3. In conclusion, by looking at research into audience ‘uses’ and ‘effects’, it is easy to see that there is a relationship between the media and the audience. Research methods vary and themselves have different effects. The methods used in the research of media effects on the audience are often stringent and formal, such as the laboratory research by Bandura, with the unnatural setting having a bearing on the results. On the other hand, the research methods used when investigating how the audience uses the media and how the media use the audience are more qualitative. Such research may use interviews and observations made in a ‘real’ and ‘natural’ environment and, therefore, the results are often more accurate and meaningful but harder to quantify. The research into the audience in terms of ‘effects’ and ‘uses’ can then give an insight into how the audience is affected. For instance, we see how consumption of certain media, such as violent videos, may affect children’s behaviour or attitude. Contrastingly, we see also how the audience uses the media in everyday life, in their routines and conversations, such as in Trinidad. Finally, we can also see how the audience can affect what the media produce, such as the development of relevant and contemporary topics in The Archers in Afghanistan. The Archers has now become part of Afghan national life. The characters are so well-known that real public figures have been known to compare each other to them. When the Taliban controlled the country they allowed New Home New Life to continue – though a group did turn up at the studios in Kabul demanding to see what was going on (Thompson, 2010). This is how and why the audience is researched in terms of ‘effects’ and ‘uses’.
Source: M. Thompson (2010) ‘Nation Speaking Peace Unto Nation: The BBC’s Global Mission’, available at: http://www.chathamhouse.org.uk/files/16574_110510thompson.pdf (accessed 5 September 2010).
In some ways, this is quite a comprehensive conclusion. It fully addresses the ‘how’ of the question, and recaps the material from the main body of the essay.
However, it goes too far with the recapping and veers into discussion that should have remained in the essay’s main body. At the end, it commits the cardinal sin of adding new material. Although it is related to a previous discussion, Conclusion 3 provides a short anecdote about New Home New Life, which should have been in the main body of the essay. The final statement, ‘This is how and why the audience is researched in terms of “effects” and “uses”,’ does not follow on from the previous sentence – in part, of course, because the previous sentence is new material.
In the end, it fails explicitly to address the ‘why’ part of question – although answers to ‘why’ are implicit in much of the conclusion.