100 Points. 5 questions. Answer ASAP. Please, thank you.
Brainliest. Please answer. (In order.)

What are some differences you noticed in the way these articles present information about___________?

Is it possible for two different news sources to paint completely different pictures of the same story? What are some ways in which they do this?

Why is it important to be on alert for bias in sources? What do you do if you find some?
Why is it important to read multiple news sources?

How can we present information in an unbiased way? How do we work against our own biases?

Why is it important for the news to be unbiased? Is this possible?

100 Points 5 questions Answer ASAP Please thank you Brainliest Please answer In order What are some differences you noticed in the way these articles present in class=

Respuesta :

Answer:

hold up i got you

Explanation:

Answer:

I believe the first answer is probably 'the robber' or the 'robber in the flood' or something to that effect.

It is possible; they do this by interpreting the information differently, and putting their own spin on the story.

It's important because some articles could be incorrect, others biased, and still others who twist the facts.

When we present the pure facts we can write without bias. (things like 'two men robbed $1,000 from a convenience store last night.' v.s. 'two imposing masked men broke into a family-owned, hard-working shop last night, leaving them penniless and in denial.' Obviously, the 2nd is the attention grabber, and would be the news headline, not the 1st. To work against your own biases, you must be careful to only present facts with NO assumptions: e.g. 'well they were robbed, so obviously they have to be upset.' if they didn't directly say they were upset, it's not a fact, even if they look upset.

When you present assumptions as facts, and when people find out they were not true facts, you loose your credibility in the eyes of the people; even if from now on you only present true facts, nobody will believe you're not twisting it anymore. *NOTE your curriculum may have an opinion on this, and if they do it is most likely the correct answer on your test will be 'no'.  

Explanation: