TABLE OF CONTENTS

 



Topic #1
TV Program Ratings
Introduction


What is a rating/share?

Math Activity One


One Week's Ratings  

Math Activity Two  

Syndicated Programming

Sample Ratings Page

Sweeps

What Do Ratings Represent

Math Activity Three

30 Sec. Ad Costs

Math Activities 4 & 5

Accuracy & Ratings

Market Sizes

Math Activity Six

Articles About Ratings

Related Media Math Lesson Plans
 


 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

wpe2.jpg (3977 bytes)Math In The Media wpe1.jpg (4219 bytes)

                                  Media Math Activity Two

1. The first thing you will want your students to do is: become familiar with the one page handout. Never having seen the ratings in this format, the following questions are designed to help them.

a. Note: the networks are listed alphabetically across the top ( ABC, CBS, NBC, etc). These are broadcast networks, so students will NOT find cable networks or programs. Just below the network logos is a darkened row, which lists the average rating/share for that hour.

b. The days of the week are listed down the left hand column. So, the first row represents all of the ratings for shows broadcast on Monday of that week.

c. Have students notice the KEY box located in the lower right hand side of the page. Ask them to determine what one RATING point represents.

d. Looking at 8:00pm for ABC on Monday night, you will notice the program "20/20 Downtown"; to the left of the program name is a number, in this case, the number 22. Ask students what this number represents. (It represents the fact that "20/20 Downtown" was the 22nd highest rated program of the week.)

e. Ask students to locate and document the top 10 programs for the week.
They should try to chart not only the program name, but the date and time, network name, rating and share. For example:

#1  Who Wants to Be A Millionaire?   Tuesday, 8:00pm  ABC, 9.8/19
#2  Who Wants to Be A Millionaire?  Thursday, 9:00pm ABC, 6.5/13

f. Ask students if they notice any trends about their list.

g. Some math and media literacy problems:

   -If  Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? received a 9.8 rating on Tuesday night, how many TV households were watching? 
   -If  Dawson's Creek received a 1.6 rating on Wednesday night, how many TV households were watching?
   -If one 30-second commercial costs $290,000 during Dawson's Creek, and there are 8 commercials in the program, how much money is generated for the WB network?
- Have students determine the cost per household during Dawson's Creek. This involves dividing the total number of households by the cost of the 8 commercials?
- Which day of the week, which hour and which network ranked highest?   lowest?
- Which TV show has the highest share? the lowest share?
- After looking at a program's competition, can you come to any conclusions?
- Ask students to make a list of different genres of programs (situation comedy; drama; talk show; news magazine; movie);
 then have them document the rating/share for each program in a genre. Can they make any conclusions based on their findings?
- If you were going to advertise for new back-to-school clothes, which TV show would you want to air your commercial?  Why?
- Which show probably receives the highest price for commercials?  the lowest?   Why?



Site updated on:  08/08/2006