Abstract

Organizing educational broadcasting in the Republic of Korea has been difficult. The decade of the 1970s was a period of intensive planning, of producing and stockpiling television programmes, and of producing and transmitting radio programmes. Educational broadcasting is mainly under the auspices of the Korean Educational Development Institute (KEDI), which was made responsible in 1978 for producing programmes, while the task of transmission was assigned to the Korean Broadcasting System (KBS). This chapter is based largely on two American reports on KEDI, one written by Robert Morgan (1979) of Florida State University and the other edited by Paul Masoner and Frank Klassen (1979). KEDI staff have assisted in bringing this chapter up to date.

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