Mail online teenagers





Teenagers spend 40 days a year looking at their mobile phones.

It seems teenagers really are addicted to their phones. The average teen spends nearly 41 days of the year glued to their mobile ¿ or two hours and 40 minutes a day, research has discovered (stock image)  
Test analysis showed those who'd been separated from their phones displayed heartbeat patterns associated with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder 
In this article they use negative words about the teenagers, the most popular one is 'addictive' or 'addicted' and then that shortly follows with the word phone. probably the most positive word in the article is 'London came last with 37 days', this is the most positive word in the article as the rest is negative and saying how every teenager spends over 2 hours on their phone and that they're 'glued' to their phone. This article shows us what adults think about us and how much time we spend on our phones, these attitudes are not fair and they're not always true as no every teenager spends that much time on their phone and with this they are using one big stereotype that teenagers can't live without their phone and if they are without it then they have anxiety. I can tell that they've ranged this at all the teenagers instead of some of the teenagers. The picture that they have used is 4 teenagers sat together all on their phone, they used this as it 'represents' the type of story they are producing, the way that teenagers are represented in the photo is that when they're with their friends instead of talking they just sit on their phones and communicate that way. 

UK teenagers complain about impossible GCSE question. 

In this article there isn't many negative words about the teenagers, although there are negative words like 'stressed' and 'tricky exams' but in a way the people that were writing this are sticking up for the students that had to go through this. 

Comments

  1. I like this, it is very detailed, great analysis Ms.Hall.

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