This thesis investigates the readability and comprehensibility of English language newspapers in Ghana as a developing country. It also attempts to discover the extent to which Ghanaian readers find the language of the newspapers easy or difficult to comprehend. The findings are meant to provide insights into the effectiveness of the newspaper press in providing news information to a broad readership to enhance political participation and democracy in the country. The study employed a research design that triangulated approaches in corpus linguistics, readability and survey studies. A computer-aided Linguistic analysis was carried out on the front-page stories of four influential national newspapers of the country to assess the extent ...
In a democratic society where the individual freedoms of its citizens are ensured and the rule of la...
The study investigated the perceptions of University of Cape Coast students about the media as a pla...
Few citizens personally attend political campaign rallies. Many depend on the mass media and other s...
This thesis investigates the readability and comprehensibility of English language newspapers in Gha...
This paper investigates the readability and comprehensibility of English language newspapers in Ghan...
The media is a potent means of information in every democratic dispensation since it controls the ma...
This thesis compares newspaper coverage of two constitutional governments in Ghana's Fourth Republic...
This thesis compares newspaper coverage of two constitutional governments in Ghana's Fourth Republic...
The sturdy examined the coverage of government in 1998 and 2002 by two state-owned and two privately...
Contributors to this Issue A LINGUISTIC DESCRIPTION OF THE LANGUAGE OF GHANAIAN NEWSPAPERS: IMPLICAT...
Although radio has historically been the most widespread media in Ghana and much of Africa, little i...
There is a widespread concern that the print newspaper industry across the world and in Ghana partic...
The paper sets up a platform for debating whether the mass media is a partner or a scourge to develo...
The bachelor thesis ‘The journalistic aim in Ghana” is a study of what aims Ghanaian journalists hav...
The study examined the coverage of polytechnic in 1998 and 2002 by two state-owned and two privately...
In a democratic society where the individual freedoms of its citizens are ensured and the rule of la...
The study investigated the perceptions of University of Cape Coast students about the media as a pla...
Few citizens personally attend political campaign rallies. Many depend on the mass media and other s...
This thesis investigates the readability and comprehensibility of English language newspapers in Gha...
This paper investigates the readability and comprehensibility of English language newspapers in Ghan...
The media is a potent means of information in every democratic dispensation since it controls the ma...
This thesis compares newspaper coverage of two constitutional governments in Ghana's Fourth Republic...
This thesis compares newspaper coverage of two constitutional governments in Ghana's Fourth Republic...
The sturdy examined the coverage of government in 1998 and 2002 by two state-owned and two privately...
Contributors to this Issue A LINGUISTIC DESCRIPTION OF THE LANGUAGE OF GHANAIAN NEWSPAPERS: IMPLICAT...
Although radio has historically been the most widespread media in Ghana and much of Africa, little i...
There is a widespread concern that the print newspaper industry across the world and in Ghana partic...
The paper sets up a platform for debating whether the mass media is a partner or a scourge to develo...
The bachelor thesis ‘The journalistic aim in Ghana” is a study of what aims Ghanaian journalists hav...
The study examined the coverage of polytechnic in 1998 and 2002 by two state-owned and two privately...
In a democratic society where the individual freedoms of its citizens are ensured and the rule of la...
The study investigated the perceptions of University of Cape Coast students about the media as a pla...
Few citizens personally attend political campaign rallies. Many depend on the mass media and other s...