Social Sciences, asked by portuguese2262, 11 months ago

As a class project decide to focus on a particular news topic and cut out stories from different newspapers on this also what the coverage of this topic on TV news compared newspaper and write down the similarity and differences in their report it might help to ask the following questions a. what information is this article providing ?b. what information is it Living out ?c. from whose point of view is the article being written? d. whose point of view is been left out and why ?​

Answers

Answered by sonuroy76
88

Answer:

a.

in order to know or understand the information provided in any article, you need to read and re-read it for a number of time unless the true meaning of the article is completely clear to you. Reading an excerpt repeatedly makes you visualize something in front of eyes....

b.

In addition, respondents were asked to estimate how many total active customers their business had. Four hypotheses were tested: ...

c.

Point of view refers to who is telling or narrating a story. ... If it was up to me, I would choose the white car. ... When writing in second-person point of view, the writer has the narrator ...

d.

The third-person point of view is a form of storytelling in ... the reader can learn only what is observable by that person.

Answered by Mahibhargava
62

Answer:

a.

in order to know or understand the information provided in any article, you need to read and re-read it for a number of time unless the true meaning of the article is completely clear to you. Reading an excerpt repeatedly makes you visualize something in front of eyes....

b.

In addition, respondents were asked to estimate how many total active customers their business had. Four hypotheses were tested: ...

c.

Point of view refers to who is telling or narrating a story. ... If it was up to me, I would choose the white car. ... When writing in second-person point of view, the writer has the narrator ...

d.

The third-person point of view is a form of storytelling in ... the reader can learn only what is observable by that person.

Explanation:

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