
Mission of WVIZ/PBS To
strengthen our communities by providing distinctive, thought-provoking
programs and services that enlighten, inspire, educate and entertain.
Vision
of WVIZ/PBS
ideastream will be recognized as an indispensable resource critical to the future success of the region and deserving of philanthropic and public support.
History
of WVIZ/PBS
WVIZ/PBS
signed on the air as the 100th noncommercial educational television
station in the United States on February 7, 1965, with studios in Cleveland's
Max Hayes Trade School. The station, now located on Brookpark Road in
Cleveland, is licensed to the Educational Television Association of
Metropolitan Cleveland, a 501 ( c ) (3) non profit corporation governed
by a board of volunteer trustees. WVIZ/PBS serves a 17-county Northeast
Ohio market, which includes the metropolitan areas of Cleveland and
Akron.
When WVIZ/PBS signed
on the air in 1965, it broadcast 50 hours of programming over 5-1/2
days in black and white. Its purpose was to offer daytime programming
to the schools and alternate choices of programming to Northeastern
Ohio residents. Today, WVIZ/PBS distributes programs across an array
of platforms including videotapes, CD-ROM, internet, microwave signals,
cable, and more. The WVIZ/PBS television signal is on the air 24 hours
a day, seven days a week, providing high-quality programming for children
and adults and is viewed by over one million households in an average
month.
In Summer, 2001, WCPN and WVIZ/PBS joined forces to create a new multiple
media organization - ideastream - that combines the vision of a multiple
media future with the legacy of a rich public service past.
As a community-based public media organization, ideastream has a strong
commitment to provide in-depth news, arts and cultural programming,
jazz and intelligent talk that strives to inspire people to reflect
upon events in their community and around the world. ideastream operates
in concert with a mission statement that reflects this commitment.
WVIZ/PBS
Timeline
1939
Television demonstrated at NY World's Fair.
1951 Color
television introduced.
1952 FCC
sets aside television channels for noncommercial educational use.
1961 Mayor
Anthony Celebrezze appoints special commission to study bringing educational
television to Cleveland.
1965 Station
signs on the air as the 100th noncommercial, educational television
station in the nation. Studios and offices at the Max Hayes Trade School.
1967 WVIZ
moves to Brookpark Road location.
1968 WVIZ
interconnects colleges, public schools and hospitals via microwave network.
1969 WVIZ
and other stations organize the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) as
a national organization to share programs and meet common interests
and needs.
1969 WVIZ
converts to color.
1973 College
credit telecourses begin airing on WVIZ.
1978 WVIZ
enters the satellite era, hooking up with the PBS satellite distribution
system.
1984 WVIZ
creates Adult Learner Television, a cable service presenting college
credit telecourses and programming geared toward lifelong learning opportunities.
1984 WVIZ
establishes Viz-Tec to assist schools in training and utilization of
educational multi-media technology.
1985 WVIZ
is the first station in Ohio to broadcast in stereo.
1987 WVIZ
is the first station in Ohio, and one of the first in the nation, to
utilize the Descriptive Video Service, a service for the blind and visually
impaired.
1988 WVIZ
introduces Learning Link, a computer network for teachers.
1988 WVIZ
is the first station in Ohio to bring live, interactive educational
television via satellite into area classrooms.
1990 WVIZ's
Learning Link offers access to the Internet to schools and teachers.
1995 Anticipating
the conversion to digital, WVIZ begins to replace key pieces of analog
equipment with digital equipment.
1996 WVIZ,
fourteen schools and three colleges and universities collaborate to
create the Northern Ohio Technology Association, a fully interactive
distance learning system allowing students in several schools to participate
in classes simultaneously.
1997 WVIZ
produces a multimedia interactive learning package for math proficiency
with video and CD- ROM.
2000 WVIZ/PBS
receives first funding for digital conversion with state and federal
grants to purchase production equipment including the first multi-format
digital television cameras capable of creating simultaneous High Definition
and Standard Definition pictures.
2001 90.3 WCPN and WVIZ/PBS join forces to create a
new multiple media organization - ideastream.
2003 Simultaneous
analog and digital broadcasting begins. Video compression technology
will permit multicasting of up to four channels of enhanced video and
audio.
2006 Simultaneous
analog and digital broadcasting will cease. From this point forward,
FCC timeline calls for broadcast in an all-digital environment. |