Developing Research and Analysis
Holly Butler, s2967605, COM15 Developing Research and Analytical Skills, Assignment 3 â Research ReportContentsContents PageExecutive SummaryResearch QuestionResearch5-6. Literature Review7-8. Findings9-10. Discussion11. Conclusion12-13. ReferencesExecutive SummaryCriminality is defined as âactivities that are in violation of the laws of the stateâ. The research question is How is criminality represented on Drama television?.The Findings draw interesting points about criminality, forensics and television drama and the Discussion looks at three tv crime drama shows NCIS, CSI and Criminal Minds.Research question: How is criminality represented on Drama television?Research Research was obtained using Google Scholar through searching keywords relating to CSI, NCIS, Criminal Minds, and Cultivation Theory. Websterâs Online Dictionary was used to source definitions.Literature ReviewCriminality is defined by the Webster Dictionary (2014) as being âactivities that are in violation of the laws of the stateâ, âthe quality or state of being criminalâ and âcriminal activityâ. It is represented in different ways, from the crime, to the criminal, to the people trying to catch the criminal, justice and the families affected by the crime.
Major themes that appear through all four readings within our topic list folder all seem to tie into Criminality and Drama Television. Klein, Romer, FergusonKlein (2011) states that âthe educational potential of entertainment television has been acknowledged, with varying degrees of enthusiasm, through research into entertainment-education strategies, intersections of politics and popular media, and the mediated public sphereâ (p2). In her paper “Entertaining ideas: social issues in entertainment televisionâ, Klein explores the research she gained through what is currently available on Entertainment Education and her own interviews. Initially, she examines the question of stereotypical perception of Educational Entertainment and how this has become linked with social perception. She then explores the research on three elements: Politics, Unconventional Television (relating to specific Television shows) and Social Perception in relation to Social Issues (Crimes Against Children, Disability and Immigration pp911-914). The final part of the argument concerns the initiation of the entertainment-education framework to discuss how it questions the predisposition of the viewing population to compartmentalize programs and the possibility that society is engaging ourselves to the notion of equality, establishes entertainment programming as being an extremely useful tool and here she states that more entertainment personnel need to step out of the conventional and into the unconventional. (p918)