One factor in this disparity is the fact that more men than women hold “hard” news beats such as politics and world news, where organizations often turn to hire management. An analysis of thousands of New York Times articles this year showed that men wrote most of the articles in the seven largest sections. And for women serving as primary child caretakers — the case in the majority of American families — irregular hours and travel make it difficult to commit to these beats, the Nieman report said.

Women that make it through the pipeline in many industries face cultural attitudes that favor leadership by men. A Fortune study on performance reviews in the tech industry found that words like “bossy, abrasive, strident, and aggressive” appear in reviews of female leaders more frequently than men. Jill Abramson, who was fired from her position as editor of the New York Times this year, was frequently described as such. A Google search of “Jill Abramson abrasive” yields over 110,000 results.

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Question
Use the article to answer the question.

How does the central idea of the article emerge?

(1 point)
Responses which answer is correct and why by solving it if it is a b c or d

It is stated directly in the first paragraph.
It is stated directly in the first paragraph.

The text leaves it totally up to reader interpretation.
The text leaves it totally up to reader interpretation.

It is stated directly in the final paragraph.
It is stated directly in the final paragraph.

The first three paragraphs lead up to it.

1 answer

The correct answer is:

The first three paragraphs lead up to it.

This is because the article discusses various factors contributing to the disparity between men and women in news reporting, particularly in "hard" news beats and cultural attitudes towards female leaders. The central idea emerges through the cumulative information presented, rather than being explicitly stated in one paragraph.