Look at the excerpt from "How to Think Like a Researcher," a chapter from How to Find Out Anything. More to our purpose, we need
to ask answerable questions for the eminently practical reason that if a question has no end, neither does the research. Pursuing an open-ended question can be a fool’s errand. So, to become a skilled researcher, step number one is learning how to craft the answerable question. ______________ To become a skilled researcher, step number one is learning how to craft the answerable question. _______________ Say you’re a reporter for a business magazine and your editor wants to run an article on computer executive compensation. The editor asks you to find out if computer executives are overpaid. This is a great idea for a magazine article. It would probably make for a nifty feature in any number of business and tech magazines. What text feature does this excerpt include? a sidebar a heading a callout a subtitle
Hello, I could probably answer it more surely if the question was provided in its original format. But for how it was presented, I believe the answer would be C. A callout.
A callout (or call-out) in publishing is a short excerpt within a bigger text, somehow highlighted to call the reader's attention out to that part, specially.It can be a short string of text with its words connected by lines, dots, arrows, or similar, a sentence in bold separated from the text, or written in a different format, usually in a larger font. - This one is very common in magazines and newspapers. (and I believe this is the type that was presented on this excerpt original format).
After moving to another country, maintaining your old culture can be ... adapting to a new culture doesn't mean you need to let go of the old. ... shock can also be experienced by people who move to another state or city. So what do you do when living in a new culture to help you maintain ties to your old one
It is giving you the way to be able to identify the said bird, by taking note of it's features, calls, size and more. By taking notes, it allows you to be able to study the bird later on after the bird is long gone.