Educational television
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Educational television is the use of television programmes in the field of education. It may be in the form of individual programmes or a dedicated television channel.
Many children's television series are educational, ranging from dedicated learning programmes to those that indirectly teach the viewers. Some series are written to have a specific moral behind every episode, often explained at the end by the character that learnt the lesson. There are also educational programmes for an older audience, such as the broadcasts on the BBC by the distance learning service Open University.
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- Arkansas Educational Television Network (Arkansas, 1966–present)
- Cobb Education Television (Cobb County, Georgia, 2004–present)
- Kentucky Educational Television (Kentucky, 1968–present)
- National Educational Television (1952–1970) — became the Public Broadcasting Service
- Oklahoma Educational Television Authority (Oklahoma, 1956–present)
- South Carolina Educational Television (South Carolina, 1960–present)
India
Vyas the Higher Education channel run by the University Grants Commission(UGC), the apex funding body for universities of the Country. Programmes for the Channel are produced by 17 Educational Multimedia Research Centres set up by the Cmmission. They Are controllled by the Ugc's Consortium for Educational Communication(CEC) based at New Delhi. Another educational Channnell is the GyanDarshan run By the Indra Gandhi National Open University(IGNOU. These programmes are also telecast on DD1,DD Bharati, India's National television channels. www.cec-ugc.org
- Educational Television, a series of educational programmes in Hong Kong
- Eureka!, Canada (1980)
- Wonder Why, Canada (1990–1992)