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Common Core State Standard
SL.CCS.1/2/3/4 Grades 6-12: An essay of a current news event is provided for discussion to encourage participation, but also inspire the use of evidence to support logical claims using the main ideas of the article. Students must analyze background information provided about a current event within the news, draw out the main ideas and key details, and review different opinions on the issue. Then, students should present their own claims using facts and analysis for support. FOR THE WEEK OF AUG. 26, 2013 New cable news network – Al Jazeera America – adds diversity to media![]() ![]() Does this publication also reflect "fact-based, unbiased and in-depth news?" Find recent examples.
![]() The new network pledges to skip most celebrity news. See if you can spot something in that category.
![]() Now identify anything in the paper's print or online edition that typically isn't on TV news networks.
This country's youngest cable and satellite news channel is foreign-owned and has a name that sounds tricky, but isn't. It's Al Jazeera America – pronounced ahhl juh-ZEER-ahh. It's an English language network owned by the government of Qatar, a small Arab country on the Persian Gulf. The network, based in New York City, began last week with 14 hours of live news daily – including "America Tonight," an evening news show. Al Jazeera America has about 900 employees , bureaus in 12 U.S. cities and a frequently updated website (america.aljazeera.com). Managers, producers and reporters are Americans with newspaper and broadcast backgrounds. Programs will include documentaries, investigative reports, a business show already airing, a sports program and a morning show. It already reflects "one of the most significant investments in television journalism in modern times," a New York Times media reporter writes, calling it "the most ambitious American television news venture since . . . the Fox News Channel [began] in 1996." "It is an American channel for the American audience," says the top executive, Ehab Al Shihabi. “Viewers will see a news channel unlike the others . . . [with] fact-based, unbiased and in-depth news. There will be less opinion, less yelling and fewer celebrity sightings." And thanks to support from its oil-rich government owner, there are far fewer commercials than usual -- about six minutes an hour, compared with more than 15 minutes an hour on other news channels.
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2025
Front Page Talking Points Archive►Undersea warning sign: Coral bleaching spreads, weakening or killing vital tropical reefs ►Federal vaccine testing change concerns some medical experts ►Courts try to halt rushed removals of alleged gang members, testing presidential powers ►U.S. Education Department shrinks as the president tries to 'move education back to the states' ►Batter up: Odd-looking 'torpedo bat' apparently can help players smash home runs ►Top U.S. officials mistakenly leaked Yemen attack phone chat messages before jets and missiles flew ►Trump stirs drama with talk of wanting Greenland, Canada and the Panama Canal ►Measles outbreaks bring reminders of need for childhood vaccines |
Step onto any school campus and you'll feel its energy. Each school is turbocharged with the power of young minds, bodies, hearts and spirits.
Here on the Western Slope, young citizens are honing and testing their skills to take on a rapidly changing world. Largely thanks to technology, they are in the midst of the most profound seismic shift the world has ever seen.
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