Informational Text Point of View Quick Check

1 of 51 of 5 Items
Feature

"How Ads Created Global Junk Food Generation"
by Saeed Kamali Denghan

Nepalese schoolgirl Prasiddhika Shrestha is holding up a video camera at her aunt’s house, filming her cousins as they devour crisps, corn puffs, soda and dalmoth, a traditional lentil based snack.

“What is it that you like eating most?” she asks them. “Lay’s chips and Coke,” says Diwani, who drinks between one and two litres of soft drink every day. Rihana includes a pack of Kurkure corn puffs in her daily diet.

Prasiddhika is among 100 schoolchildren in seven countries asked by researchers from University College London to film themselves and the food they eat for a study about the exposure of children to unhealthy diets.

© 2022 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.

Question
Use the passage to answer the question.

What is the author’s point of view about the children’s eating habits?

(1 point)
Responses

indifferent
indifferent

approving
approving

amused

1 answer

The author's point of view about the children's eating habits appears to be indifferent. The passage presents information about the children's preferences without expressing a clear approval or disapproval of their eating choices. It focuses on the observations from the study rather than the author's personal feelings towards those habits.

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