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Will newspapers survive?. Students: A.Chernyavskaya and D. Rybakova Teacher: O.N. Shitikova. The aims of the project. To enrich the knowledge about the history of newspapers in Great Britain and Russia as mass media
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Will newspapers survive? Students: A.Chernyavskaya and D. Rybakova Teacher: O.N. Shitikova
The aims of the project • To enrich the knowledge about the history of newspapers in Great Britain and Russia as mass media • To broaden our outlook about different kinds of British and Russian newspapers in the past and nowadays • To find advantages of printed newspapers and give a piece of advice for teenagers to make them read newspapers
The Internet Radio Mass media TV Newspapers Magazines
Statistics IZLUCHINSK • 1599 families subscribe newspapers • The most popular newspaper is “NovostyPriobiya” • 2 % of teenagers read newspapers • 30 % of adults subscribe newspapers • 89% of adults and teenagers read newspapers while travelling
From the history of newspapers • The earliest newspaper appeared in 59 BC in Rome • In Europe printed newspapers appeared in the 15th century • The first daily newspapers in England was The Daily Courant (London, 1702) • XVII century - the first handwritten newspaper in Russia “Vesti- Kuranty”; the first printed newspaper “Vedomosti” appeared on the 13th of January 1703
British newspapers Tabloids (popular press) Serious (quality pressor broadsheets) Daily Sunday National Local
British newspapers Quality Tabloids • The Times • The Independent • The Guardian • The Financial Times • The Daily Telegraph • The Daily Mail • The Daily Express • The Daily Mirror • The Sun • The Daily Star
The most popular Russian newspapers nowadays • The nationwide tabloids are • Komsomolskaya Pravda (www.kp.ru), MoskovskyKomsomolets (www.mk.ru), ArgumentyiFakty (www.aif.ru). • Among the quality newspapers are • Vedomosti (www.vedomosti.ru), Kommersant (www.kommersant.ru), and Izvestia (www.izvestia.ru) newspapers. • Kommersant has a version • in English on the internet: • www.kommersant.com.
Some interesting changes and facts about British and Russian newspapers today • The Independent and The Times have switched in recent years to a compact format. • The Guardian switched in September 2005 to what is described as a "Berliner" format. • All the major UK newspapers currently have websites, some of which provide free access. • “Trud”, “Komsomolskaya Pravda”, “Izvestiya” became independent . • The Party press in Russia was and replaced by commercial issues. • The new types of newspapers appeared in the RF. • Weekly qualities are in greater demand. • Local newspapers supplant national ones.
Some advantages of printed newspapers: • Printed newspapers still have their readers • They are easier to carry and use while travelling or waiting. • They don’t need electricity. • People can read them and get information whenever they like. • You can keep them for a long time. • People can reuse them (as a pack). • Printed newspapers can be recycled. • You can read and reread it several times. • You can use printed newspapers for you work. • Weekly newspapers have interesting journalists’ investigations and reviews.
School Newspaper • The size of the newspaper is A3. • It is free for every form and it is kept in the classroom. But schoolchildren can buy it for themselves and their families. • It is published one or two times a month. • Our newspaper has four pages.