The Children‘s Media Conference
TV & Film
Broadcasters offer preschool programming for children aged 0-6 years, a very wide age span. Because there’s always the chance that the youngest children in the audience might be watching without an adult, broadcasters tend to favour content that does not contain anything too scary or sophisticated for a 2-3 year old, even if it is intended for an older audience. Where can 4-6 year olds find developmentally appropriate content that will arm them with the cognitive, social and emotional tools they will need for school and beyond? Some UK-funded live-action programming does cater to that older audience, but preschool animation tends to play it safe. Can we take more risks in our storytelling to serve 4-6 year olds? How? Parents, broadcasters, writers and academics are brought together to discuss the challenges and possibilities.
CMC 2016 - Commissioner Conversations - Disney
CMC 2016 - Commissioner Conversations - BBC
CMC 2016 - Research 3 - Through The Looking Glass
CMC 2016 - Research 5 - Do Children Still Like Reading?
CMC 2016 - Research 9 - Here Come The Boys
CMC 2016 - Research 8 - The C-Word
CMC 2016 - Research 7 - Emotional Scheduling: The Role of Families in Kids’ Entertainment
CMC 2016 - Research 6 - Tuning Into Pre-Schoolers
CMC 2016 - Research 4 - Are Digital Tools Making Children More Creative?
CMC 2016 - Research 2 - The Rise of the VOD Natives
CMC 2016 - Research 1 - Continuity and Change: The Impact of Online on Children’s TV Viewing
CMC 2016 The Last Word - George the Poet
CMC 2016 Changemaker - Jess Thom
CMC 2015 - The Web We Want
CMC 2015 - Play, Make and Share: Inspiring Creativity
CMC 2015 - Licensed to Thrill
CMC 2015 - Learning by App
CMC 2015 - Learning: A Land of Opportunity?
CMC 2015 - From Tokenism to Truthful
CMC 2015 - Finance Lab
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Cinema: A to B
I Finally Watched...
Star Wars Escape Pod
Pod Meets World
Kill James Bond!