Beth/Michael- I've seen many of the videos. The later ones are in color, the 
acting is somewhat better, and it worked with kids as actor/model as well as 
the oddly (now) clad adult (but you did remind me I should probably go back and 
re-view those!). :)
Tim
_______________________________
Timothy O. Shearon, PhD
Professor and Chair Department of Psychology
The College of Idaho
Caldwell, ID 83605
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

teaching: intro to neuropsychology; psychopharmacology; general; history and 
systems

"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." Dorothy Parker



-----Original Message-----
From: beth benoit [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tue 6/3/2008 12:33 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: RE: [tips] B/W TV versus Color
 
The Bandura experiment films I have are in color/colour.  But still very 
stilted.  The woman in the film, in skirt, heels, and Peter Pan collar, who 
wields those fists in such a ladylike manner always elicits a laugh in class.  
(Starting with me, I cannot tell a lie.)  In contrast, I LOVE the little girl, 
with pigtails and party dress, who "goes house" on poor Bobo with great 
enthusiasm and creativity.
I agree though, that younger students are likely to think that b&w films aren't 
relevant.  I don't know how to overcome that prejudice.  Wish I could show some 
nice clip comparing the same scene in color and then in b&w.  It might open 
their minds a bit to their own prejudices.
Beth Benoit
Granite State College, New Hampshire
 

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