1. 2 and 3 are the best titles.
They both speak directly to the
reader and promise strong
opinions; 2 uses dramatic
vocabulary also. 1 is too
general to be of interest; it
sounds more lika a school
essay title. 4 is an interesting
idea but is not presented very
strinkingly
d
c
e
e g
a
b
f
R E
P
S
Generally, yes. The article appeals to the busy person in the electronic age, the first paragraph asks direct questions to
involve the reader, the text uses interesting vocabulary, e.g. 'anachronistic' and quotes other people, it makes bold
statements, e.g. 'So what if people buy them less for news than for their daily fix of football or gossip?', it ends with a
strong, slightly humorous view, i.e. 'Only newspapers can really go 'beyond the news'!'
2. Ok
Ok
X
X
X
Ok
You can use either " " or ' ' to quote someone's actual words; other forms of punctuation such as << >> are
not acceptable. Note too, the comma before the first quotation marks in 2 and before the last quotation mark
in 6. At the end of the quotation, just use the normal punctuation, i.e.
"_____________ ." "______________ !" "_______________ ?" inside the quotation marks