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Baran Book Cover
Introduction to Mass Communication, 2/e
Stanley J. Baran

Theories of Mass Communication

Multiple Choice Quiz



1

Middle-range theories are
A)explanations and predictions of social phenomena that attempt to relate mass communication to various aspects of our personal and cultural lives or social systems.
B)ideas that explain or predict only limited aspects of the mass communication process.
C)theories that explain media's influence over middle-class or typical people.
D)attempts to mediate between competing paradigms.
2

A paradigm is
A)a theory that summarizes and is consistent with all known facts.
B)an explanation of social phenomena that attempts to relate mass communication to various aspects of our personal and cultural lives or social systems.
C)an idea that explains or predicts only limited aspects of the mass communication process.
D)another name for grand social theory.
3

The Orson Wells radio production of The War of the Worlds began the era of _______ in the development of mass communication theory.
A)mass society theory
B)cultural theory
C)limited effects theory
D)the scientific perspective on mass communication theory
4

In studying how media's influence is affected by people's intelligence and education, individual differences theory is an example of the era of
A)mass society theory.
B)cultural theory.
C)limited effects.
D)the scientific perspective on mass communication theory.
5

In two-step flow theory, media influence passes from ___________ to opinion followers.
A)the media
B)opinion leaders
C)powerful elites
D)opinion makers
6

Uses and gratifications theory argues that
A)media don't do things to people, rather, people do things with media.
B)media producers can dictate the uses to which people put media.
C)only selected, especially well-crafted, media messages can influence gratifications.
D)people use media to gratify only unimportant needs, such as keeping up on fashions.
7

Klapper's reinforcement theory argues that
A)media are quite powerful, especially in the realm of reinforcement.
B)only selected, especially well-crafted, media messages can influence reinforcement.
C)media have little power, but what influence they do have is in the form of reinforcement.
D)mediating variables make media powerful agents of change.
8

Agenda-setting is a theory that argues that
A)reality is a social construction.
B)cultures attribute meaning to symbols which then control behavior.
C)media do not tell us what to think, but what to think about.
D)children can learn violence through watching television.
9

Dependency theory argues that
A)people learn to model the behaviors they see through observation.
B)audience members don't just passively take in and store bits of information, they actively process this information, reshape it, and store it.
C)media's influence resides in the relationship between the larger social system, the media's role in that system, and audience relationships to the media.
D)people who share a culture also share an "ongoing correspondence" of meaning.
10

According to ______________, television constructs a reality of the world that, although possibly inaccurate, becomes accepted simply because we as a culture believe it to be true.
A)critical cultural theory
B)the Frankfurt School
C)cultivation analysis
D)social construction of reality theory