The editorial discusses Maryland's new internal-trigger-lock law for handguns that took effect on January 1, 2003. It notes that gun dealers have known about the law for three years but are now claiming it will threaten their livelihoods. The editorial argues that only a small number of handgun models meet the law's safety standards, but gun dealers have glossed over the fact that the law could save lives by preventing accidental shootings. While concessions may be made, the law's goal of promoting public safety should not be compromised.
This document summarizes different types of opinion pieces that may appear in newspapers, including editorials, columns, op-eds, and letters to the editor. It defines each type and provides some key details about their purpose and typical format. Editorials reflect the newspaper's opinion and may be unsigned. Columns express the writer's opinion but not the newspaper's. Op-eds appear on the opinion page and are often written by experts. Letters to the editor are written by readers on topics relevant to the publication and address current events or respond to other articles/letters. They have word limits and the editor chooses which to publish.
An editorial presents a newspaper's opinion on issues and aims to guide public opinion. It reflects the majority view of the newspaper's editorial board. The key objectives of an editorial are to logically analyze issues, explain events and their implications, hold rulers accountable, promote political awareness and national welfare, and adapt critical thinking. An editorial represents the public voice and acts as a source of discussion on important matters.
This document provides instructions for students to develop an editorial on a given topic. It has the students first read editorials online and check for elements like facts, quotes, clear opinions. They are then divided into groups to find facts or refine their topic. The lesson concludes with students sharing initial findings and posing any research questions.
This document provides guidance on writing editorials for a newspaper. It explains that editorials state the newspaper's opinion on issues and appear on the editorial page alongside columns and cartoons. The editorial board, comprised of editors, determines the stances taken in editorials. Editorials can explain issues, evaluate actions, or persuade readers. When writing editorials, researchers should support their arguments with evidence. Letters to the editor and opinion articles allow readers to engage in discussion. Effective editorial cartoons reinforce messages from accompanying editorials.
The document discusses the importance and purpose of editorial pages in newspapers. Some key points:
1) Editorials reflect the opinions of a newspaper's owners/managers and are meant to influence public opinion on important issues. The editorial board evaluates issues and the newspaper's stance.
2) The editorial page provides a forum for discussion and allows the newspaper and readers to influence officials and suggest courses of action.
3) Editorials are researched and supported like news stories. Good editorials engage issues constructively and refrain from personal attacks.
The document discusses the importance and role of editorials in newspapers. It explains that editorials represent the opinion of the newspaper and are written by an editorial board. They can be used to explain issues, evaluate actions, or persuade readers. Effective editorials involve research, addressing opposing views, and concluding remarks. The document also discusses involving readers through letters to the editor and opinion features.
The document provides guidance on writing editorials. It discusses that editorials should have three parts: an introduction with a newspeg, a body with main ideas and details on both sides of an issue, and a conclusion that restates the position. Editorials aim to inform, interpret, criticize, commend, argue, or entertain readers. When writing, pick a significant topic, gather facts, present opposing views with evidence, refute other sides, and offer realistic solutions. Editorials should be concise at around 500 words and avoid generalities, preaching, and use of first-person pronouns.
The Art and Practice of Editorial WritingAdam Nekola
Dan McCaleb is the editor of the Northwest Herald in Crystal Lake, Illinois. He has over 20 years of experience in journalism, previously working as a reporter, metro editor, and news editor at other newspapers before becoming managing editor and then editor of the Northwest Herald. The document provides McCaleb's contact information and the newspaper's website.
This document summarizes different types of opinion pieces that may appear in newspapers, including editorials, columns, op-eds, and letters to the editor. It defines each type and provides some key details about their purpose and typical format. Editorials reflect the newspaper's opinion and may be unsigned. Columns express the writer's opinion but not the newspaper's. Op-eds appear on the opinion page and are often written by experts. Letters to the editor are written by readers on topics relevant to the publication and address current events or respond to other articles/letters. They have word limits and the editor chooses which to publish.
An editorial presents a newspaper's opinion on issues and aims to guide public opinion. It reflects the majority view of the newspaper's editorial board. The key objectives of an editorial are to logically analyze issues, explain events and their implications, hold rulers accountable, promote political awareness and national welfare, and adapt critical thinking. An editorial represents the public voice and acts as a source of discussion on important matters.
This document provides instructions for students to develop an editorial on a given topic. It has the students first read editorials online and check for elements like facts, quotes, clear opinions. They are then divided into groups to find facts or refine their topic. The lesson concludes with students sharing initial findings and posing any research questions.
This document provides guidance on writing editorials for a newspaper. It explains that editorials state the newspaper's opinion on issues and appear on the editorial page alongside columns and cartoons. The editorial board, comprised of editors, determines the stances taken in editorials. Editorials can explain issues, evaluate actions, or persuade readers. When writing editorials, researchers should support their arguments with evidence. Letters to the editor and opinion articles allow readers to engage in discussion. Effective editorial cartoons reinforce messages from accompanying editorials.
The document discusses the importance and purpose of editorial pages in newspapers. Some key points:
1) Editorials reflect the opinions of a newspaper's owners/managers and are meant to influence public opinion on important issues. The editorial board evaluates issues and the newspaper's stance.
2) The editorial page provides a forum for discussion and allows the newspaper and readers to influence officials and suggest courses of action.
3) Editorials are researched and supported like news stories. Good editorials engage issues constructively and refrain from personal attacks.
The document discusses the importance and role of editorials in newspapers. It explains that editorials represent the opinion of the newspaper and are written by an editorial board. They can be used to explain issues, evaluate actions, or persuade readers. Effective editorials involve research, addressing opposing views, and concluding remarks. The document also discusses involving readers through letters to the editor and opinion features.
The document provides guidance on writing editorials. It discusses that editorials should have three parts: an introduction with a newspeg, a body with main ideas and details on both sides of an issue, and a conclusion that restates the position. Editorials aim to inform, interpret, criticize, commend, argue, or entertain readers. When writing, pick a significant topic, gather facts, present opposing views with evidence, refute other sides, and offer realistic solutions. Editorials should be concise at around 500 words and avoid generalities, preaching, and use of first-person pronouns.
The Art and Practice of Editorial WritingAdam Nekola
Dan McCaleb is the editor of the Northwest Herald in Crystal Lake, Illinois. He has over 20 years of experience in journalism, previously working as a reporter, metro editor, and news editor at other newspapers before becoming managing editor and then editor of the Northwest Herald. The document provides McCaleb's contact information and the newspaper's website.
The document discusses the role and responsibilities of journalism in a democratic society. It explores whether journalists should aim for objectivity or acknowledge their biases, and whether the media should actively shape policy or serve as watchdogs of government. It also examines the business factors influencing media organizations and the changing nature of journalism in the digital age. Key themes are the importance of accuracy, balance and original reporting in quality journalism.
The document discusses the advantages and limitations of a career in journalism. It outlines some key benefits such as the power of exposing secrets through investigative reporting, gaining recognition through publishing under your own byline, and being among the first to access and share new information. However, it also notes limitations like incomplete facts due to time pressures, an inability to consider all perspectives, and the risk of being manipulated for political purposes. Overall, the document argues that while the press serves an important public role, its accounts should be read critically rather than as absolute truth given its human fallibilities.
This study measures media bias in major US media outlets by comparing how often they cite various think tanks and policy groups to how often members of Congress cite the same groups. The results show an overall liberal bias: most outlets, including the New York Times and CBS Evening News, were scored as being closer to the average Democrat in Congress than the political center. Only Fox News' Special Report and the Washington Times were scored as being right of the average member of Congress. This provides an objective measure of media slant and allows comparisons to ideological scores of political actors.
Beat reporting involves covering specific geographic or topical areas in depth. Traditionally, newspapers employed beat reporters to provide specialized coverage of areas like courts, business, science, and more. However, newspaper consolidation and financial pressures have led many papers to cut specialized beats. As a result, there is less in-depth coverage of important issues and institutions. Some see an opportunity for beat reporting to evolve by utilizing social networks and community expertise to enhance coverage, but there is also a risk that over-specialization could make reporting less accessible.
Comm300.002, media literacy assignment, step 1MonayeRikard
The document summarizes an article from Spectra Magazine on the topic of fake news. The article, titled "If It's Fake, It's Not News", discusses three main points: 1) Journalists taking back their role in educating audiences about the history and importance of journalism; 2) Bringing audiences along by not allowing political groups to redefine their industry; 3) Taking a stand as an industry by offering excellence that can withstand attacks on the Fourth Estate. The article argues that journalists must educate audiences about the history of the profession and its crusaders in order to strengthen trust and combat the spread of fake news.
Reach your audience with the 7Search PPC best alternative media ads platform & best ad networks for advertisers. we provide media entertainment ads alternative.
There is never one way to assuage the concerns of those looking to make a career out of writing. Many labour tirelessly for decades on manuscripts that never make it to print. The UK on average publishes around 185,000 new titles per year, ranking us the third largest publishing
market in the world, yet the number of aspiring writers is substantially greater.
The document provides guidance on writing editorials for a student newspaper. It explains that editorials state the newspaper's opinions on issues and appear on the editorial page along with columns and cartoons. The editorial board, comprised of editors and staff, determines the stances taken in editorials. There are three main types of editorials: ones that explain issues, ones that evaluate actions/situations, and ones that persuade readers by offering solutions. It is important for editorials to engage readers through letters to the editor and opinion features to encourage discussion.
Chapter 9: Make the New Comprehensive and ProportionalZachary Schmidt
The document discusses the importance of comprehensive and proportional journalism. It argues that journalists act as "map makers" for citizens to navigate society. A good map maker includes all relevant information and roads to give travelers an accurate picture. The document suggests journalists should cover a wide range of topics, demographics and communities to be comprehensive map makers. It also warns against only focusing on sensational stories for profit or popularity at the expense of important news. Credibility as a trustworthy map maker depends on balanced and truthful coverage.
This document provides an overview of objectivity in journalism. It discusses that objectivity means avoiding personal biases and using neutral language. Reporters should give both sides of an issue equal representation to remain fair. Objectivity applies to how stories are written and how reporters conduct themselves. The stages of objectivity are having a negative capacity, being modest, properly processing facts, and being willing to betray friends for the sake of truth. Journalists prioritize truth over loyalty to any group.
This document discusses different definitions and perspectives on what constitutes news. It provides a brief history of news reporting from the 18th/19th century revolutionary press to the modern era of 24/7 digital news. It also examines the changing roles of professional journalists versus citizen journalists online. Key themes discussed include the tension between public interest journalism and commercial pressures, as well as debates around objectivity and the blurring lines between news and entertainment.
This document provides an overview of newspapers and different types of journalism. It begins with a quote about how people interact with newspapers. The document then lists various topics that will be covered in the chapter, including types of journalism, current newspaper statistics and issues, and how newspapers relate to democracy. It discusses declining newspaper readership and numbers of dailies. The role newspapers play in democracy is outlined, along with some criticisms. New forms of getting news like blogs and social media are mentioned. Finally, different types of journalism like yellow journalism, objective journalism, and interpretive journalism are defined.
What Are Good Essay Writing Services The 7 Best Legit Essay Writing ...Kristen Lee
The document discusses the role of scientific knowledge on policymaking. It begins by outlining the different types of scientific knowledge that can inform policy, including natural, social and health sciences. It then examines the complex relationship between science and policy, noting that while science seeks objectivity, policy involves subjective value judgments. The document concludes by arguing that the best approach is for science to establish facts while policymaking determines priorities and action, with open communication between the two.
The document discusses the past, present and future of print media such as newspapers and magazines. It describes the differences between broadsheet and tabloid newspapers, and how newspapers have struggled with declining circulation and revenue as well as increased competition from the internet. It also outlines the history and types of magazines, and how magazines have adapted over time to focus more on niche audiences and ideas rather than general readership. The principles of journalism are discussed, as well as how both newspapers and magazines have tried to stay relevant in the modern media landscape.
The document discusses the past, present and future of print media such as newspapers and magazines. It describes the differences between broadsheet and tabloid newspapers, and how newspapers have struggled with declining circulation and revenue as well as increased competition from the internet. It also discusses the history and types of magazines, and how magazines have evolved to focus on niche audiences instead of general readership. The principles of journalism are outlined, and it questions whether for-profit media can truly adhere to those principles of serving the public and acting as a watchdog.
This document provides guidance on writing editorials for a student newspaper. It defines key terms like editorial, editorial page, and editorial board. It explains that the editorial board determines the newspaper's stances on issues. There are three main types of editorials: ones that explain issues, ones that evaluate actions/situations, and ones that persuade readers. The document offers tips for writing different types of editorials and involving readers through letters to the editor and opinion features. It also discusses choosing editorial cartoons that effectively express opinions.
This document discusses journalism and mass media. It defines journalism as a form of writing that informs people about events they may not know about. Mass media refers to means of communication like television, radio, newspapers, and magazines that reach large audiences quickly. The document also outlines different types of journalism like investigative journalism, political journalism, crime journalism, and business journalism. It concludes by discussing the functions of journalism in society and providing citations.
The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) is a union that represents over 38,000 members, including journalists, photographers, and media workers. The NUJ was founded in 1907 and aims to protect media freedom and promote high professional standards. It provides resources and guidelines for journalists on ethics and represents members across the UK and parts of Europe. The NUJ code of conduct and conscience clause protect journalists' right to refuse assignments that violate their ethics without facing repercussions.
The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) is a union that represents over 38,000 members, including journalists, photographers, and media workers. The NUJ was founded in 1907 and aims to protect media freedom and promote high professional standards. It provides resources and guidelines for journalists on ethics and represents members across the UK and parts of Europe. The NUJ code of conduct and ethics guidelines help ensure responsible and unbiased reporting.
The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) is a union that represents over 38,000 members, including journalists, photographers, and media workers. The NUJ was founded in 1907 and aims to protect media freedom and promote high professional standards. It provides resources and guidelines for journalists on ethics and represents members across the UK and parts of Europe. The NUJ code of conduct and ethics guidelines help ensure responsible and unbiased reporting.
1. The document discusses the importance of developing strong conversation skills for success in both personal and professional settings.
2. It emphasizes the importance of listening to others, making eye contact, allowing others to finish speaking without interrupting, and assuming others are communicating their intended meaning.
3. The art of conversation is broken into three parts - small talk, moving beyond small talk to share opinions and views, and merging ideas to a satisfying conclusion. Developing these skills takes practice.
1. The document discusses the importance of developing strong conversation skills for success in both personal and professional settings. It emphasizes that polite conversation that advances your career is different than casual conversation with friends.
2. Some key aspects of developing strong conversation skills include actively listening to others without interrupting, making eye contact, assuming others mean what they say, and expressing your own views in a positive manner.
3. Conversations can be broken into three parts - small talk, moving to more substantive topics, and finding mutual understanding. Mastering each part is an important aspect of developing strong conversation skills.
The document discusses the role and responsibilities of journalism in a democratic society. It explores whether journalists should aim for objectivity or acknowledge their biases, and whether the media should actively shape policy or serve as watchdogs of government. It also examines the business factors influencing media organizations and the changing nature of journalism in the digital age. Key themes are the importance of accuracy, balance and original reporting in quality journalism.
The document discusses the advantages and limitations of a career in journalism. It outlines some key benefits such as the power of exposing secrets through investigative reporting, gaining recognition through publishing under your own byline, and being among the first to access and share new information. However, it also notes limitations like incomplete facts due to time pressures, an inability to consider all perspectives, and the risk of being manipulated for political purposes. Overall, the document argues that while the press serves an important public role, its accounts should be read critically rather than as absolute truth given its human fallibilities.
This study measures media bias in major US media outlets by comparing how often they cite various think tanks and policy groups to how often members of Congress cite the same groups. The results show an overall liberal bias: most outlets, including the New York Times and CBS Evening News, were scored as being closer to the average Democrat in Congress than the political center. Only Fox News' Special Report and the Washington Times were scored as being right of the average member of Congress. This provides an objective measure of media slant and allows comparisons to ideological scores of political actors.
Beat reporting involves covering specific geographic or topical areas in depth. Traditionally, newspapers employed beat reporters to provide specialized coverage of areas like courts, business, science, and more. However, newspaper consolidation and financial pressures have led many papers to cut specialized beats. As a result, there is less in-depth coverage of important issues and institutions. Some see an opportunity for beat reporting to evolve by utilizing social networks and community expertise to enhance coverage, but there is also a risk that over-specialization could make reporting less accessible.
Comm300.002, media literacy assignment, step 1MonayeRikard
The document summarizes an article from Spectra Magazine on the topic of fake news. The article, titled "If It's Fake, It's Not News", discusses three main points: 1) Journalists taking back their role in educating audiences about the history and importance of journalism; 2) Bringing audiences along by not allowing political groups to redefine their industry; 3) Taking a stand as an industry by offering excellence that can withstand attacks on the Fourth Estate. The article argues that journalists must educate audiences about the history of the profession and its crusaders in order to strengthen trust and combat the spread of fake news.
Reach your audience with the 7Search PPC best alternative media ads platform & best ad networks for advertisers. we provide media entertainment ads alternative.
There is never one way to assuage the concerns of those looking to make a career out of writing. Many labour tirelessly for decades on manuscripts that never make it to print. The UK on average publishes around 185,000 new titles per year, ranking us the third largest publishing
market in the world, yet the number of aspiring writers is substantially greater.
The document provides guidance on writing editorials for a student newspaper. It explains that editorials state the newspaper's opinions on issues and appear on the editorial page along with columns and cartoons. The editorial board, comprised of editors and staff, determines the stances taken in editorials. There are three main types of editorials: ones that explain issues, ones that evaluate actions/situations, and ones that persuade readers by offering solutions. It is important for editorials to engage readers through letters to the editor and opinion features to encourage discussion.
Chapter 9: Make the New Comprehensive and ProportionalZachary Schmidt
The document discusses the importance of comprehensive and proportional journalism. It argues that journalists act as "map makers" for citizens to navigate society. A good map maker includes all relevant information and roads to give travelers an accurate picture. The document suggests journalists should cover a wide range of topics, demographics and communities to be comprehensive map makers. It also warns against only focusing on sensational stories for profit or popularity at the expense of important news. Credibility as a trustworthy map maker depends on balanced and truthful coverage.
This document provides an overview of objectivity in journalism. It discusses that objectivity means avoiding personal biases and using neutral language. Reporters should give both sides of an issue equal representation to remain fair. Objectivity applies to how stories are written and how reporters conduct themselves. The stages of objectivity are having a negative capacity, being modest, properly processing facts, and being willing to betray friends for the sake of truth. Journalists prioritize truth over loyalty to any group.
This document discusses different definitions and perspectives on what constitutes news. It provides a brief history of news reporting from the 18th/19th century revolutionary press to the modern era of 24/7 digital news. It also examines the changing roles of professional journalists versus citizen journalists online. Key themes discussed include the tension between public interest journalism and commercial pressures, as well as debates around objectivity and the blurring lines between news and entertainment.
This document provides an overview of newspapers and different types of journalism. It begins with a quote about how people interact with newspapers. The document then lists various topics that will be covered in the chapter, including types of journalism, current newspaper statistics and issues, and how newspapers relate to democracy. It discusses declining newspaper readership and numbers of dailies. The role newspapers play in democracy is outlined, along with some criticisms. New forms of getting news like blogs and social media are mentioned. Finally, different types of journalism like yellow journalism, objective journalism, and interpretive journalism are defined.
What Are Good Essay Writing Services The 7 Best Legit Essay Writing ...Kristen Lee
The document discusses the role of scientific knowledge on policymaking. It begins by outlining the different types of scientific knowledge that can inform policy, including natural, social and health sciences. It then examines the complex relationship between science and policy, noting that while science seeks objectivity, policy involves subjective value judgments. The document concludes by arguing that the best approach is for science to establish facts while policymaking determines priorities and action, with open communication between the two.
The document discusses the past, present and future of print media such as newspapers and magazines. It describes the differences between broadsheet and tabloid newspapers, and how newspapers have struggled with declining circulation and revenue as well as increased competition from the internet. It also outlines the history and types of magazines, and how magazines have adapted over time to focus more on niche audiences and ideas rather than general readership. The principles of journalism are discussed, as well as how both newspapers and magazines have tried to stay relevant in the modern media landscape.
The document discusses the past, present and future of print media such as newspapers and magazines. It describes the differences between broadsheet and tabloid newspapers, and how newspapers have struggled with declining circulation and revenue as well as increased competition from the internet. It also discusses the history and types of magazines, and how magazines have evolved to focus on niche audiences instead of general readership. The principles of journalism are outlined, and it questions whether for-profit media can truly adhere to those principles of serving the public and acting as a watchdog.
This document provides guidance on writing editorials for a student newspaper. It defines key terms like editorial, editorial page, and editorial board. It explains that the editorial board determines the newspaper's stances on issues. There are three main types of editorials: ones that explain issues, ones that evaluate actions/situations, and ones that persuade readers. The document offers tips for writing different types of editorials and involving readers through letters to the editor and opinion features. It also discusses choosing editorial cartoons that effectively express opinions.
This document discusses journalism and mass media. It defines journalism as a form of writing that informs people about events they may not know about. Mass media refers to means of communication like television, radio, newspapers, and magazines that reach large audiences quickly. The document also outlines different types of journalism like investigative journalism, political journalism, crime journalism, and business journalism. It concludes by discussing the functions of journalism in society and providing citations.
The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) is a union that represents over 38,000 members, including journalists, photographers, and media workers. The NUJ was founded in 1907 and aims to protect media freedom and promote high professional standards. It provides resources and guidelines for journalists on ethics and represents members across the UK and parts of Europe. The NUJ code of conduct and conscience clause protect journalists' right to refuse assignments that violate their ethics without facing repercussions.
The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) is a union that represents over 38,000 members, including journalists, photographers, and media workers. The NUJ was founded in 1907 and aims to protect media freedom and promote high professional standards. It provides resources and guidelines for journalists on ethics and represents members across the UK and parts of Europe. The NUJ code of conduct and ethics guidelines help ensure responsible and unbiased reporting.
The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) is a union that represents over 38,000 members, including journalists, photographers, and media workers. The NUJ was founded in 1907 and aims to protect media freedom and promote high professional standards. It provides resources and guidelines for journalists on ethics and represents members across the UK and parts of Europe. The NUJ code of conduct and ethics guidelines help ensure responsible and unbiased reporting.
1. The document discusses the importance of developing strong conversation skills for success in both personal and professional settings.
2. It emphasizes the importance of listening to others, making eye contact, allowing others to finish speaking without interrupting, and assuming others are communicating their intended meaning.
3. The art of conversation is broken into three parts - small talk, moving beyond small talk to share opinions and views, and merging ideas to a satisfying conclusion. Developing these skills takes practice.
1. The document discusses the importance of developing strong conversation skills for success in both personal and professional settings. It emphasizes that polite conversation that advances your career is different than casual conversation with friends.
2. Some key aspects of developing strong conversation skills include actively listening to others without interrupting, making eye contact, assuming others mean what they say, and expressing your own views in a positive manner.
3. Conversations can be broken into three parts - small talk, moving to more substantive topics, and finding mutual understanding. Mastering each part is an important aspect of developing strong conversation skills.
Students must complete a 5-7 page research paper on a specific career of their choice, which requires conducting an in-person informational interview with someone in that field. The paper should cover the nature of the work, typical career path, and student's reaction after researching the career. Students will be graded based on the research process, paper content, grammar, and inclusion of at least 5 sources in MLA format.
The document outlines requirements for a research project assignment in an English class. Students must write a 5-7 page paper on a career they are interested in. It must include details about the work, skills required, career path, and a face-to-face informational interview with someone in that field. Students must submit drafts, get peer feedback, and meet with the teacher. The final paper and a thank you letter to the interview subject are due at the end of the quarter grading period.
The document outlines the requirements for a research project assignment for an English class. Students must write a 5-7 page paper on a career of their interest, including an interview with someone in that field. They must also create a 10 minute PowerPoint presentation summarizing their research. The project will make up a major part of the students' second quarter grade and serve as the final exam. It is due in stages with drafts, peer reviews, and a final paper and presentation.
This document outlines the process and point breakdown for a research paper assignment. It lists the key tasks such as developing interview questions, conducting an interview, writing a thank you letter, finding research sources, creating an outline, writing rough drafts with peer review, revising after a teacher conference, creating a works cited page, and submitting the final paper. Completing all the tasks on time will result in 100 total points. No late work will be accepted unless an exception is approved by the teacher.
This document outlines the process and grading breakdown for a research paper assignment on careers. It includes various components to be completed throughout the quarter with assigned point values, such as choosing a career topic, finding sources, creating an interview outline and questions, drafting an outline, conducting an interview, writing drafts, and submitting a final paper and thank you letter. It notes that no late work will be accepted and components will be averaged for the final exam grade.
This document provides guidance on conducting effective interviews, including types of interview questions and active listening techniques. It outlines open-ended, closed-ended, probing, leading, hypothetical, multiple choice, linking, and behavioral questions. The key aspects of active listening are concentrating fully, summarizing responses, paraphrasing to check understanding, and establishing rapport through a supportive approach and style.
Rhetoric is the art of speaking or writing effectively to persuade others. According to Aristotle, rhetoric is the ability to see the available means of persuasion in a given situation. He identified three main forms of rhetoric: logos which appeals to reason, ethos which appeals to character, and pathos which appeals to emotion. Logos appeals to a person's sense of reason, ethos demonstrates fairness to create persuasion, and pathos uses emotional pleas carefully to show passion for a point of view.
This document provides a template for peer editing an editorial. It includes prompts for the editor to provide their general reaction to the editorial, assess whether it is well organized and fulfills the assignment. The editor is asked to evaluate if the writer establishes a clear audience and perspective. They are also prompted to assess the use of persuasive language, evidence, examples, and addressing multiple sides of the issue. The editor provides suggestions for improvements and comments on the quality of language use, spelling, punctuation, grammar, and paragraph structure in the editorial.
This document provides 15 opinion questions for a student to answer yes or no to regarding various social issues. The student is then instructed to choose 3 questions to further explain their answers to in a short written response. The questions cover topics like senior citizen driver testing, Barbie body images, welfare programs, drug testing athletes, animal dissection, genetic engineering, media violence, prison costs, drug abuse by pregnant women, child abuse laws, the insanity defense, and pop culture role models.
This document outlines a 6-point rubric for assessing grammar and conventions in writing. It describes the types and frequency of errors that are typical of each score level from F (Not Yet) to A+ (WOW!). Lower scores are characterized by numerous distracting errors that impede readability, while higher scores demonstrate stronger control of conventions with minor errors that do not interfere with understanding. The rubric provides guidance on punctuation, spelling, paragraph structure, capitalization, grammar and usage, and need for editing at each level.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
13. T-Shirt Speech
Create a symbol that means something to you. You may add a slogan or catch phrase that expresses the concept in
verbal form. Do the words and symbol work together to call attention to your idea?
Be aware that “slogan” is rooted in the Scottish word slogorne that means battle cry. It comes from Gaelic sluagh-
ghairm, meaning shout in death or battle. Advertisers have kept the concept of “calling out for attention” in the slogans
devised to promote their products.
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