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Winter 1987 Volume 25 Number 4 |
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Television as a Delivery SystemS. Kay Rockwell
James K. Randall
"Farm and Ranch Report," a television series designed to provide agricultural producers in Nebraska with current production and marketing information, first aired in May 1982 and continued during the growing season through 1985. Using a magazine format, Extension specialists and agents discussed timely topics in crop and livestock production and marketing on each weekly program. Farm and Ranch Report: The First Four Years1 reports three interviews conducted with the program's target audience toward the end of the growing seasons in 1982, 1983, and 1985 (573, 532, and 511 farmers, respectively). The primary objective for all three studies was to obtain viewership statistics from the target audience and reactions to the program from the regular viewers. Conclusions Some of our conclusions based on these studies include:
Implications Continual programming over several years is an important factor in developing an audience when Extension selects television as a delivery system. Through this continual programming, Extension begins to attract viewers who aren't among its regular clientele. Delivering production and marketing information via television appears to be accepted well by farmers/ranchers as a method for receiving pertinent and timely information. To increase the value of the program within its cost guidelines, segments can be used in multiple ways, such as distribution for broadcast through other appropriate television and radio avenues. Footnotes 1. S. K. Rockwell and J. K. Randall, Farm and Ranch Report: The First Four Years (Lincoln: University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Cooperative Extension Service, 1986). 2. S. K. Rockwell, Testing and Evaluating a Flow Chart for Identifying Program Impact with Implications for Evaluation (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 1984).
This article is online at http://www.joe.org/joe/1987winter/rb2.html.
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