Besides "Sesame Street" and other PBS kids' programs, UNC-TV (PBS in NC) does an hour or so of educational programs between 4 and 5 or 5 and 6 on weekday mornings. It's usually GED-oriented, though.
Raymie said:Most classrooms still had their C1-issued TVs. Two for some reason were tuner-based, which I think was nicer but a little more work for the teacher (manual turn-on).
vchimpanzee said:I somehow missed this topic.
I remember watching "Sesame Street" on a TV in the classroom as a sixth grader on several occasions. That would have been 1972 or 1973.
nomadcowatbk said:Raymie said:Most classrooms still had their C1-issued TVs. Two for some reason were tuner-based, which I think was nicer but a little more work for the teacher (manual turn-on).
They're early 90s Magnavox, aren't they?
BMR said:vchimpanzee said:I somehow missed this topic.
I remember watching "Sesame Street" on a TV in the classroom as a sixth grader on several occasions. That would have been 1972 or 1973.
I thought Sesame Street was aimed at younger kids than that? (sixth grade is about 10 years old, yes?)
Eleven, and yes, I complained that this was little kids' programming. As I recall, it was a substitute teacher.BMR said:vchimpanzee said:I somehow missed this topic.
I remember watching "Sesame Street" on a TV in the classroom as a sixth grader on several occasions. That would have been 1972 or 1973.
I thought Sesame Street was aimed at younger kids than that? (sixth grade is about 10 years old, yes?)
Thank goodness your school still has Channel One. Ever since this group in Alabama called Obligation Inc. started up in the mid '90s, they've been persuading schools all across the country to drop Channel One, and actually have succeeded in thousands of schools. Don't want to rant too much about it (even though I have a lot to say about it), but I think Obligation's mission to cancel Channel One News is a bit ridiculous. It seems pretty harmless to me.Greg Goodfellow said:I teach in a Channel 1 school (and play broadcast geek online)...
The Channel 1 box was pretty much as the previous poster stated. Now all the shows (the newscasts and educational programs) are brought in, and show up in the morning. The TV attached to the Channel one box comes up with a interactive menu similar to a DVR, and the shows can be transmitted by the proverbial touch of a button. There is no VCR mechanism in the Channel 1 box as in the olden days.
As for TVs in the classrooms, many teachers (and all the staff in the newest part of the building) have LCD projectors and SmartBoards to use for computer, etc, as well as a DVD-VCR combo with a tuner that acts as the TV set.
I'm old school--got my 25" Toshiba bolted to the wall!
Everything above applies to me as well, including the 90s Magnavox a poster mentioned. Our school has had Channel One since '93, when our two high schools consolidated. Our in-school TV broadcast (which isn't on because our two-year-old Tricaster died) would go out through the system. Their techs had to come twice, as we suspect wires were accidentally cut by another group of contractors.
Very few of these TVs have been replaced, but much larger and newer sets have bit the dust.