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LING 200

Course Guide for LING 200 Advanced English for Bilingual, ESL and International Students

Facts, Opinions, Perspectives

Information vs Resources

Facts, opinions, and perspectives are information types that you will need for your paper assignment. While these are three types of information, they can each be found in different resource types listed below.

Reference Material Opposing Viewpoints Expert Opinion
Reference materials are various sources that provide background information or quick facts on any given topic. Opposing Viewpoints offers material to support differing views and help students develop critical thinking skills on thousands of current social topics  
Types of resources: almanacs, atlases, bibliographies, biographical resources, dictionaries, encyclopedias (both general and by subject), handbooks, indexes, statistics, and citation guides. Types of resources: primary source documents, statistics, websites, and multimedia  
Facts Facts, Opinions, Perspectives Facts, Opinions, Perspectives

Databases

includes reference material, opposing viewpoints, & expert opinion

offers in-depth, unbiased coverage of political and social issues, with regular reports on a wide range of topics including: health, international affairs, education, the environment, technology, the U.S. economy, crime, and civil liberties.

To be clear: CQ Researcher Reports are not peer-reviewed and are not considered academic/scholarly sources; however, they are rigorously fact-checked and edited by professionals before publication and, unlike traditional magazine articles, the journalists who write CQ Researcher Reports always include extensive footnotes and annotated bibliographies at the end of their writing.

Search Topic Examples: Media Bias, Press Freedom, Journalism Standard in the Internet Age, Freedom of Information, Internet and Social Media, Regulation and Legal Issues, Journalism and the News

includes facts, opinions, and perspectives

Opposing Viewpoints In Context includes pro/con viewpoints, reference articles, interactive maps, infographics, and more on today's hottest social issues, from capital punishment to immigration to marijuana. This database supports science, social studies, current events, and language arts. Periodical content covers current events, news and commentary, economics, environmental issues, political science, and more.

Search Topic Examples: Internet, Advertising, Censorship, Cyberbullying, Cybercrime, Digital Citizenship, Digital Divide, Digital Media, Fake News on Social Media, Freedom of Speech, Hacking and Hackers, Live Streaming of Violent Acts, Media Bias, Online Dating, Twitter, YouTube 

 

Press Freedom, Journalism Standard in the Internet Age


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