English, asked by harshsg4279, 1 year ago

1 MINUTE DEBATE IN ENGLISH

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0
today we are going to debate on the topic do social site harmful or useful

in my opinion social sites are very useful for us we can have any knowledge of on any topic we can contact our family friends living far away from us we can do very good things here we can know about our environment our nature what hell is happening around all news what are the culture traditions of different people from different parts of the world society their nature heart the like how did how do they live what are the climatic conditions there all we can find with the help of this.


HOPE IT HELPS U ✌️✌️✌️
Answered by spacelover123
0

Debate on TV. You can shorten if you wish because I am not sure about timings but I know it is between 1-3 min.

I added extra points if you did not like any.

Pls mark as brainliest answer

What's good about TV

  • TV can encourage reading. On shows like Sesame Street, books are heavily promoted, notes Daniel Anderson, PhD, professor of psychology at University of Massachusetts. Plus, a child gets interested in a character like Arthur, and he wants to read books about him too.
  • Kids who watch educational shows may do better in school. One study found that kids who watched Sesame Street in the '80s did better academically in high school than kids who didn't. Anderson speculates that these kids entered first grade with some basic knowledge, which made them enthusiastic and confident about school. Getting off to a good start had a positive effect on their entire academic experience.
  • TV provides a window into world. For example, if your child has never seen an elephant or a lion, watching a nature show about wild animals is a very effective way of learning about them, notes Anderson.

What's bad about TV

  • It stifles creativity. Kids who watch too much TV are less able to use their own mind to create something out of nothing, says Jane Healy, PhD, author of Endangered Minds: Why Children Don't Think -- and What We Can Do About It. When they play make-believe, the play tends to be based on their favorite shows.
  • It inhibits language development. Even the better shows rely on visuals at the expense of talk, says Healy. When kids start school, they're expected to pay attention and process information without the benefit of dancing Muppets. Kids who are used to TV may have a hard time making the transition.
  • TV is addictive. The average American child watches three hours a day of TV. Time spent watching TV is time robbed from other important activities like reading, make-believe play, and interacting with parents.
  • The things kids learn on TV do not translate into academic success. Frank Vespe, executive director of the TV TurnOff Network, points out that according to a study conducted by the National Association of Educational Programs, kids who watched the least TV did the best on standardized tests in fourth grade.
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