Asked by khare
Remember to always cite your sources.
Based on your topic, which of these sources would be most likely to provide you with useful information? Choose three correct answers.
Responses
articles that describe government programs that respond to pollution issues
articles that describe government programs that respond to pollution issues
articles about Chinese foreign policy
articles about Chinese foreign policy
air pollution data that has been collected and published by the Chinese government
air pollution data that has been collected and published by the Chinese government
books about the effects of globalization on China
books about the effects of globalization on China
personal anecdotes about Chinese history
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct choices (three):
- articles that describe government programs that respond to pollution issues
- air pollution data that has been collected and published by the Chinese government
- books about the effects of globalization on China
Why: policy- and program-focused articles give direct information about measures and outcomes; official air-quality datasets are primary data for measuring pollution trends; books on globalization give useful background on economic and institutional drivers that shape pollution and policy responses. For examples and guidance on using these kinds of sources, see WHO on air pollution (https://www.who.int/health-topics/air-pollution) and China’s Ministry of Ecology and Environment (http://english.mee.gov.cn/) and general source-evaluation guidance (e.g., university research guides such as UC Berkeley’s Evaluating Sources guide: https://guides.lib.berkeley.edu/evaluatingsources).
- articles that describe government programs that respond to pollution issues
- air pollution data that has been collected and published by the Chinese government
- books about the effects of globalization on China
Why: policy- and program-focused articles give direct information about measures and outcomes; official air-quality datasets are primary data for measuring pollution trends; books on globalization give useful background on economic and institutional drivers that shape pollution and policy responses. For examples and guidance on using these kinds of sources, see WHO on air pollution (https://www.who.int/health-topics/air-pollution) and China’s Ministry of Ecology and Environment (http://english.mee.gov.cn/) and general source-evaluation guidance (e.g., university research guides such as UC Berkeley’s Evaluating Sources guide: https://guides.lib.berkeley.edu/evaluatingsources).
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