Article Evaluation: Tragedy

The article does a decent job of staying on topic. I was drawn in by the flow of the article, which made it easier to follow ultimately.

There was nothing that was really out of date, per say, but the article did neglect to interpret the way modern practices have influenced tragedies. Tragedies have far less incest and physical pain, but more of a deep emotional connection between the reader and the characters.

The article, however, could be a little more concise.

Because the article is supposed to be more fact based, it lacks any noticeable biases and under-represented points of view. This is because the goal is capture them all.

The links do work and the sources heavily support the claims of the article.

The information comes from scholarly articles and peer reviewed articles, because they are peer reviewed the amount biases have been reduced

In the talk section, editors are discussing whether or not regular individuals adding vulgar, inappropriate, or ignorant comments on the talk page such as "basically anyone that dies" is considered vandalism.

This is rated as a featured article

Digital Divide in Africa edit

Africa's foundation for multiple developmental problems stems from holds on ICT's and ethnic inequities.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_divide_in_South_Africa

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_in_Africa

africa is definitely growing fast in its digital age even though its is still underdeveloped

Also talking about regulations

Draft edit

What is a Digital Divide?

The Digital Divide is described as the characterization of the gap between individuals or countries that have access to technology and individuals or countries that do not. [1]This also includes, but is not limited to: access to computers, internet, and information literacy.   General contributions to the digital divide are geography and next generational users. Next generational users are people who can access the internet from virtually any location with a wide array of devices (Graham 5). Next generational users are more involved with using devices that can connect to the internet, while the geography factor focuses more on how an individuals' location put them at an advantage or disadvantage to compete with the digital age. However, only a handful on people and communities are being represented. Underdeveloped geographical locations, like the continent of Africa serves as one of the underrepresented minorities.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_divide

What causes the digital divide in Africa

In a study conducted in 2011, they estimate that internet access is only available to roughly fourteen percent of the African population.[2] This means that while the world’s population is only composed of fifteen percent of Africans, around six percent of that subscribe to the internet. [3]

Solutions to bridging

https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2018/09/13/bridging-africas-digital-divide/

In an article published on This Day Live, researchers noted that supporting the creation of modern entities with the inclusion of societal needs will be a major step to bridging the digital divide. https://www.thisdaylive.com/index.php/2018/09/13/bridging-africas-digital-divide/

  1. ^ "Digital divide", Wikipedia, 2018-10-26, retrieved 2018-11-12