1.2 What do university students have to read?
University students read textbooks as well as other printed or online material. The type of material they read depends on the subject they are studying.
Below are five examples of texts a university student is likely to read. They are often available both in print and online.
- Academic journal: Journal of Political Ecology [Tip: hold Ctrl and click a link to open it in a new tab. (Hide tip)]
- Academic book: 'Democracy and Moral Development' by David L. Norton
- Newspapers and magazines: The Guardian, Financial Times and The Economist
- Reference material: Encyclopaedia Britannica and the Oxford English Dictionary
- Specialist organisations’ websites: OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), the UK government’s Environment Agency and the UK Food Standards Agency
You may already be familiar with some or all of these types of text. Test your knowledge in the next activity.
Activity _unit2.1.2 Activity 2
Match each source to the description of its content.
Two lists follow, match one item from the first with one item from the second. Each item can only be matched once. There are 5 items in each list.
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Reference material
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Academic journals
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Newspapers and magazines
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Specialist organisations’ websites
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Academic books
Match each of the previous list items with an item from the following list:
a.Up-to-date developments, current issues and events, written by journalists
b.The most specialised and up-to-date research, theories and debates in your subject area, written by academics
c.Key principles, facts and theories about a topic
d.Online specialist information on a topic
e.Facts and figures, addresses, statistics, definitions
- 1 = e,
- 2 = b,
- 3 = a,
- 4 = d,
- 5 = c