We use cookies to give you the best experience and to help improve our website.

Find out more about how we use cookies Thanks for letting me know
Skip to main content
Jisc logo 0203 697 5800
  • Digital content
    • eJournals
    • Learning and teaching resources
    • Maps and geospatial data
    • eBooks
    • Film and images
    • Archives
    Jisc Collections

    Finding, negotiating and providing digital content for education and research in the UK

  • Network & IT services
    • Security
    • Connectivity
    • Authentication
    • Procurement
    • Cloud
    • Email
    • Internet and IP services
    • Telecoms
    • Videoconferencing
    Janet

    Janet manages the operation and development of the UK’s research and education network

  • Advice
    • Student experience
    • Institutional management
    • Research excellence
    • Reducing costs
    • Future trends
    • Advisory services
    • Training
    Regional Support Centres

    Our 12 Regional Support Centres work across the UK, providing advice and support

  • Research & development
    Co-design

    Find out how we're piloting a new approach to projects and funding

    • Projects
    • Programmes
    • Funding and co-design
    • Running a Jisc project
Close search results

  • News
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Publications
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home
  • News
  • Television in education ‑ find over five million broadcasts and use them
News

Television in education - find over five million broadcasts and use them

16 July 2005

Television has the power to mould the thinking of a nation. It has long
been acknowledged, perhaps tacitly, that the medium can be immensely
effective not only in enhancing the education experience, but also in
leading it. Because television covers such a broad range of subjects, there
is something for everyone. Whether you are teaching ‘A’ Level biology or
undertaking doctoral study in economics, there will be a programme of
relevance to you. Students, teachers, university administrators, even
Vice-Chancellors, can all use such content to enrich the learning
experience.
How, though, can you tap into these resources, when the programme you need
may have been shown many years ago? How can you find out what relevant
programmes have been shown, let alone locate a copy? The best place to
start is the Television and Radio Index for Learning and Teaching (TRILT),
one of the unique database services of the British Universities Film & Video
Council (BUFVC). Users of the full TRILT service (who must be
from BUFVC member institutions – see more information)
are able to search across records of five million broadcasts from more than
330 radio and television channels received in the UK, going back more than
ten years. Not only that, but the BUFVC operates an Off Air Recording Back
Up Service which can supply copies of missed programmes to its members,
providing they hold an ERA licence. The Service records up to 44,000 hours
per annum of programmes from seven UK television channels. The two
services are now linked and users of TRILT can instantly see what
programmes are available from BUFVC while they are searching the database.

The TRILT service was enhanced thanks to funding from the Jisc's
Learning and Teaching 5/99 programme
.

Most read
  • Changes to Jisc funding
  • Oxford University Press joins OAPEN-UK project
  • Jisc Collections boosts online learning resources for engineering and technology students
  • Development underway for shared national library services in Scotland and Wales
  • E-books for FE project provides new titles to improve online teaching and learning
Related
  • Launching the world’s first 3D virtual fossil collection
  • Changes to Jisc funding
  • Universities have improved access to mobile services, new report shows
  • BFI Inview - British 20th century life online
  • Commercial radio archive online for the first time

You may also like…

R&D

Television and Radio Index for Learning and Teaching (TRILT)

29 January 2009
News

New guide means citing films and audio in your content couldn't be easier

27 March 2013

Popular content

  • Putting people at the heart of the digital revolution
  • Jisc Digital Festival 2014
  • DIY augmented reality apps
  • Changes to Jisc funding
  • Developing students' digital literacy

Useful links

  • Feedback
  • Using our content
  • Cookies
  • Website
  • Youtube
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • @Jisc
  • 'Caution on the road towards education-by-technology' http://t.co/4ftGUVuaRA (via @WorldCrunch) #edtech
Digital content
  • eJournals
  • Learning and teaching resources
  • Maps and geospatial data
  • eBooks
  • Film and images
  • Archives
Network & IT services
  • Security
  • Connectivity
  • Authentication
  • Procurement
  • Cloud
  • Email
  • Internet and IP services
  • Telecoms
  • Videoconferencing
Advice
  • Student experience
  • Institutional management
  • Research excellence
  • Reducing costs
  • Future trends
  • Advisory services
  • Training
Research & development
  • Projects
  • Programmes
  • Funding and co-design
  • Running a Jisc project
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 UK: England & Wales
This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND