academicwriting- A formal mode of writing intended for an educated audience
Communication - is the art of exchanging messages between two or more people.
Non-verbal is the transfer of information through the use of body language including eye contact, facial expressions, gestures, and more.
Interpersonal communication- is the process by which people exchange information through verbal and non-verbal messages.
Academic writing is also considered as critical writing.*
Writing an academic paper means you must be subjective in your topic.
Accuracy - This feature of academic writing pertains to the use of accurate terminologies. It avoids the use of inappropriate or improper words and phrases.
backchannelling -is a way of showing a speaker that you are following what they are saying and understand, often through interjections
Objectivity - prohibits the use of personal point of views and biases. It is more concerned with facts and arguments which are based on a thorough examination of the evidence
Open-ended questions - These questions encourage the interviewee to share experiences, emotions, attitude or opinions.
Filtering - means selecting only the information necessary to better understand the selection that you are listening to.
Determining importance - helps you to filter information and to organize your thinking around big ideas
Interesting information - refers to little detail or additional detail, which could be a cool fact or trivia.
Occasion - It is an element of source verification which refers to time or place that prompted the author or speaker to create the material.
Tone - It is an element of source verification which refers to the attitude of the author towards the subject or his audience
Truth - It is the quality of being honest and not containing or telling any lie
Misleading Content - Some common examples of this technique are selection of a partial segment from a quote, creating statistics that support a particular claim but don’t take into account how the data set was created, or cropping a photo to frame an event in a particular way.
Manipulated Content - This is when the genuine content is tampered with or doctored in some way.
Imposter content - An example of this information disorder is when the logo of a well-known brand or name is used alongside false content.
Satire - In this type of information disorder, there is no intention to cause harm but has potential to fool.
purpose - it is an element of source verification which refers reason of the author for creating the material.
False context - It often happens during a breaking news event when old imagery is re-shared, but it also happens when old news articles are re-shared as new, when the headline still potentially fits with contemporary events.
Fabricated content - is a type of information disorder where new content is 100% false. These texts are designed to deceive and to harm. New fake social media accounts are created to spread new and invented content from it.
Important information - refers to main ideas or key topics that you need to better understand the concept you are listening to.
SOAPStone - Speaker, Occasion, Audience, Purpose, Subject, Tone
Writing -is a form of communication that helps you to write down your thoughts and emotions, organize your knowledge and opinions into persuasive arguments, and express meaning through well-written text