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ACTIVITY 1:

1.  What is multimodal CDA?   What is the aim of


multimodal discourse analysis?    ( 30 points ) 
ANS: Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis is a method
for studying not only the language of a media text, but also
diverse semiotic modes such as image, pictures, diagrams,
and graphics. In a media text, visual strategies and lexical
choices contribute to the representation of people or
events. Its goal is to bring together the many aspects'
representational, interactive, and textual meanings.

ACTIVITY 2 :
1. what  is  your  own   ecological Approach to Visual
Perception  in referral  to some   Discourse Strategies  and
to  your  own   Rationalization of Society.    ( 30 points ) 
ANSWER: My Visual Perception Ecological Approach is It
reflects how you communicate in terms of certain
Discourse Strategies, which is engagement with others.
What we see is regarded as visual perception. In social
with the relationship between people and the
environment, which poses a significant challenge to
dominant views about the role of language, it does not
constitute a theory that emphasizes what needs to be
communicated, as well as the means available for
materializing the meanings at hand, as well as the most
effective means in terms of the social environment and
audiologist.

ACTIVITY 3 : VARK QUESTIONER

ACTIVITY : VARK LEARNING STYLES SELF


ASSESSMENT QUESTIONNER

1.B
2.B
3.A
4.C
5.B
6.B
7.C
8.B
9.A
10.B
11.B
12.B
13.B
14.B
15.C
16.A
17.C
18.B
19.B
20.A
21.B
22.B
23.B
24.A
25.C
26.A
27.C
28.C
29.B
30.C
NOW ADD UP HOW MANY A’s, B’s AND C’s YOU
SELECTED.
A’s = 6
B’s = 16
C’s = 8
You have a AUDITORY learning style if you chose largely
B's.

I am optimistic as a result of the findings. Someone with


an auditory learning style prefers to transfer information
by listening: to one's own or others' spoken words, as well
as sounds and noises. These folks will utilize expressions
like "tell me," "let's talk it over," and "let's talk it over," and
will be best able to complete a new task after listening to
expert guidance. These are the people who are happy being
given spoken instructions over the phone, and can
remember all the words to songs they hear!

ACTIVITY: VARK LEARNING QUESTIONNER

1.A
2.B
3.B
4.D
5.A
6.A
7.A
8.C
9.A
10.B
11.D
12.A
13.B
14.D
15.D
16.C

-TOTAL NUMBER OF Vs CIRCLED =4


-TOTAL NUMBER OF As CIRCLED=4
-TOTAL NUMBER OF Rs CIRCLED=2
-TOTAL NUMBER OF Ks CIRCLED=6
-KINESTHETIC STRATEGIES

ACTIVITY: CLIMATE LITERACY QUIZ


1. What is the greenhouse effect? 
- The atmosphere contains some gases that trap heat and
warm the Earth.
2. If the greenhouse effect is natural, then why is
today's climate change a bad thing? 
- All of the choices
3. Which activities are the largest contributors of
greenhouse gases? 
- Transportation and energy production
4. How much has CO2 in the atmosphere increased
since the Industrial Revolution? In the 10,000
years before the Industrial Revolution in 1751,
carbon dioxide levels rose less than 1
percent. Since then, they've risen by: 
- 49 percent
5. How has the global average temperature
changed since the Industrial Revolution? 
- Warmer by more than 1 degree C (2.1 degrees F) 
6. How does the rate of today's warming compare
to previous episodes of rapid climate change on
Earth?
- The Earth's climate is changing at a considerably faster
rate today than it has in the past.
7. We know that variations in Earth's orbit, solar
output, and other factors cause changes in the
climate. If we removed the human impacts of
greenhouse gas emissions, what might the climate
be doing today, on its own?
- Slight cooling
8. When was the last time in Earth's history that
CO2 was as high as it is now?
- The last time, CO2 was this high, 3 million years ago
9. Modern instruments have only been around for
a little over 100 years. So how do we know what
greenhouse gas concentrations (and temperature)
were in Earth's past?
- Air bubbles contained in ice cores provide precise
accounts of historical atmospheric conditions.
10. What proportion of climate scientists has
concluded that humans are the primary driver of
today's climate warming?
- 97% or more
11. The most common misunderstanding about
climate change is that the Earth's climate has
changed naturally in the past, therefore humans
are not the cause of global warming. That is not
correct. What are some analogies or rebuttals that
help debunk this myth?
-  The drivers of climate in previous geological epochs were
natural (volcanoes, plate tectonics, meteorites,
cyanobacteria developing and releasing oxygen into our
atmosphere, and so on), but now we, as humans, are the
drivers of climate. This is why some scientists have coined
the term "Anthropocene" to describe the current geological
epoch. While it is frightening to consider that we as a
species are causing climate change, it also underscores the
fact that we humans are the first'self-aware' climate
drivers, and hence have the ability to change our behavior.
12. Which country has emitted the most CO2 over
time? In other words, which nation has the most
responsibility for the greenhouse gases that are
currently residing in the atmosphere?
- USA
13. How long does CO2 remain in the atmosphere?
- CO2 remains in the atmosphere for up to 200 years or
more.
14. If we stopped burning fossil fuels today, what
would happen to the climate?
- Temperatures would stop rising after greenhouse gas
levels stabilized.
15a. This is a graph of carbon dioxide in Earth's
atmosphere, measured since 1958. There are two
patterns in this data, what are they?
- This data comes from Scripps, and the website, as well as
the linked Keeling curve website, have current CO2 data
and many other types of atmospheric CO2 data.
15b. Based on the graph in question 15, What
causes the annual up-and-down fluctuation in
CO2 in the atmosphere?
- Plants take up more CO2 during the Northern
Hemisphere summer.
15c. What is the primary cause of the overall rising
trend in CO2 in the atmosphere?
- The increase in CO2 is caused by burning of fossil fuels
16. What are the major causes of sea level rise?
- Melting glaciers and ice sheets
17. What causes ocean acidification?
- CO2 dissolved in ocean water
18. What is the leading cause of coral bleaching?
- Warm water
19. Many of us are already familiar with solutions
to climate change. While there are many actions
we can take every day, it's important to focus on
the solutions with the biggest result. Most of the
actions show below will reduce emissions, but
which will have the biggest effect? There are
several correct answers.
- Large-scale solar farms

20. How fast to we need to stop burning fossil


fuels to limit global temperature rise to 2 degrees
C? (3.6 degrees F)
- We need to stop burning fossil fuels by 2040.

ACTIVITY : DIGITAL LITERACY QUIZ

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