Specifically, he researched the effect of television on children's knowledge of occupational roles, and on the factors that influence the content and output of the American broadcasting systems.
12.
Media organization level is distinguished from routines as this level describes larger organizational and occupational context such as organizational policy, occupational roles, and how the media enterprise itself is structured.
13.
In sociological terms, urban refers to an area characterized by a relatively high degree of specialization in occupational roles, many special-purpose institutions, and uniform treatment of people in impersonal settings.
14.
Klass noted in 1978 that it was still a focal point of sorts for the villages that surrounded it because many Brahmin priests continued to live there, along with other castes with specialist occupational roles.
15.
There are lots of reasons that communities become over-represented in various occupational roles that have nothing much to do with the community in question except for the fact that the community becomes self-reinforcing.
16.
Jews were re-cast into various economic occupational roles, and as a result became a people that could be coveted, sold, or traded for economic purposes by those in power at the time.
17.
Fawcett's roles continued in 1949 as Professor ( He got to portray his previous occupational role ) Hammil, a scientist and inventor, in " Batman and Robin " and as Merlin the Magician in " Adventures of Sir Galahad ".
18.
In a study done by Mastro and Stern ( 2003 ) examining frequencies of different races in commercials, Latinos were shown to advertise soap or hygiene products in 43 % of ads they are featured in, closely followed by other non-occupational roles advertising clothing or footwear.
19.
Up until the latter portion of the 20th century in OECD countries, and contemporarily in developing countries around the word, young people made the transition from adolescence to young adulthood around or by the age of 22, when they settled into long-lasting, obligation-filled familial and occupational roles.
20.
As a result of their day-to-day routines, people develop special preferences, antipathies, discriminations and emphases . ( The term " psychosis " is used by Dewey to denote a " pronounced character of the mind " . ) These psychoses develop through demands put upon the individual by the particular organization of his occupational role.