These are four points from a presentation on the Great Depression: a. effects of the Great Depression: unemployment and poverty b. causes, including the Wall Street crash of 1929 c. history of the Great Depression d. the revival of the economy following the New Deal programs
What is the best sequence in which to synthesize these points?
Wow, this is sorta confusing, all I know is that it should be B, A, D. But I don't know where C would go
i thin c would go last
because history comes after you do things
C is confusing because the other things listed are the history.. It is either the first or last thing.
Maybe it goes first, because it could be the introduction to the list of the history.. Such as this: History of the Great Depression:
and then carry on with the rest of the presentation..
but history is like the past
Yes, but this is for the order of a presentation. They are listing the history of the event in order.
exactly
So, it wouldn't make sense to list the history, then say the history...
if there listing it in order it would be the ending
No, because each of the things in the middle ARE the history, just in detail... Hold on a sec, lemme write an example.
Rocks started from the beginning of time. They created large land-forms, including the Andes Mountains. They also are the very ground we walk on. The History of Rocks:
See, it doesn't make sense to put it there: Rocks started from the beginning of time. They created large land-forms, including the Andes Mountains. They also are the very ground we walk on. --->The History of Rocks: Rather, it should go on top: The History of Rocks: Rocks started from the beginning of time. They created large land-forms, including the Andes Mountains. They also are the very ground we walk on.
Yeah, I'm with @Whitemonsterbunny17 on this
the history of rocks could be the title but if it was then it wouldnt be there so it would go on the ending
Then what else would be the title? Each presentation must start with a title.
the title isnt there because thats not part of the sequence
that would be the title
anyone can name the title anything
... but it is there. It may not be capitalized correctly, but that's the trick. c;
omg nvm
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