Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Incorporating Sources Effectively

In his article “How Cell Phones Are Killing Face-to-Face Interactions,” Mark Glasser goes onto say “For young people especially, having cell phones or iPod in hand and at the ready default mode while walking the streets.”

On the Elite Daily, Yasmine Hassan stated “We need to be connected every minute of the day, every day of the week, and the minute something goes wrong in our perfect technological world, we lose it because the thought of being alone with ourselves is terrifying.”

Mark Glasser is an executive editor of PBS MediaShift and Idea Lab where he is a freelance journalist writing columns, reviews, and travel stories.  In Glasser’s article “How Cellphones Are Killing Face-to-Face Interactions,” he states “For young people especially, having cell phones or iPod in hand and at the ready default mode while walking the streets.”  Citing similar alarms from a different sector, writer Yasmin Hassan noted, “We need to be connected every minute of the day, every day of the week, and the minute something goes wrong in our perfect technological world, we lose it because the thought of being alone with ourselves is terrifying.”

Works Cited
Glasser, Mark.  MediaShift Your Guide to the Digital Media Revolution.  “How Cell Phones Are Killing Fact-to-Face Conversations.”  PBS Publications.  Web.  22 Oct. 2007.

Hassan, Yasmin.  Elite Daily The Voice of Generation-Y.  “How Technology Continues to Destroy A 
Social Generation.”  Web.  25 Oct. 2013.

Alleyne, Richard.  The Telegraph.  “Mobile Phone Addiction Ruining Relationships.”  Telegraph Media Group Publications.  Web.  30 Nov.  2012


Piper, Robert.  Huffpost.  Your Cell Phone Is Not A Part Of Your Body-You Can Let It Go.”  The Huffington Post Publications.  Web.  24 Sept. 2013.

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