long Distance Learning Gets an 'A' at Last," Business Week, May 9, 1988,
108-11. The statement quoted is by Nicholas Johnson.
7. See Walter Perry, The Open University ( San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1977).
8. Wilbur Schramm et al., The New Media -- Memo to Educational Planners
( Paris: UNESCO Institute for Educational Planning, 1967). See also Schramm, gen'l
ed., New Educational Media in Action, 3 vols., also published by the UNESCO
Institute in the same year.

-169-

Questia, a part of Gale, Cengage Learning. www.questia.com

Publication Information: Book Title: The Uses of Television in American Higher Education. Contributors: James Zigerell - author. Publisher: Praeger Publishers. Place of Publication: New York. Publication Year: 1991. Page Number: 169.
    
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