Although numerous media literacy interventions have been developed and delivered over the past 3 decades, a comprehensive meta-analytic assessment of their effects has not been available. This study investigates the average effect size and moderators of 51 media literacy interventions. Media literacy interventions had positive effects (d=.37) on outcomes including media knowledge, criticism, perceived realism, influence, behavioral beliefs, attitudes, self-efficacy, and behavior. Moderator analyses indicated that interventions with more sessions were more effective, but those with more components were less effective. Intervention effects did not vary by the agent, target age, the setting, audience involvement, the topic, the country, or publication status.
Convective assembly at high volume fraction was used to deposit silica nanoparticle coatings onto
glass and silicon substrates. By allowing control of the film structure and thickness, this technique provides
a means for making large-scale coatings with antireflective properties. The reflectance was reduced by
50% for silicon (at 600 nm) and by 70% for single glass/air surface. Microstructural investigations using
SEM, AFM, profilometry, and ellipsometry provided good correlation to the observed macroscopic optical
properties. By virtue of the coatings' uniformity, the reflectance and transmission spectra from both
substrates could be modeled well by classical reflection relations, using a volume-averaged refractive
index. Data analysis showed that the relatively high packing fraction in nanocoatings made from
monodisperse spheres is responsible for the limit on antireflective capabilities. To overcome this restriction,
low-density silica coatings were made from binary colloidal mixtures of different diameter SiO2 particles.
The packing fraction of these coatings was further optimized to yield 88% maximal reduction in the
reflectance of glass surfaces. The technique is simple, inexpensive, and scalable.
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