Complete The Sentences With The Gerund or The Infinitive Form of The Verbs in Brackets
Complete The Sentences With The Gerund or The Infinitive Form of The Verbs in Brackets
Complete The Sentences With The Gerund or The Infinitive Form of The Verbs in Brackets
sleep.
5 The person who directs an orchestra is called a
c________.
6 A c________ looks like a very big violin.
READING
B
GRAMMAR
1 Order the words to make sentences.
Example: cat / look / to / James / offered / after /
neighbours / his
READING
Read the article and tick () A, B or C.
young people are the focus of their attention. But, how can
society be dumbing down and becoming more stupid, when
both common sense and statistics suggest that this cant be true?
Its a fact that levels of intelligence have been rising steadily over
the past 50 years, and its surely reasonable to suspect that, in an
age when technology provides easy access to information, young
people might just know more about whats going on than
previous generations did.
Thats why I was deeply irritated to find unreliable research
being used to promote the idea that todays young people are
less well-informed and therefore less intelligent. Research
carried out in the United States has discovered that young
people no longer read newspapers regularly. The researchers
claim they are astonished that, whereas decades ago young and
old Americans got their news from the same sources, nowadays
teenagers and young adults dont read a newspaper as part of
their typical daily routine. But why the astonishment? Im
convinced that this has always been true. Young peoples lives
arent built around routines, but are often chaotic and
unplanned. Whats more, why should they make the time to
read something that was never written with their interests in
mind, anyway? In my experience, such a habit is and always has
been something that comes with getting older and settling
down.
Some people have taken the results of this research to conclude
that, because young people dont read newspapers, they must be
less well-informed. But they fail to consider that the widespread
use of the Internet has not only changed but improved the way
young people access the news. Newspapers are quickly
becoming old-fashioned, and I suspect that, as more older
people get used to obtaining news faster and for free online,
newsprint will soon be a thing of the past read only by those too
afraid to use a computer.
One thing that the American research gets right is its
description that how people get the news has changed over
time, with newspapers being the main source of news until the
fifties when television took over. The rise of the Internet,
providing news that is not only up to date, but also designed to
meet the interests and demands of the reader, is also described
accurately. However the research then goes on to argue that
one of the problems with online access to news is that people
who view it find it hard to remember what theyve read. The
implication is that reading information printed in a paper is
somehow a more reliable way of getting and remembering it
than reading it on a computer screen. But there is no evidence
to support such a claim. Im sure that 1940s newspaper readers
forgot everything they read some time between breakfast and
dinner, too.
So what can we make of the American research? That it tells us
nothing new. Or, more worryingly, that, once again, unreliable
and biased research is being used to promote the false idea that
young people today are not as intelligent as we used to be.
WRITING
1. You have read an article in a newspaper that you
disagree with.
Write a formal letter to the editor of the newspaper to
complain. Write 140180 words. Include the following
information:
10