Tag: co-host

  • Casbaa to co-host sports TV forum in China

    MUMBAI: China International Television Corp (CITVC) and the Cable & Satellite Broadcasting Association of Asia (Casbaa) have announced details of the inaugural China International Sports Television Forum.

    The event takes place in Beijing on 25 August 2005.

    The theme for the seminar is The Fastest Marathon – China Sports TV 2005-2008. The China International Sports TV Forum 2005 will be co-hosted by The State Administration of Radio, Film & Television (SARFT) and China Media Group, and supported by the Beijing Olympic Committee Organizing Group (Bocog) and national broadcaster CCTV. The event producer is national sports TV network CCTV-5, with front-running Chinese-language ISP, Sina.com as the main sponsor.

    CITVC president Li Jian says, “The objective of this year’s Forum is to highlight international best practices for the further development of the sports television market within China and to underline China’s increasing capacity to match those global standards.

    “During the forum we will examine the most innovative business models for sports television and exchange views and information on the latest technical advances in the run-up to the Beijing 2008 Olympics. We are particularly pleased to be working with BOCOG and Casbaa at this important time.”

    Casbaa chairman Marcel Fenez says, “As a regional industry organisation devoted to the advancement of multi-channel television, Casbaa is delighted to be partnering with CITVC on this project which our board of directors believes will add significantly to industry knowledge.”

    Participants at the event will include Bocog VC Jiang Xiao Yu, Sarft vice minister Tian Jin, Beijing Olympic Broadcasting COO Ma Guo Li, and CCTV VP Sun Yu Sheng.
     

  • US education department, PBS to co-host media summit

    MUMBAI: How does the US media impact on American children’s literacy skills? That is the question the US Department of Education and US public broadcaster PBS seek to answer when they co-host a summit A Child’s Life: Learning, Literacy and the Role of the Media,

    It will be held from 3-4 February 2005 in Baltimore.

    The event will offer participants an opportunity to learn about and exchange information on current research, insights and future projections as well as lay a foundation to forge new partnerships among the public broadcasting, reading research, technology and entertainment fields.

    Summit attendees will hear from American education experts who will consider how media — television, video games, computers and the Internet — shape and influence children’s abilities to process and retain information in their preschool and early elementary years.

    The keynote speaker Dr. Reid Lyon, chief of the child development and behaviour branch at the National Institutes of Health, will specifically outline about how children learn and the impact of using scientific evidence to influence the development of education-oriented television shows.

    Other panelists will address the complexities of today’s media, such as its contributions, current role and position, trends and potential obligation in facilitating language and literacy development for young children.

    The US education department has noted that American children are continually bombarded with different media influences that may shape the way they learn and perceive the world around them. The seminar is being looked upon as an opportunity to pull together the best and the brightest in the early learning, media and technology fields to address important questions facing educators, parents and caregivers.

    The summit will be moderated by education researcher Dr. Michael Cohen. He will present market and public opinion research to help identify potential solutions. PBS president and CEO Pat Mitchell said, “Knowing that children spend more time watching television than anything else, it is critical to understand media’s impact on children’s learning. Studies have shown that the media can be a powerful teaching tool, specifically that carefully constructed, educational programs improve pre-reading skills. By bringing together the best minds studying media and education, as well as representatives of organisations engaged in children’s media, we hope to build on that learning and work together with the US Department of Education to ensure that parents and children have choices in media that will strengthen children’s learning skills and enrich their minds.”