任务型阅读It's important to spend time talking to your teen about the news and how the media works. Studies show kids experience fewer harmful effects when they've been taught basic media literacy skills. Encourage critical thinking. Encourage your teen to question the information he's reading. Ask him to consider who wrote the story and why that person may have written it.Discuss advertising techniques. Promising that a product will help you look beautiful or be more popular, for example, is often part of the message.Teach your teen to look at all the information. It helps to learn more about who produced the content. Also, show your teen how to look at photographs more closely. Just a picture paired with an article doesn't mean the picture was taken at the actual event being discussed in the story.Look at websites together. And discuss how to tell between news stories and the sponsored content. Read articles together and talk about the messages that you're viewing.Make sure your teen is aware that many writers get paid by the page view. Clickbait headlines are intended to get traffic, rather than provide quality information. Explain how many writers are trying to sell products, rather than report the facts.A. Watch your teen's use.B. Here are the ones you can refer to.C. Mention the ways to check stories online.D. Discuss people's reasons for creating the content.E. Sit down with your teen and review popular news sites.F. Emphasise the importance of looking at the “about us” page on a website.G. Talk about the methods companies use to convince people to buy their products.
答案:【1】B【2】G【3】F【4】E【5】D