Exercise 10. Read the article and choose the best title for it.
Warm-up
Exercise 8. Do a survey on how your environment has changed in the last fifteen years and write a list of changes.
Language work
• Follow the steps:
1. In your group agree on four or five questions you are going to ask and make a questionnaire. Use the cues in the box or your own ideas.
2. Make a copy of the questionnaire for every student in your group.
3. At home interview your parents, grandparents, older brothers or sisters or neighbours. Take notes of the answers.
4. Write a list of your findings. The verbs in the box will help you.
Example: Two new shops have been built.
Exercise 9. Which do you think is the most common excuse among teenagers for dropping litter?
1. Teenagers ignore litter bins "to stay cool"
2. More litter bins in the streets!
3. Teenagers against litter
Teenagers have admitted they drop litter because they don't think it's cool to use a bin. A survey by the Tidy Britain Group found that boys say that putting rubbish in a bin would make them appear "soft" or "uncool". Youngsters aged 13-16 were asked what they thought litter was, how big a problem it was in their area, who they thought dropped litter and why they did it?
|Most teenagers believe rubbish is mainly made up of sweet and crisp wrappers and that richer areas are less likely to be littered than poorer ones. They also recognise that rubbish is a common thing in and around schools. When it comes to dropping litter, the kids questioned admitted their age group were the biggest culprits, with boys more to blame than girls. One 14-year-old said he dropped litter "365 days a year — 'cos I'm always eating".
A lack of waste bins was mentioned as an excuse for dropping rubbish, but the main reason given is laziness and peer pressure.