Textual analysis, as part of the metodolgy of Content analysis, works as a good technique to gather information from other people to see how they see the world, members of various cultures. Different information can be analyzed such as that contained in pictures, text, audio or video. Textual analysis of course is using only written text.
For the specific topic of the expanded role of gender in pop culture a good source of media are the blogs online which is a discussion or informational website with diary-style text entries people can make a blog (post some text) and it gets displayed in reverse chronological order, so the most recent post appears first, at the top of the web page, Whe someone makes a blog it is people that want to inform others sharing information and their points of view. Some of them are really prepared and even have a college degree from some university in gender studies, and they post online, which is a pop media platform; therefore, they would be the best source of information and it could provide us with examples of historic actions that prove that gender roles have changed.
Nowadays you can have a diferent biological gender that the one you represent, example of this is Angela Ponce a transgender born male in Spain competing on the female miss universe contest.
Answer:
1. Percent of school-age children in the U.S. who were homeschooled students in 2003 ⇒ 2.2%.
2. Percent of full time homeschooled students. ⇒ 82%.
3. Percent of homeschooled students also in school less than 9 hours ⇒ 12%.
4. Percent of homeschooled students were also in school 9-25 hours ⇒ 6%
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5. Percent of homeschooled students from white families vs. other ethnicities ⇒ 77%.
6. Percent of homeschooled students from two-parent homes ⇒ 81%.
7. Percent of homeschooled students from two-parent homes with one parent working ⇒ 54%.
8. Percent of parents homeschooling because of school environment. ⇒ 85%
Answer:
Shane's bag was stolen by someone in the bus.
Answer:
<em><u>5</u></em><em><u>:</u></em><em><u>In the United States, the term fourth estate is sometimes used to place the press alongside the three branches of government: legislative, executive and judicial. The fourth estate refers to the watchdog role of the press, one that is important to a functioning democracy.</u></em>
<em><u>6</u></em><em><u>:</u></em><em><u>Why is the media called the fourth estate? The term hails from the European concept of the three estates of the realm - the clergy, the nobility and the commoners. ... It has come to symbolise the media or press as a segment of society that has an indirect but key role in influencing the political system.</u></em>